Coats v. Commonwealth

230 S.W. 947, 191 Ky. 521, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 344
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 17, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 230 S.W. 947 (Coats 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
Coats v. Commonwealth, 230 S.W. 947, 191 Ky. 521, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 344 (Ky. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Turner, Commissioner

Affirming.

The appellant, W. H. Coats, and his son, Lawrence Coats, were jointly indicted, charged with the murder of Alex Harris.

Upon their joint trial Lawrence Coats was acquitted, but appellant was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter and sentenced to twelve years’ imprisonment.

His motion and grounds for a new trial were overruled, and he has appealed.

The admitted facts are, that some time prior to the day of the homicide W. H. Coats and Alex Harris had a difficulty about the right of Harris and his family to the use of a certain passway or right of way across the lands ,of Coats, and that on the day of the homicide they had each, together with some members of the family of each, been to the county seat to attend a trial wherein Coats was charged with a breach of the peace growing out of the difficulty with Harris. On the trial Coats was acquitted, and in the afternoon of that day Harris and his party left the county seat before Coats and his party did, but the Harris party stopped on the road at the home of a relative named Deweese and there took a late afternoon dinner. While they were at the home of Deweese, which was near the road where Coats’ party had to pass, they passed and were observed by at least some of the members of the Harris party, and the Coats party reached home before the Harris party left the home of Deweese.

Coats, upon reaching his home, unloaded from his wagon some groceries and other things which he had purchased and then got his double-barrel shotgun and announced his purpose of going to another part of the farm to feed the hogs, but abandoned this immediate intention [523]*523because of a suggestion by his wife that she would go with' him if he would wait until after supper. He then put down his shotgun against the fence in the yard and proceeded to do some other things. About that time he was notified by some member of his family that the Harrises were coming up* the disputed passway from the direction of the Deweese home. His son Lawrence was at the time at the barn, some little distance away. Upon receiving this information he took his shotgun and, accompanied or followed by two or three of his daughters, started toward the passway or road so as to intercept the Harris party, and, as he says, for the purpose of telling them again that they were not to use the passway. The son Lawrence, being at the barn, also started toward the passway, probably along a different route from that taken by his father. At any rate, appellant testifies that he did not know his son was at the. place of the difficulty until after it was over.

The parties met in the pássway, and from that time on the evidence as to what occurred is very contradictory.

The Harris party consisted of Alex Harris and two of his young grandsons, and his daughter-in-law and two or three other smaller children. One of the young grandsons, as all of the Harrises say, was leading a mule, and another carrying a single-barrel shotgun, while Harris himself was on horseback and unarmed and all other members of the party walking. . ■

The deceased, Alex Harris, was 75 years of age, while appellant was 46, and the evidence fails to show that Harris dismounted from his horse at any time during the difficulty, but shows that after being shot he fell therefrom and .shortly died.

The difficulty began at a point on the road about 25 or 30 yards from a sharp turn therein going towards the house of Harris, and the point where Harris fell from his horse was after he had made that turn going towards his home.

The evidence for the Commonwealth, in substance, is that when he came to the road or passway and intercepted the Harris party, appellant ,said to the daughter-in-law, whose name was Lucy: “Lucy, you and the children step aside!” and then said to Alex Harris and Ernest the elder grandson, “Alex, you and Ernest stop!” and that appellant then immediately shot at Ernest Harris, who in the meantime had taken from his younger brother, John, a single-barrel shotgun, and that appel[524]*524lant, after so shooting at Ernest, turned a little bit and shot at Alex Harris, who was on the hors'e; that Ernest Harris, after appellant had shot twice and was reloading his gun, shot at appellant and struck him in the shoulder, and then turned around and ran back in the direction whence he had come; that appellant, having reloaded his gun, then started after Ernest and shot at him ag’ain, but abandoning the chase after Ernest, he turned back and followed the old man, who was on the horse and who had turned the corner in the road, and shot him twice after he had passed the corner and at about the point where his body was found; that Lawrence Coats was present during the difficulty and had a pistol and fired some several shots from it; that the deceased was shot on the inside of his right leg, whereby one of the large arteries was severed, from which he died.

It appears also that Lawrence Coats was shot during the difficulty, and the evidence for the Commonwealth tends to ¡show that at the time appellant was shot, Lawrence was standing behind him and on higher ground, and that the same .shot which struck appellant in the shoulder also struck Lawrence in the leg.

On the contrary, the ¡evidence for the appellant shows that when he reached the road he said to them that he did not want them to use that road any more', and that Ernest Harris, who in the meantime had taken the shotgun from John, immediately opened fire on him and wounded him in the shoulder, and that Ernest Plarris fired some four or five shots, and that appellant fired only two shots and both of them at Ernest Harris; that Lawrence C'oats did not have a pistol on that occasion and did not fire a shot, and the evidence for the defendant tended to show, that the shot fired by Ernest, and which struck appellant in the shoulder, was the shot which struck and killed Alex Harris. The appellant .states that, when he reached the road and notified the party that they must not use that pass-way any more, Alex Harris, who was leading the Harris party on horseback, said, in substance, that he had started and he was going, and rode around appellant and left him (appellant) facing Ernest Harris, who had the single-barrel shotgun, and that when Alex Harris rode around and got behind appellant, and Ernest Harris shot appellant in the shoulder the deceased was in direct line behind appellant and must have been shot by the same shot which struck him in the- shoulder. Appellant’s own evidence, and that of the member's of his family present, [525]*525is that he never fired a shot at any time at Alex Harris, and that Ernest Harris shot some three or four times, and shot one or more times at Lawrence Coats.

On the night of the homicide the sheriff, McCabe, with several others went to the place of the difficulty and there found the body of Harris. Desiring to remove the body to the home of deceased, it became necessary for them to get a blanket in which to handle the body, and with that purpose in view they went to the nearby residence of appellant and there the sheriff had a conversation with appellant with reference to how the difficulty occurred, and on the trial the sheriff was permitted to state that in response to a question from him, the appellant stated to him that Mr. Harris was coming towards him with his hand on his hip when he shot him.

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238 S.W. 182 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
230 S.W. 947, 191 Ky. 521, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coats-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1921.