Barton v. Commonwealth

77 S.W.2d 397, 257 Ky. 23, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 523
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 21, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 77 S.W.2d 397 (Barton v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barton v. Commonwealth, 77 S.W.2d 397, 257 Ky. 23, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 523 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Richardson

Affirming.

Troy Adams was a deputy sheriff in Knott county, Ky., residing at Anco, one-half mile from Sassafras. Prior to the 5th day of March, 1934, he received for execution a subpoena for Chester Brown as a witness in a justice’s court. On the morning of that day, he, with his father, Lindsey Collins and Tug Engle, left his home in his car to go to Sassafras; his purpose was to serve the subpoena on Brown, who resided at Sassafras.

Arriving at Sassafras, Collins and Troy’s father went in Huck Smith’s store. In a few minutes Troy came in and remained about ten or fifteen minutes. While there, at the invitation of Collins, he drank a mug of beer, then left, and went to the place of business of the accused, Lula Barton, where he found Chester Brown, Lula Barton, Ed Barton, Sam Hall, Sam Whit-taker, and Harrison Brown. He served the subpoena on Chester, and at the time he did so Sam Hall was shining Brown’s shoes. The accused and Ed Barton were behind the beer cabinet. At the time Troy entered the accused’s place of business, Harrison Brown was drinking beer. He asked Troy to take a drink with him. He accepted the invitation. The accused used in her business 24 beer mugs; she obtained 2 of them and drew the beer into them. Harrison Brown received from her one of them and handed it to Troy. Troy sipped it about one inch down the mug; “it seemed like it strangled him some way or other”; he walked over to where Brown handed it to him, sat the mug on the beer cabinet, and began coughing as he did so and then walked out the door, coughing and trying to vomit. He returned into the accused’s place of business and remarked, “I have just eaten breakfast, I can’t drink just after I eat.” Harrison Brown called to him; they sat down back of a table; Troy “kept strangling and seemed like he was coughing, he had a cigar in his hand and a penny box of matches and a handkerchief with which he was cleaning *25 his mouth.” Brown began to engage him in a conversation relating to Troy “picking him up at Yiceo the night before.” In about three or four or five minutes Troy “hunkered himself down on the seat” and' never again spoke. Those present, except the accused, endeavored to render him aid, and, while they were doing so, she “remained behind the beer cabinet moving about. Within a few minutes Troy was carried to the home of Hall, where he immediately died. From the moment he sipped the beer he began to cough and strangle and immediately began to try to vomit and was “frothing at the mouth,” and continued to engage in the latter until his death. While Harrisón Brown was talking to him, his face was red; he was “blowing like he had something hot in his mouth and slobbering. ’ ’ From the moment he drank the beer until his death, the accused manifested neither interest in, nor sympathy toward, him. About the time Harrison Brown called those present to assist him with Troy, the accused picked up the mug of beer out of which Troy drank; Ed Barton mopped the beer cabinet with a rag and squeezed it out into the mug from which Troy had sipped the beer. The accused went back into the kitchen and returned, picked up the mug out of which Troy drank, emptied its contents, set it away, filled another mug with beer to about the point Troy had sipped out of the mug, and-set it at the same place on the beer cabinet from which she had removed the one used by Troy. Three of those present observed her engage in this act.

After Troy was carried from her place of business to Hall’s, the accused stated to Sam Hall, “You was watching me get the beer.” In a few minutes after Troy’s death, Herbert Boelyn went to the place of busi-. ness of the accused and got the mug of beer which was setting at the place Troy placed the one used by him, and carried it to a physician for the purpose of having its contents examined and analyzed for poison. The accused had him trailed, for the purpose, as she stated, to see that nothing was put in it before it reached the hands of the physician.

Troy was carried to the office of the undertaker, who, with the physician present at the death of Troy, pumped from his stomach about one pint of its contents; bottled it, when it was delivered to the undertaker. The undertaker himself obtained a pint of blood from the body of the deceased, which together with the *26 bottle containing the contents of bis stomach and the beer obtained by Boelyn were inclosed in a box, wrapped, sealed, and expressed to Dr. E. S. Maxwell, Lexington, Ky., who received it from the hands of the express agent and delivered the same to Dr. J. H.' Martin. On arrival of the box at Lexington, it was intact and sealed, and had not been tampered with after it left the hands of the undertaker. Dr. Martin broke the seal, opened the box in the presence of Dr. Maxwell, and took possession of the three bottles, one containing’ blood, the other the contents of the stomach, and the bottle containing the beer. He analysed a portion of the contents of each bottle. The analysis showed the contents of the stomach contained 1.90 grains of potassium cyanide,the blood a smaller quantity of the same poison. The beer was free of poison. The undertaker, at the time he obtained the blood from the body of Troy, stated “it was cherry red.” This is the color of it described by Dr. Martin. The physicians agree that potassium cyanide is a deadly poison producing death at any time from within two to twenty-five minutes, according to the dose, and also depending upon whether it is inhaled or swallowed, or both. Dr. Martin states that its symptomatic effects on a human being were the same as those manifested by Troy and described by the persons present immediately following his drinking the beer until his death.

The accused, from some time in December next before the death of Troy Adams, was engaged ostensibly in the business of conducting a restaurant and operating a beer joint at the place at which Troy drank the beer. About a week before his death, in company with other deputy sheriffs, he had conducted a raid on her place of business in the execution of a search warrant authorizing him to do so. Whisky was found in her place of business, for which she was arrested, tried, and convicted. From the judgment of conviction, she had taken an appeal to the Knott circuit court which was pending at the time of his death. Troy was a witness for the commonwealth in the prosecution, and testified against the accused. Soon after the analysis of the contents of the stomach and blood was completed, the accused was arrested on the charge of murder, alleged to have been committed by the administration of poison by and through the mug of beer of which Troy drank at her place of business. Granville Stacey, United States commissioner, residing at London, Ky., who was born and *27 raised at Sassafras, Knott county, assisted the accused to engage in business at Sassafras by furnishing her the means; the same business in which she was engaged at the time of the death of Troy Adams. After she was placed in jail, he went to see her concerning their financial matters. He discussed with her the poisoning and death of Troy Adams. This was after the analysis of the contents of the stomach had been completed.

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Bluebook (online)
77 S.W.2d 397, 257 Ky. 23, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barton-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1934.