Bradley v. Commonwealth

148 S.W.2d 737, 285 Ky. 579, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 610
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 8, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 148 S.W.2d 737 (Bradley 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
Bradley v. Commonwealth, 148 S.W.2d 737, 285 Ky. 579, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 610 (Ky. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion of ■ the Court by

Morris, Commissioner—

Affirming.

Aaron Bradley was sentenced to serve five years in the reformatory for killing Laurel Huff. The indictment charged murder, and Carroll Clay was jointly indicted. Appellant was tried separately. On appeal, as is evidenced by his brief, he insists that the court committed errors prejudicial to his substantial rights by r

(1) The admission of incompetent evidence, and

(2) Refusing to sustain appellant’s motion for a peremptory instruction of not guilty.

The homicide occurred on the night of November 21, 1939, in a road house or beer joint, politely called, in testimony, a “restaurant,” located on Beaver Creek in Floyd County, and operated by Mrs. Bessie Swindle. There were in the restaurant the usual accompaniments —a miniature shooting gallery, a mechanically operated musical instrument, plenty of beer, and the customary crowd. At about ten o ’clock, appellant in company with deceased, Laurel Huff and Carroll Clay, came into the place. At this time there were gathered there, Everett Kendrick with four or more companions, male and female; Mrs. Swindle and her two daughters assisting in the conduct of the business, and others.

When appellant and his companions came in, they went to the counter and appellant bought three bottles of beer. Huff came to the counter and received change for a quarter, indicating that he wanted to try some target practice, which consisted of shooting an electric gun at a colored person running with some supposedly stolen chickens; it is called the “chicken thief” game. Huff, Bradley and Clay walked back to the target machine, and some target practice was indulged.

Later the three came back to the counter, and more beer was bought; Kenneth Pennington having joined them after a few moments at the counter. Bradley walked to the booth where the other parties were sitting. *582 Although appellant was laughing and joking with the seated crowd, there appears to have arisen some trouble between appellant and Everett Kendrick. What caused it is not made clear, but words passed between the two. Appellant then went to the counter, but came back and after further words between another of the party and appellant} the latter reached for and jerked Kendrick. Some witnesses say he struck him; others are not certain.

The two wrestled or struggled on the floor, and a pistol, which several witnesses say appellant drew from his pocket and was holding, fell on the floor. Huff, the deceased, reached down and picked it up. After this there was some wrestling or scuffling between Huff and Bradley, apparently for possession of the pistol. Most of the parties, anticipating trouble, left the room', and some of them say they saw appellant go to an automobile and get a shotgun, and had raised it in an attempt to shoot at some of the parties, or a party who was running up the road. Appellant requested, and the request was complied with, that the parties go back into the restaurant.

It is shown that Huff had retrieved or gotten possession of the pistol, and thrown it under or behind the counter. ’ Bradley, after procuring the shotgun, came back into the room demanding that no one leave until he had recovered his pistol. About this time Huff came from a back door into the room and walked to the water cooler. Bradley approached and cursed him. Huff had the pistol; was holding it up, not pointing it at Bradley, saying: “Here, Aaron.” They were four or five feet apart. Without further ado Bradley fired the shotgun twice and Huff fell to the floor, dead, the pistol falling out of his hand.

The foregoing is taken in the main from the testimony of the proprietor, and is corroborated by. a number of those who were present during the evening. Appellant’s testimony, corroborated by witnesses, chiefly Clay, who went with him and Huff to the road house, was substantially'to the following effect: ' ■■

Appellant lived a short distance from the restaurant. . About nine o’clock Huff and Clay Came to his home, and remained there about;ten minutes; the first time Huff borfowed fifty cents arid waiitéd tó'borrow a *583 shotgun. Appellant told Huff that the gun belonged to his brother Joe. Huff then left, but returned in about twenty minutes and said that it was “all right with Joe,” and appellant let him have the gun and a “handful” of shells. They talked for a few minutes, and appellant concluded to go down the road to get change f.or a twenty-dollar bill; deceased and Clay accompanied him.

Appellant decided to stop at the restaurant to buy a bottle of beer, and “maybe get change for his twenty dollar bill. ’ ’ After drinking his beer and after Huff had bought two bottles, he went over to the booth where the Penningtons and Kendrick were seated; began talking to them and asked if they wanted some beer. Kendrick refused, saying he wanted “something stronger.” Kendrick appeared sullen, and got up and left the room. Appellant remembered that Huff had left the shotgun about the car, and he was afraid that Kendrick would get it and “come back and kill me.” He went out and got the shotgun; came back in the building and walked to the counter. He says he had no conversation with anyone after he returned to the restaurant; he denies that there was any scuffle over the pistol.

He states that he was either standing against the counter or seated on a counter stool, when he heard Huff say: “Aaron, Gf. D. you, get ready,” and he turned around and “Huff had a pistol on me and it was cocked.” Huff was coming out of a back room. Appellant denies all the testimony with regard to his demand for his pistol, and that he was not going to leave until he got it. He said that when Huff made the remark, quoted above, he replied: “Lari, what do you want to shoot me for? Don’t shoot, I am the best friend you’ve got,” and Huff replied: “By G- you heard what I said.” “When he said that, I had this gun in my left hand and grabbed it up, like this (indicating) and shot two shots as fast as I could, because I thought he was going to kill me, and I wanted to protect myself.”

It was shown by the undertaker who removed Huff’s body, -that there was a cocked.pistol under or near his body, and. some indefinite, proof to the effect that the. pistol had belonged to Huff, who had displayed it in a threatening manner at other and prior times, and had made a threat' prior to the shooting. '

*584 Contention (2) needs little discussion. Appellant in brief contends that tbe evidence shows that the parties were on friendly terms prior to the killing; this is evident, as appears from the record, certainly up to the point of the scuffle between appellant and Kendrick and later Huff.

There is an absence of proof of previous malice, but we think the jury properly, under all the evidence, returned a verdict of manslaughter, a shooting in sudden affray or heat and passion. It is argued that the proof shows that appellant had no pistol, over which the parties might have had a scuffle. We note that three or more witnesses testified in rather a positive way that Bradley drew his pistol, and was engaged in a scuffle when others were trying to relieve him of it, and one witness testified that she kicked it under or behind the counter.

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Related

Friley v. Commonwealth
255 S.W.2d 483 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1953)
Graham v. Commonwealth
221 S.W.2d 677 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1949)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 S.W.2d 737, 285 Ky. 579, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1940.