Clair v. Commonwealth

159 S.W. 523, 154 Ky. 711, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 133
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedSeptember 19, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 159 S.W. 523 (Clair 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
Clair v. Commonwealth, 159 S.W. 523, 154 Ky. 711, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 133 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Settle

Reversing.

Tlie appellant was tried and convicted of voluntary manslaughter in the court below, under an indictment charging him with the murder of Jack (Bummer) Spicer. The homicide occurred in Breathitt County, but, on application of the. Commonwealth’s attorney, the venue was changed to Powell County where the trial took place. Three grounds were relied on by appellant for a new trial, and are now urged for -a reversal of the judgment, viz.: First, absence, at the time of the trial, of counsel whom he had first employed in his defense; second, the refusal of the circuit court to grant h::m a continuance, on account of the absence of one of his material witnesses; and third, newly discovered evidence.

The complaint presented by the first ground is wholly, without merit. It appears from the record that appellant, before the case was transferred from the Breathitt to the Powell Circuit Court, had employed Messrs. Adams, Holiday, and Redwine, of the Breathitt bar, to defend him, and that they were not present at the trial of his case in the latter court. The record, however, does not disclose why they were absent, nor does it show that appellant made any complaint of their absence, or that he asked a continuance of the case because thereof. But, it does show that shortly before the term of the Powell Circuit Court at which he was tried he employed.C. F. Spencer, of the Clark County bar, and later employed J. D. Atkinson, of the Powell County bar, to make his [713]*713defense, and that he was represented throughout the trial by both Spencer and Atkinson.

If appellant had been of the opinion that he could not safely go into the trial without the'presence of Messrs. Adams, Holiday and Redwine, he should have made that fact known to the court when the case was called for trial and asked a continuance on account of their absence. Having failed to urge his complaint of the absence of counsel named at the proper time, such complaint could not be considered' by the court as a ground for a new trial. Cook v. Commonwealth, 114 Ky., 586; Stephens v. Commonwealth, 9 Rep., 742; Brown v. Commonwealth, 7 Rep., 451.

•Appellant’s second contention presents a more serious question and, in order to intelligently pass upon it,' consideration' of the evidence introduced on the trial is here necessary. It, in brief, discloses the following state of facts: On Sunday, January 7, 1912, appellant went to the store of Henry Noble on Wolf creek, in Breathitt County, to make a settlement of some business he had with Noble. He there met the deceased, Jack Spicer, and a number of other persons. Spicer, who was partially intoxicated and armed with a pistol, encountered appellant in front of the store and, without provocation, cocked the pistol and presented it at him, remarking at the time, “I am the worst damned son of a b — h that ever hit this county.” Upon seeing the pistol thus pointed at him, appellant said to Spicer, “Don’t do that, Bummer. What do you want to kill me for, I am your friend.” It does not appear that Spicer made any reply, but, at that juncture, William Moore, who was standing near, caught Spicer’s arm and shoved the pistol away, so that it no longer pointed at appellant. Appellant then went into the store and requested William Allen, a deputy sheriff present, to go to Spicer and disarm him,saying at the time, “He cocked and presented his pistol on me out at the door and tried to kill me. If he does that any more, I will shoot his heart out.” Allen refused to perform the service requested of him by appellant, giving as a reason for such refusal that, as he and Spicer were not on friendly terms, the latter would shoot him if he attempted to disarm him.

Down to this point there is no controversy as to what occurred. The facts, thus far stated, were established by the testimony of appellant alone, as William Moore was the only other person with appellant and Spicer in [714]*714front of the store, and Moore was not present at the trial. As to what' occurred later in the store and at the time of the homicide, numerous witnesses gave their testimony. That of the Commonwealth, furnished by Henry Noble and Bud Noble, was to the effect that Spicer, when he walked into the store, had his pistol in his right hand, holding it by the muzzle; that he presented the handle to Henry Noble and said to him, “Henry, come and get her,” and that, as he thus held the pistol, appellant jumped at Spicer, caught and held him by the hand, drew a pistol and fired five shots at him, the last one striking Spicer in the back of the head after he fell to the floor.

The testimony of appellant, and at least four other witnesses, as to what occurred in the store and at the time of the shooting, radically differs from that of the two witnesses for the Commonwealth. It was, in substance, that appellant, while standing in the door immediately before Spicer entered the store, was cursed and threatened by the latter and ordered by him to stand back out of the door; that appellant, after remonstrating with Spicer, left the door and stepped back a few feet therefrom, whereupon Spicer entered the store, with pistol in hand, the muzzle of which he pointed at appellant as if to shoot him, and, while in this position, his hand was grabbed by appellant, and while holding him in this position appellant shot and killed him, in the manner already indicated.

It may well be said that, while the testimony of the two witnesses for the Commonwealth conduced to prove that the shooting of Spicer by appellant was inexcusable, appellant’s testimony, and that of the several witnesses introduced in his behalf, as strongly conduced to prove that, in shooting Spicer, he acted in his necessary self defense. In view of this situation, the testimony of William Moore, the witness on account of whose absence appellant asked a continuance of his case, was very material and important to his defense. If, as stated in the affidavit for the continuance filed by appellant, Moore would have testified as to what occurred between appellant and Spicer in front of the store as the facts were related by appellant in his testimony, the corroboration thereby given the testimony of the latter would, in all probability, have had great weight with the jury. The facts as to what occurred in front of the store were known only to appellant and Moore. As the other wit[715]*715nesses were all, at the time, in the store, they did not profess to have heard or seen what passed between appellant and Spicer before the latter entered the store, and the jury, by reason of the manifest desire of appellant to escape conviction for the killing of Spicer, were doubtless disposed to regard, with suspicion, his unsupported testimony; whereas, if it could have been corroborated by that of Moore, the inducement to them to have accepted it as a true statement of the facts would have been calculated to have caused a different verdict. •In order to realize the importance to appellant of Moore’s corroboration of his statement as to what occurred in front of the store, it may be remarked that it would have served to show the violent character and maliciousness of Spicer, the condition of his mind immediately preceding the killing, and that the motive with which he thereafter entered the store was to follow up and bring on a difficulty with appellant, for the purpose of inflicting upon him bodily harm or killing him; also that appellant had attempted to avoid a difficulty with hrm,

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Related

Dunn v. Commonwealth
237 S.W. 1072 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 S.W. 523, 154 Ky. 711, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clair-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1913.