Bryant v. Commonwealth

113 S.W.2d 1118, 272 Ky. 222, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 87
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 18, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 113 S.W.2d 1118 (Bryant 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
Bryant v. Commonwealth, 113 S.W.2d 1118, 272 Ky. 222, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 87 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

Eldon Bryant appeals from a judgment convicting-him of manslaughter and fixing his punishment at fifteen years’ imprisonment.

The indictment on which this trial and conviction: were had was returned by the grand jury at the July,, 1937, term of the Breathitt circuit court, wherein Bryant was charged with the willful murder of Herman Gross, by shooting and killing him.

It is shown by the evidence that this homicide occurred about dark on the evening of - May 3, 1937, at.' Highland College in Breathitt county, Ky., where the school’s commencement exercises were then being held

The' evidence portraying the facts and circumstances leading up to the commission of the offense here in evidence and under which it was committed is, briefly stated, that at about 7 o’clock on this evening and occasion in evidence, a crowd had assembled and was gathering at the schoolhouse for the school’s commencement exercises to be held there. With this crowd came also the appellant, Eldon Bryant, and the deceased, Herman Gross, who were soon to become the actors in a tragic killing staged at the very threshold of the school.

Further, it is shown that preliminary to the opening t>f the exercises and just before the trouble occurred between the accused and the deceased, Herman Gross, the- app'ellant, Eldon Bryant, went up-the steps, onto. *224 the front porch of the school building, where he met a number of people and acquaintances, among them the deceased, standing around, to whom he spoke, when it is testified the deceased, announcing that he was drunk, returned the greeting by slapping appellant off the porch to the ground as he cursed him, and further threw a stick at Bryant as he got up and ran around the corner of the building to his home. There, finding that the white coat he wore had been soiled with trash and dirt when he was knocked off the porch to the ground, he changed it for a. blue one and soon returned to the school building.

Further, the testimony of the witnesses, from this point of the trouble and leading on to the homicide, becomes conflicting and is. that appellant, after returning to the school, went into the auditorium, where the ■exercises were to be held, and remained there but for a minute or two, when he left and asain went out on the porch, drawing his gun as he went, when the deceased, seeing him coming, immediately left the window where he had been standing, looking into the auditorium, and going up to appellant “made a glom at his gun” and began to grapple and wrestle with him for it, when, in the struggle, they backed off the porch and fell to the ground, where, all the witnesses testify, the appellant then fired his gun three or four times into the deceased, almost instantly killing him.

The evidence shows that both the appellant and deceased were at the time of their trouble young men, in their early twenties; also, that the deceased was a large, strong and heavy man, weighing about 180 pounds, while the appellant was of slight build and strength, weighing only, some 115 pounds and in no sense an even match for the stronger, heavier Gross in any physical struggle or combat.

The appellant, testifying in his own defense, states that when he and the deceásed, in their struggling, fell from the porch and onto the ground, the deceased fell ■or got on top of him and was threatening to kill him, and that it was because of his belief and fear that he would so so, that, when he could, he drew his gun and shot Gross to death to save his own life.

On the other hand, the testimony given by the witnesses for the Commonwealth is contradictory of the appellant’s version of the ■ circumstances of the homicide, *225 and is that the appellant went into the auditorium, hut that, on his seeing deceased, standing outside on the porch, looking in through the window, he started from the auditorium for the porch, at the time saying to Mr. Zeke Jett, with who'm he was then talking, that he was going to kill the “g. d. s. o. b. ” and as he went out, he drew his gun and, on approaching the deceased, “threw it” on him, when the deceased began to wrestle and struggle with him for its possession; that while thus struggling, they fell from off the porch to the ground, the appellant on top of him, when he shot and killed the deceased.

We deem this summary to be a sufficient statement of the facts in evidence, especially when the appellant is making no contention that the evidence was insufficient to support the jury’s verdict returned against him; nor is he insisting that its verdict was palpably and flagrantly against the evidence.

The one contention here strenuously urged and argued by counsel for appellant is that the court committed so flagrant an error and one so prejudicial to appellant’s substantial rights as, in its effect, to have practically denied him a fair trial, by reason of its most improperly overruling his motion made to set aside the swearing of the jury and continue the case, or at least pass the hearing or postpone the trial of it, until the presence of Zeke Jett, as a defense witness, could be had to impeach the credibility of the false testimony of the Commonwealth’s witness, Lewis, which it is contended, very strongly influenced the jury’s verdict. Inasmuch as the appellant is insisting upon the controlling importance of this objection or as the one ground upon which the judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted him, we deem it expedient to briefly state the evidence of this witness, to which this objection is directed because of its claimed impressive and prejudicial character and by which, as the defendant alleges, he was taken by surprise, which rendered it necessary to impeach its credibility by the testimony .of the witness, Jett, who would have testified, if present, that no such statements or conversation, as alleged testified By Lewis, were made to or had by appellant with Jett upon this occasion, or at all.

An examination of the record shows that this adverse testimony, so hostilely and, it is claimed, so false *226 ly given by Lewis in Ms account of tbe fact and circumstances of appellant’s killing of the deceased and wbicb was so damaging and prejudicial to appellant in its effect upon tbe jury, was to tbe effect that appellant, even before tbe struggle and trouble began between bim and the deceased out on tbe porch, bad fired bis first shot at the deceased. Also, Lewis was tbe only one who testified as to many previous threats having been made to bim by tbe appellant against tbe deceased, to tbe effect that be was going to kill bim, and he further testified that appellant said to Zeke Jett, while standing at tbe door of tbe school auditorium, immediately before going out onto tbe porch and starting tbe trouble with and shooting at tbe deceased, “I will kill tbe g. d. s. o. b. right now.”

The appellant’s contention and complaint is that tbe court erred in overruling bis motion made, when this testimony was given, to set aside the swearing' of tbe jury and continue tbe case, because of bis having been taken by surprise by the giving of this testimony by Lewis, wbicb, was decidedly different from what .Lewis bad stated; upon bis examination made of bim (granted by the court), be would testify.

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Related

Foley v. Commonwealth
55 S.W.3d 809 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 2001)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 S.W.2d 1118, 272 Ky. 222, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryant-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1938.