Burden v. Commonwealth

288 S.W. 742, 216 Ky. 787, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 1013
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 30, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 288 S.W. 742 (Burden 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
Burden v. Commonwealth, 288 S.W. 742, 216 Ky. 787, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 1013 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Ohiee Justice Thomas — ■

Affirming.

On May 16,1925, at about the hour of 11:30 a. m., in the mining town of Powderly,' Muhlenberg county, Ken *788 tucky, the appellant, Nellie May Burden, shot and killed Clarrissa Edwards. . She was indicted by the grand jury of that county charged with murder and upon her trial was convicted and sentenced to confinement in the penitentiary for life, and on this appeal from the judgment pronounced on that verdict after her motion for a new-trial was overruled, her counsel insists (1), that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence and is flagrantly against it, and (2)_, that the self-defense instruction was-so drafted as to be prejudicial to appellant’s substantial rights; and to those two. contentions we will proceed to-address ourselves.

Appellant, to whom we shall hereafter refer as defendant, and the' deceased resided in adjoining small mining houses in the mining town of Powderly, and they were each facing the public road running between Green-ville and Central City and were what are termed in this-record as “gun barrel” houses. Defendant claims to have had a garden at the rear of her house and each of them had doors facing the other one close to their rear. According to defendant’s testimony deceased on the afternoon preceding the killing came over to defendant’s house and gave her a severe cursing and abusing for some alleged slanderous report that defendant had circulated against deceased. Defendant denied the accusation, but admits that she gave deceased the same character of tongue lashing. Nothing more seems to have come of that episode, but later in the day two witnesses for defendant testified that while she was at the croquet ground some distance from her house deceased was met by the witnesses and she was carrying a large stick and made inquiry as to the whereabouts of defendant, to whom she threatened to do violence with the stick on account of the same actual or imaginary slanderous report. The witnesses saw defendant and told her of such threats, but. she did not leave the croquet grounds until late in the afternoon, although deceased, some time before that, appeared at the same place but without attempting to execute the alleged threats. Defendant said that in the earlier part of the morning of the day of the killing deceased made a similar assault upon her as she did the day before, accompanied with like abusive language, but no physical conflict occurred at that time. Somewhere about 11 o’clock on the same day deceased, while standing in her back door, again accosted defendant with a *789 severe word assault and while the latter was in her residence either in or near her back door, but no collision of any kind then happened. Defendant testified that immediately thereafter she armed herself and went into her garden to gather some vegetables for dinner and after obtaining them she was going along' the opposite side of her house to its front when deceased came around the front with a large piece of iron in her hand and with it raised threatened to strike her, whereupon she drew her pistol, which was in her dress pocket under her apron, and shot deceased some three or four times, from the effects of which she died. The body of deceased was found with her feet in the public road and her head lying on the bank of the road immediately or about in front of defendant’s house.

The Commonwealth introduced two witnesses who claimed to have seen the essential parts of the difficulty, and they were James Dukes and Brank Dukes, his son, the latter of whom was about 25 years of age. Those witnesses were miners and were in an automobile and had started to Greenville. According to their testimony about the time they passed defendant’s house, which was only 9% feet from the road, they passed deceased leading a small child with no weapon or other thing in her hands. A comparatively short distance they met defendant in the road traveling towards and meeting the deceased and immediately upon passing her they heard the first shot and looked back and saw two or three other shots fired, with deceased backing and making no demonstrations to injure or harm defendant, and that the latter, as soon as she ceased shooting, picked up a piece of iron that appeared to be a part of an automobile spring and which was some seven, eight or ten feet from where she ceased shooting, and she then went and sat upon her front porch, carrying -with her the piece of iron and her pistol. Both of those witnesses stated that defendant had no basket in which she testified she was carrying her vegetables at the time of the shooting. Some testimony introduced by defendant contradicted the prosecuting witnesses on some of the points to which they testified, especially that of distances; and James Dukes was impeached for truth, and veracity. But there was no such testimony as to his son. There was also testimony contradicting defendant in some of the minor details she related.

*790 If the testimony of the two alleged eye-witnesses' introduced ¡by the Commonwealth, one of whom is entirely unimpeached, is to be believed there would appear to be no legal excuse for the homicide, and their testimony is sought to be impeached by only that of defendant as to what occurred and as to the relative situation of the parties immediately at the time of shooting. Her testimony as to difficulties with deceased is unsupported by any witness except as to the threats made by the deceased at the time the two witnesses for defendant saw her with the stick and threatening defendant on the'afternoon prior to the killing. However, all of that testimony, if it was undisputably true, created only a circumstance in corroboration of defendant’s story as to how the killing occurred. Even then the jury may have concluded, and which they were authorized to do from the circumstances, that defendant was smarting under the false accusations preferred against her by deceased and because of the threats of the latter and for that reason she concluded to and did commit the homicide. They may have disbelieved such assaults and threats altogether but did believe the testimony of the two prosecuting witnesses, notwithstanding one of them was impeached, and if so, we repeat, the offense would appear to be premeditated.

We have constantly and repeatedly announced the rule to be that a jiidgment of conviction in a criminal prosecution could not be said to be so flagrantly against the evidence as to authorize the court to set it aside for that reason, unless at first blush it appeared to be the result of passion or prejudice on the part of the jury, or to have been founded upon no evidence of convincing or convicting fbrce. Our opinions are without dissent on that proposition, two of the latest of which are Winchester v. Commonwealth, 210 Ky. 685, and Deaton v. Commonwealth, 211 Ky. 651. Following that rule it clearly appears that we are without authority to reverse the judgment upon that ground, although we might be of the opinion that had we been on the jury we would not have returned so severe a verdict. The contention, therefore, must fail.

Under this contention it is insisted that instruction No. 3, embodying defendant’s right of self-defense, was erroneous in the particular hereinafter pointed out and discussed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 742, 216 Ky. 787, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 1013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burden-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1926.