Brashear v. Commonwealth

199 S.W. 21, 178 Ky. 492, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 751
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 21, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 199 S.W. 21 (Brashear v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brashear v. Commonwealth, 199 S.W. 21, 178 Ky. 492, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 751 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

[493]*493Opinion op the Court by

Judge Hurt

Reversing.

The appellant, Harry Brashear, was tried and suffered a conviction, in the Warren circuit court, for the crime of wilful murder, and his punishment was fixed at imprisonment for life, by a judgment of the court, in accordance with the verdict of the jury. His motion for a new trial having been overruled, he seeks a reversal of the judgment, by appeal to this court. The two grounds, urged by his counsel, for reversal of the judgment are.: (1) The admission, over his objection, of incompetent evidence, which was prejudicial to his substantial rights; (2) important evidence discovered by him after the trial, of which he did not know, at the time of the trial, and of which he, with reasonable diligence, could not have learned and produced at the trial, in his behalf.

The victim of the homicide, of which he was convicted, was Maggie Cherry, a young woman about twenty-seven or twenty-eight years of age, and a resident of the city of Bowling Green. The murder was, peculiarly, an atrocious one. Maggie Cherry had been married, but, a year or more before her death, she and her husband had separated and he was residing in a distant city, at the time of her murder. The appellant was a young man, twenty-eight years of age, and a native of New Albany, Indiana; a marble cutter by occupation, and very much given to the use of alcoholic beverages. Some time, in the fall of 1916, he came to Bowling Green to work in the marble works of one Clarence Runner, and, while, he was thereafter absent for certain periods of time from the city, he continued chiefly in the employment of Runner, until the murder occurred, for which he was convicted. Shortly after he came to Bowling Green, he became acquainted with Maggie Cherry, who then kept a small restaurant in the city, and by the end of the year, he and Maggie appeared to have become lovers, as a number of letters, which he wrote to her from New Albany, about the first of the year, were read, in the evidence, and ■they abounded with many endearing terms, which he bestowed upon her. In one or more of them, he addressed her as his wife. The letters, also, showed, that he had been, borrowing money from her, and, in one of them, he made the inquiry, if when he returned to Bowling Green, she .would furnish him money for transportation. He seems to have returned to Bowling Green, in February or March, 1917, and, in the meantime, Maggie Cherry had [494]*494closed her restaurant and was employed by one Mr, Hester, who conducted a hotel, to attend to the dining-room. Very nearly every evening, when supper had been served at the hotel, she would go to the home of her mother, who resided nearby, and the appellant, Brashear, would join her there, and when she would return to the hotel about 9:30 or 10 o’clock in the evening, he would accompany her to the hotel. He was in her company each •evening after nightfall with few exceptions, for some time preceding her murder, and-it was proven on the ■trial, that he had stated, at the time of her disappearance, ■that he could not remember of any night, when he was not in her company, except the one, upon which she disap7 peared and was murdered. She was killed upon Thursday night, the 21st. day of June, but, he stated upon the trial, that he did not see her upon that night, but was with her on the evenings of Sunday, Monday and Wednesday, preceding, but did not see her on the Tuesday •evening preceding. Some time before her death, her friends and family came to recognize, that, she and appellant were intending to marry, and he said upon the trial, that they were engaged to be married, but the time for the nuptials had not been agreed upon. She brought a suit and obtained a divorce from her husband about ten days before her death. About 5 o’clock, on Thursday evening, June 21st, the appellant was seen talking with her at the hotel, where she worked. After supper had been served, and at about half after 7 o ’clock, she prepared to go out and said to the other servants, that she had a “date” for the evening, and left the hotel. She did not g’o to her mother’s home, as she had been accustomed to do, and was not there on Wednesday evening, preceding, though upon Thursday evening, after she had left the hotel, she was seen going in the direction of her mother’s home. The appellant, near to this time, was seen upon the street and about 8 o’clock passed along the street, in front of her mother’s home, and was' (probably seen in that vicinity another time on that even•jing. The whereabouts of Maggie Cherry, from the time: «he left the Hester Hotel* until-nearly 11 o’clock, was not accounted for. Between 10 and 11 o’clock, MorrisGreenberg and Eli Shapiro saw her and appellant near-•the Mansárd Hotel, where they turned into and went out. «Center street. She did not return to her room, at the, hotel, on that night, and- on the next morning, the proprietor began an investigation to learn the cause of her [495]*495absence. He went to her mother’s home, and it was suggested, there, that probably she and appellant had gone away to get married. He then went to the marble shop, where appellant worked, and finding him there, inquired of him if he and Maggie had married, and having received a denial, stated that she had not returned to the hotel the evening before, and appellant stated, that he had not seen her for the two nights preceding. Appellant then went to. the home of her mother, and in a conversation, which followed, suggested, that probably she had gone to Louisville, and that he would meet the incoming trains on that night. On the same morning, persons, passing over the bridge across Barren river,, which is nearly or quite two miles from the court house,, in Bowling Green, discovered drops of blood on the end. of the bridge, opposite the city. These blood drops continued along the floor of the bridge to near its middle, where the wire fence, on the side, was crushed down, somewhat, and there blood stains were upon each side of the wire fence, on the floor of the bridge. That night the appellant was about the depot, until the midnight train from Louisville arrived, when he remarked to the policeman, that she had not come on the train, and that he was going home. On the following Monday morning her body was discovered, in the Barren river, about forty or fifty yards below the bridge, with a stone, which weighed seventy-six pounds, attached to it by a rope, which was tied around her neck. The knot, by which the rope was attached to the stone, was of such an intricate character, that no one could describe it, in the evidence. It was shown by appellant, that he knew how to attach ropes to heavy stones for the purpose of moving them. A gun. shot wound was in the side of her head. It entered beneath the ear and came out over or near the temple. She was fully dressed, except her shoes, and one stocking had been removed. There was some evidence to the effect, that she sometimes carried her money in her stocking. Clarence Bunner informed appellant of the discovery of her body, shortly, after it was found, when he went to the home of Maggie’s mother, and in a conversation there, inquired, if she thought, that he had. killed Maggie. He, also, told the mother that Maggie-had fifty dollars, in gold, and a small roll of paper money,, and where she kept the money in a certain drawer, but, upon examination, it was not found, at that place nor at. any other. Upon that evening, he returned to the home-[496]*496of the mother, accompanied by one Otis Isbell, who stated, that on the night of Maggie’s disappearance, appellant was in the park, and, probably, at a moving picture show.

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Bluebook (online)
199 S.W. 21, 178 Ky. 492, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brashear-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1917.