Begley v. Commonwealth

276 S.W. 834, 210 Ky. 747, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 767
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 23, 1925
StatusPublished

This text of 276 S.W. 834 (Begley 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
Begley v. Commonwealth, 276 S.W. 834, 210 Ky. 747, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 767 (Ky. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

September 6, 1923, the appellant, Barney Begley, shot and wounded Floyd Evans. The wounds, of which there were four, caused the death of Evans, which occurred about two weeks later in a hospital in the city of Lexington, to'which he was carried the night following the shooting for surgical treatment. The parties were residents of Lee county, this state, and the shooting and wounding of Evans occurred in that county. At the October term, 1923, of the Lee circuit court, an indictment, charging the appellant with the murder of Evans, was found and returned by the grand jury. On his trial at the May term, 1924, of the court, for the. crime charged in the indictment, the appellant, by verdict of the jury, was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter and his punishment fixed at confinement in the penitentiary for a term of twenty-one years. He-was refused a new trial. *749 and has appealed from the. judgment entered in pursuance of that verdict.

The rulings of the trial court assigned as error entitling the appellant to the reversal of the judgment of conviction, are as follows, viz.: (1) The admission of incompetent evidence in behalf of the Commonwealth. (2) Failure to properly instruct the jury. (3) Overruling of the appellant’s motion for a directed verdict of acquittal, urged by the latter on the ground that the evidence was insufficient to authorize the submission of the case to the jury.

The shooting and wounding of the deceased took place about 11 o’clock a. m. at the home of the .appellant, after three hours of card playing in which they were the only participants. The only eye-witnesses of the shooting were the deceased, the appellant and Myrtle Terry, a sister-in-law of the latter. The deceased’s version of what then occurred is contained in certain statements made by him, first, on the day of and after the shooting, to John Durbin, Bob Boss -and Susie Boss; and later, more explicitly repeated five hours before his death, to his father, Jesse Evans. These statements were introduced in evidence by the Commonwealth through the testimony of the several persons named and admitted by the trial court as dying declarations of the deceased.

Durbin testified that when informed of the shooting and wounding of the deceased by the appellant, which-was about three hours after its occurrence, he went to the appellant’s residence and there found the deceased lying in bed and suffering from his wounds. That the latter when asked by him (Durbin) “if he was hurt,” said: “Yes, John, I guess I am killed;” and when further asked by Durbin why he was 'shot by the appellant, deceased replied, in substance, that he and Begley were gambling; .that he “broke Begley and Begley got mad and commenced shooting.” The deceased also said he did not know Begley was mad until he began to shoot at him, and that just before, or wdien, the shooting began he was “aiming to give Begley a drink” from a jar of whiskey he (deceased) -had taken to the latter’s residence; and that the pistol with which Begley did the shooting was obtained by him under the pillow of a bed near him.

The witness, Susie Boss, a near neighbor of the appellant, testified that on the day of the shooting and wounding of the deceased and before he was seen by *750 Durbin, she was called to the appellant’s home by his wife, and while there saw and talked with the deceased who, when asked by her as to his condition, made (in the words of the witness) the following reply: “He said he was going to die, said he wasn’t going to live, mid he lmowed he was killed.” That she (witness) asked the deceased “how it (the shooting) happened,” and his reply was: “Why, we was gambling.”

It appears from the testimony of the witness, Bob Ross, that he visited the deceased at the appellant’s home during the late afternoon, or night, of the day he was shot, and while there had with him the following conversation :

“I (the witness) said, 'Well, Floyd, how are you?’ ‘Well,’ he said, ‘I am in bad shape, I guess I am killed.’ I said, ‘I hope not.’ ‘Yes,’ he said, ‘A man can’t stand all this. This is too much.’ ‘I said. ‘How came that fellow to shoot you, Floyd?’ ‘Well,’ he said, ‘.I don’t know. . . . We had been gambling some and he had a gun of mine in pawn. . . . I won what money he had and broke him. ... I won my gun out of pawn and called for it and he refused to give it up. We got in kinder of an argument and all at once he grabbed it,’ I believe he said, ‘off the bed. ’ ’ ’

The witness, Jesse Evans, who was in the hospital with his son, the deceased, at the time of his death, when asked, “What statement, if any, was made by the deceased with reference to his condition, and whether or not he expected to get vell or wdiat should happen to him,” gave the answer: “Well, he told me he had to die.” It also appears from the testimony of this witness that the deceased, at the time of making the above statement, had with him a conversation in regard to the shooting and wounding of the latter by appellant, which, as related by the witness, was as follows:

“Well, I (witness) asked him (deceased) how the trouble came, and he said him and Begley had been playing cards and he broke Begley, won everything he had; that Begley had his pistol in pawn and he won it back, called for it and asked him what about his pistol, and Begley said I don’t know what about it; that he (deceased) was standing there talk *751 ing and he said Barney reached under the pillow, pulled his pistol and commenced shooting him.”

The witness further testified that the foregoing statements of the deceased were made about five hours before his death. In addition to the evidence" thus far discussed, it was shown by other evidence introduced for the Commonwealth, mainly found in the further testimony of the witness Durbin, that the deceased and appellant were accustomed to meet at the latter’s home to engage in gaming by card playing; and that he (Durbin), appellant and deceased were together engaged in such gaming at the appellant’s house three or four nights prior to the shooting of the deceased by the latter, on which occasion, as substantially testified by the witness, the deceased, after obtaining of the appellant $3.25 on a cold check of one Fred Slone for that amount, and the further sum of $10.00, for which he pawned his pistol, lost to him in the card playing the whole of. these two amounts; but that when later in the evening deceased won enough money to redeem his pistol and offered to do so, the appellant refused to return the weapon unless deceased would also return him the amount he obtained of him (appellant) on the Slone check. The latter declined to comply with this demand and left the appellant’s residence without the pistol.

It was also testified by Durbin that on the night in question he remained á short time at the appellant’s house after the deceased left, and that while there with the appellant the latter, in declaring to him his resentment of the deceased’s failure to pay him the amount of the Slone cheek, said: “That G-— d — • son of a b — don’t pay me that money back for that cheek,-1 will kill him.”

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Related

Stanfill v. Commonwealth
272 S.W. 1 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1925)
Cavanaugh v. Commonwealth
190 S.W. 123 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1916)
Postell v. Commonwealth
192 S.W. 39 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1917)
McCurry v. Commonwealth
265 S.W. 630 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
276 S.W. 834, 210 Ky. 747, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 767, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/begley-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1925.