Burchett v. Commonwealth

56 S.W.2d 571, 247 Ky. 21, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 345
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 20, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 56 S.W.2d 571 (Burchett 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
Burchett v. Commonwealth, 56 S.W.2d 571, 247 Ky. 21, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 345 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion op the Coitbt by

Judge PeeRy

Affirming.

In December, 1931, at the January term of the Floyd circuit court, the appellant, Bertha Burchett, and her husband, Larce Burchett, were jointly indicted by the grand jury of Floyd circuit court on a charge of the willful murder of Belle Thompson.

To this indictment, the defendants entered a plea of not guilty and offered a demurrer thereto, which was overruled.

Upon the first trial of the case in January, 1932, the jury was unable to agree on a verdict and was discharged.

Upon its second trial in April, 1932, the court, at the conclusion of all the evidence, sustained a motion for a peremptory instruction as to the defendant Larce Burchett, upon which the jury returned its verdict finding him not guilty. Further, the jury^ after hearing the evidence, instructions of the court, and argument of counsel, returned a verdict finding the appellant, Bertha Burchett, guilty of voluntary manslaughter and fixing her punishment at confinement in the penitentiary for a period of seven years.

Her motion and grounds for a new trial being overruled, she prosecutes this appeal, seeking a reversal of the judgment upon the sole ground that the court committed a reversible error in failing to instruct the jury on involuntary manslaughter and reckless use of firearms.

The facts shown by the record are that the appellant, Bertha Burchett, her husband, Larce Burchett, *23 and her mother, the deceased Belle Thompson, all lived together at the time of the killing on a farm in Floyd county, jointly owned by the deceased and her son-in-law, Larce Burchett; that in the summer of 1931, some difference arose between the deceased and Larce Bur-chett in connection with the control or management of the farm, resulting in a strained and unfriendly relationship between them, when they stopped speaking to each other and causing the deceased to stop eating her meals with the family, and, it is shown, she afterwards lived alone in an upstairs room of the house, there doing all her household work and preparing her own meals upon an open grate, despite the fact that she was then almost blind and had to grope her way about by feeling; that due to this difference arising between the defendant son-in-law, Larce Burchett, and the now deceased Belle Thompson, she, but a short while before being killed, instituted her suit in the Floyd circuit court, seeking a division of this- farm upon which they were living, which had been jointly bought by and was owned by her and her son-in-law, Larce Burchett. It is the theory of the commonwealth that the appellant and her husband, Larce Burchett, were opposed to this suit for division of the farm, and that they killed her for the purpose of ending the litigation she had started therefor.

The evidence, however, is to the effect that the appellant did not become involved in this land controversy between her mother and husband,, but continued to be on friendly terms and speaking relations with her, though there is some evidence that she, as well as her husband, Larce Burchett, did not “get along” with her nor “speak friendly” to her.

The facts and circumstances leading up to and attending the killing of Belle Thompson are in- substance, briefly stated, as follows: The appellant, Bertha Burchett, states that on the morning of September 15, 1931, her mother, Mrs. Thompson, was looking for a letter which she stated she had received from “Pony” Thompson, who was then confined in the state penitentiary; that being unable to find this letter, she accused appellant of having it and became very angry with her when she denied having the letter and left the house, stating she was going to town, when appellant followed her and persuaded her, because she was mad, to return; *24 upon her return, . she again accused the appellant of having the letter, and said, “If you don’t give it to me, I will kill you” and went upstairs to her room, returning in a few minutes with a butcher knife to the kitchen, where appellant was then standing, when she said, “You just as well get the letter for I mean to have it,” and grabbed appellant by the hair of her head and commenced choking her and cutting at her with the knife, making several minor cuts upon her hands and body, when appellant succeeded in taking the butcher knife from her; that during the scuffle for the possession of the knife wielded by her mother, she got loose from her several times, when her mother would grab her again. When asked why, when she got loose from her mother, she didn’t walk out of the kitchen and leave her, appellant answered, “I didn’t want to,” that she couldn’t get away from her on the outside, as her mother could follow her. When asked why she didn’t go where Larce, her husband was, she said, “I didn’t tbinlr of it, I was excited.” Appellant further stated that when she finally took the butcher knife from her mother, that her mother instantly discovered the gun lying upon the pie counter, close to which appellant was then standing. As to this she testifies, saying:

“I saw she had discovered the gun. I grabbed for the gun about the same time she did and both got hold of it and scuffled around and the gun went off.”
“Q. Did she get hold of the pistol first or you? A. She got hold of it first.
“Q. Did she present it on you? A. I grabbed about the same time she did, grabbed her arm.
“Q. Didn’t your mother see the pistol and start towards it, and you beat her to it? A. Both grabbed about the same time.
“Q. Both started for it.- A. Standing there reaching towards it.
‘ ‘ Q. How long did you wrangle over the pistol with the gun over your heads before the shot fired? A. I don’t know.
“Q. Do you know in what position the gun was when it fired? A. We had it over our heads.
“Q. Do you know which one had hold of the triararer? A. No I do not.
*25 “Q. Bertha .did yon intend to kill yonr mother? A. No sir.
“Q. Did yon fire that pistol intentionally? A. No sir.
“Q. Do yon know whether yon fired it or not? A. No sir.”

Epp Lafferty and W. A. Dingns, testifying for the commonwealth, said that on the morning in which appellant’s mother was killed, Bertha Burchett, after voluntarily surrendering herself for arrest, told them that she and her mother had gotten into a quarrel over a letter; that her mother believed that she had the letter her mother had received from “Pony,” her son, and was keeping it; that her mother went upstairs and got a butcher knife and came back down and got her by the hair of her head and commenced cutting her with the butcher knife; and that she shot her.

It is shown that the shot which killed Belle Thompson, appellant’s mother, “went through the top of her right breast, ranged down and out the lower side of her breast, entered the body under the right nipple * * * ; it come out in the left side of the back about one and one-half inches above the hip bone, it ranged down from the point of entrance.”

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Related

Glover v. Commonwealth
83 S.W.2d 881 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 S.W.2d 571, 247 Ky. 21, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burchett-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1933.