Burchfield v. Commonwealth

186 S.W.2d 412, 299 Ky. 549, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 475
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 13, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 186 S.W.2d 412 (Burchfield 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
Burchfield v. Commonwealth, 186 S.W.2d 412, 299 Ky. 549, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 475 (Ky. 1945).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Cammaok

Affirming.

Jake Burchfield shot and killed Bill Miller with a pistol between 8 and 9 o’clock on the evening of September 24, 1943. He was found guilty and his punishment fixed iat 21 years in prison.

Complaint is directed (1) to the contents and manner of admission of a dying declaration; (2) the giving - of an instruction on the reckless handling of the pistol; (3) the court’s refusal to admit surrebuttal testimony; (4) the admission of evidence as to a poker game and -certain remarks attributed to Burchfield; and (5) the refusal of the court to set aside the swearing of the jury because of certain remarks made by employed counsel for the Commonwealth in his closing argument to the Jury.

We will dispose of the last ground urged for reversal at the outset, because no reference was made to it in the motion and grounds for a new trial. As said in Anderson v. Commonwealth, 288 Ky. 576, 156 S. W. 2d 860, no rule is more firmly established in the judicial •procedure of this state than the one which forbids this Court to consider on appeal matters occurring; at the trial before the verdict which were not set out in the motion, and grounds for a new trial.

Burchfield and Miller were miners and both lived at G-lo, in Floyd County. There was no evidence showing there had been hard feelings between them before the killing. It seems to have been the custom for a good many miners to gather in a cow pasture between Ulo *551 and the nearby town of Estill on Sundays, at which time a good deal of card playing and drinking went on. Miller iand a brother of Burchfield had been playing cards during the afternoon. There was testimony also showing that the appellant had been playing. During the day his brother pawned a 45 pistol to him and the testimony for the Commonwealth shows that he was flourishing it and that he fired it twice during the afternoon. A Commonwealth witness said also that Burch-field said-he was the meanest man on the place.

Complaint is directed to the evidence showing what the appellant had said and done during the afternoon on the ground it was too remote from the time of the killing, namely 8:00 or 9:00 p. m., and that it had no connection with the offense with which he was charged. We are of a different view, however, because we think this evidence tends to show the state of mind and general attitude of the appellant. This view is strengthened by the further statement attributed to him after he and Miller left the cow pasture and went in the direction of Estill to the effect that Miller had beat him out of $10.

While the appellant, Miller and Johnny Wells, the principal witness for the Commonwealth, were in Estill, Miller got some whiskey. • Burchfield said he took one drink of it. It was upon” the return of the trio from Estill that the shooting took place. Wells said that, as they were returning from Estill, the appellant told Miller that he stole $10 from him and that he was going to kill him; after they crossed the wire fence Burchfield ran ahead of the party about 30 feet and called to him to join him which he did over Miller’s protest; and as to the shooting he said:

“A. I walked on up to him and Bill Miller followed me up there and I was on one side — I don’t know which side I was on — and Bill Miller was on the other side and Bill made a step like he was coming toward him, about ia half of a step and Jake had this gun in his left hand and he said: ‘God damn you, don’t you come another step, I’ll kill you,’ and Bill made a turn to go back down and Jake shot him, and when Bill fell I started to go down to him and Jake said: ‘Johnnie, don’t you do that, God damn it.’ ” Wells said also that Miller was unarmed; was not advancing toward Burch-field at the time of the shooting; and was only about six feet from him when the shot was fired. The bullet *552 entered Miller’s left side and passed through, his body. Several witnesses for the Commonwealth, who came upon the scene immediately after the shot was fired, said that, in answer to Burchfield’s statements to the effect he and Miller were scuffing over the gun and that it went off accidentally, Miller said it did not happen that way. Miller was taken to the hospital and died two days later.

The testimony relating to the dying declaration was given by Miller’s daughter. She was not examined out of the presence of the jury before the statement was admitted. She said that, while in the hospital, her father told her: “Your Daddy is going to die. You have always been a good girl, and I want you to promise me you will always be ia good girl.” After saying again her 'father told her he was going to die, she said that he gave her the following version of the shooting:

“A. He said him and Johnny Wells went to Estill and were coming back around the cow pasture and Jake said: ‘I am going to kill you, you son-of-a-bitch’, and Daddy said: ‘No, I haven’t done anything to you’, and he said: ‘Yeah, I am going to kill you’, and Daddy said: ‘Here, take a drink of liquor’, and Daddy said then he shot him and snapped at Johnny Wells and Johnny Wells went running to get some man and then I went out of the room, I didn’t want to listen to him.”

Burchfield said that as he was getting through the fence the pistol dropped on the ground and he picked it up and was carrying it in his left hand as he and Miller were going around the path; he was walking to the right of Miller; the latter asked him to let him have the gun so he could shoot under Wells’ feet; when he refused to let him have it Miller jerked him around and made a dive for the gun with his left hand and when he grabbed it it went off accidentally; Miller said, “I am shot smack through”; and when he said, “I hate this, Bill,” Millet replied, “Yeah, but it can’t be helped.” Testimony was offered for the appellant showing that Johnny Wells had a bad reputation for truth and veracity, and that shortly after the shooting he was heard to say, “I don’t know whether he is dead or not — when I left there his head was on one side of the road and his body on the other.” Albert Green testified that he lived about 100 or 150 yards from the scene of the difficulty, and that while he was looking out an upstairs *553 window he saw Miller and Burchfield, and the former suddenly grabbed Burchfield’s gun and while they were scuffling it went off. The Commonwealth offered two witnesses in rebuttal, who said they heard Green say he was down in his garden when the shooting occurred. One of these witnesses said also that it would have been impossible for Green to have seen the shooting in the daytime, because of two trees and a slate dump which were between his home and the scene of the shooting.

The morning after the case was closed counsel for the appellant sought to reopen it for the purpose of introducing three witnesses, who, according to his avowal, would have testified that immediately after court adjourned on the preceding day they went to the home of Albert Green and stood by the side of the house next to Beaver Creek, and from there they could see the place on the pathway where Miller was shot.

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Related

Davidson v. Commonwealth
340 S.W.2d 243 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1960)
Jackson v. Commonwealth
275 S.W.2d 788 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1955)
Henry v. United States
204 F.2d 817 (Sixth Circuit, 1953)

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Bluebook (online)
186 S.W.2d 412, 299 Ky. 549, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burchfield-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1945.