Broadus v. Commonwealth

465 S.W.2d 245, 1971 Ky. LEXIS 440
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 2, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 465 S.W.2d 245 (Broadus 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
Broadus v. Commonwealth, 465 S.W.2d 245, 1971 Ky. LEXIS 440 (Ky. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

PALMORE, Judge.

The appellants, James Watkins (alias Doc Broadus) and wife, Hattie Watkins, were convicted on six counts of hog stealing and sentenced to one year’s imprisonment on each count, the sentences to run consecutively. KRS 433.250(2); RCr 11.04 (1). They appeal, contending that the trial court erred in permitting the introduction of evidence obtained under a search warrant that was never produced at the trial, in declining to require production of the warrant, and in instructing the jury.

At various times between September 1969 and March 1970 hogs were stolen from the farm of Bill Williams in Lyon County. In the course of his investigations Williams discovered some of these hogs in the possession of several different people in neighboring Caldwell County, all of whom had bought them from Broadus or his wife. Ten of Williams’ hogs had been stolen on March 3, 1970, and on the afternoon of March 8, 1970, he went to the home of Broadus in Caldwell County. He described this visit as follows:

“So I decided I would go and have a talk with him about the hogs and see if he could tell me anything about it, so I went to his home and knocked on the door and hollered a time or two and didn’t anybody answer and while I was standing there on the porch waiting to see if anybody on the inside would answer me I heard some hogs and I backed up to the edge of the porch where I could see and the hogs came out of the building and around the side of the fence and there was 20 of my hogs there in his pen.”
Q. “How did you know they were your hogs, Mr. Williams ?”
A. “Well, I knew the hogs from several reasons. I don’t think I would have had to had any marks on them, but we had marked these gilts with a swallow fork in their left ear, all the gilts we intended for brood sows out of this group and he had 6 of those in there and then all the hogs we had cut switches off their tails to try to eliminate some tail biting we had on the feeding floors and all of them had switches cut off their tails.”
Q. “What about the size; were they the same size hogs that you lost ?”
A. “Yes, sir, they were the same size that had been stolen.”
Q. “And what kind of marking did you have on them; was it similar to the hogs you were raising?”
A. “Well, in this particular group there was 6 Hampshire and 3 of the gilts had swallow forks in their ears, 1 black and white spotted gilt, and 13 white gilts and 3 of the white gilts had swallow forks in their left ear.” .
Q. “So 6 of these hogs had swallow fork markings in their ear ?”
A. “That’s right, the gilts that we had marked for keeping. We do that when the litters are born so, in trying to improve our hogs, we can keep gilts out of large litters, and litters out of sows do exceptionally well, and we mark our gilts when they are small — that don’t mean we will keep them every one, because they would be culled again at 180 pounds when we turn them out on the ground to keep.
O. “All right, what did you do after you saw these 20 hogs in the defendant’s lot ?”
A. “Well, after I- — right immediately I didn’t do anything that day until a little after dark I was still investigating some other hogs that I heard about and I found several more of my hogs at other places.”

It was after Williams had thus observed and identified 20 of his hogs in Broadus’ pen that the controversial search warrant was issued and executed. At the beginning of the trial counsel for Broadus de[247]*247manded that it be produced for inspection, but the motion was overruled in view of assurances by the Commonwealth that its case would not depend upon any evidence obtained by virtue of the warrant. These assurances proved to be reliable until the very end of the Commonwealth’s production of testimony, at which point its last witness, the sheriff of Caldwell County, was permitted over objection of defense counsel to testify that he had “found 20 pigs at Doc Broadus’ premises that belonged to Bill Williams.” It was then developed through cross-examination that he had done so by virtue of a search warrant. Defense motions to exclude this testimony and to declare a mistrial were overruled. From other evidence heard in chambers it appears that the missing search warrant had been issued by the county judge of Lyon County.

It may be conceded that the admission of evidence relating to or gathered as the result of the search of Broadus’ premises without requiring the Commonwealth to produce the warrant purporting to authorize the search was an error. See, for example, Carroll v. Commonwealth, Ky., 294 S.W.2d 938 (1956). Ordinarily such an error, being of constitutional proportions, would be prejudicial and require reversal, but not necessarily. In this instance the tainted evidence merely corroborated other evidence which alone had such probative weight that we have no hesitation in finding that the error was harmless beyond peradventure of a doubt. Cf. Harrington v. California, 395 U.S. 250, 89 S.Ct. 1726, 23 L.Ed.2d 284 (1968).

There was, for example, in addition to the testimony of Williams, that of the principal thieves themselves, Partee and Blue, who admitted having delivered the hogs to the Broadus place, and that of six or eight other witnesses who had purchased from Broadus hogs later found to belong to Williams. In the final analysis, quite aside from the minimal ripple of information contributed by the sheriff’s testimony, there was only one possible defense for Broadus and wife in the case, and that was that they did not have anything to do with the stealing of the hogs and, in receiving them, did not know they had been stolen. That, exactly, is the avenue they took. It is scarcely conceivable that they could have mounted a successful defense upon a disclaimer of possession even if the illegal search and seizure had never taken place. That the jury refused to believe them could not have been influenced by the incompetent evidence.

The indictment charged Doc, Hattie, Partee and Blue jointly as principals. It was clear from the evidence that Doc and Hattie did not go to Lyon County and were never present, actually or constructively, when the hogs were abducted by Partee and Blue. Hence the case against Doc and Hattie necessarily depended on the theory that they were, accessories before the fact. The instructions given by the trial coürt under the various counts of the indictment were patterned as follows:

“COUNT No.

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Bluebook (online)
465 S.W.2d 245, 1971 Ky. LEXIS 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broadus-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1971.