Combs v. Commonwealth

58 S.W.2d 663, 248 Ky. 456, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 257
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 24, 1933
StatusPublished

This text of 58 S.W.2d 663 (Combs 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
Combs v. Commonwealth, 58 S.W.2d 663, 248 Ky. 456, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 257 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

— Affirming..

The appellant, Marshall Combs, was indicted by the Perry county grand jury, charged with the willful murder of Willie Eversole.

Upon his trial at the February, 1932, term of the-Perry circuit court, he was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter, and sentenced to confinement in the state penitentiary for ten years.

This unfortunate tragedy and triple killing, presented by the record before us, is in its tragic coloring-almost like the storied and dramatic family feuds, staged between the hostile Montagues and Capulets, with their costly death toll, exacted as grievous penalty for their baleful and bloody clashes.

The actors and victims alike, in this sanguinary mountain drama, were for the most part closely bound by ties of domestic family relation and kinship.

The appellant, Marshall Combs, was a brother-in-law of the deceased, Willie Eversole, who had married his sister, Nora Combs.

The aged and boastful “bad man,” Ira Combs,, was the father of the appellant and Nora Combs, and. father-in-law of the deceased.

The widow, Jane Combs, a vicarious sacrifice in this unfortunate melee and running amuck of these inter-family belligerents, was a sister of the deceased,, Willie Eversole, and she and her little daughters lived, as members of his mountain household, together with, his wife, Nora, and her father, Ira Combs.

The appellant and deceased were also cousins, and the witness, Jesse Miller, implicated in this general fight pictured by the evidence, was also a kinsman of' the deceased.

The scene of this annihilating conflict was in Perry county at the home of the deceased, situated at the. mouth of Clear fork and Grapevine creek.

*458 The appellant, Marshall Combs, is shown to have '.been at this time a deputy sheriff of Perry county.

On the morning of this eventful day, November 19, 1931, the deceased, Willie Eversole, had left his home to go up Grapevine, to the Blue Diamond coal camp, upon a business trip. Later, while returning home, he had fallen into the company of Jesse Miller and John Hensley, who, both astride Miller’s nag, rode back with him to his home.

It appears that the deceased had, while on this trip, secured a generous supply of home brew, in which Re and his two companions frequently indulged upon their homeward way, making one of their stops by a roadside schoolhouse, when its pupils were being dismissed, and where the deceased and his drinking" companions were seen by his little niece, Leo Combs, ard her schoolmates, who, upon reaching home, reported to her mother, Jane Combs, this fact, with other descriptive account of them and their conduct there, with the further statement that they • had better get her Uncle Willie away from these men or they would kill him.

A short while after this, the deceased, together with Miller and Hensley, arrived at his home" by a roundabout route and went to the barn.

Nora Combs Eversole, the deceased’s wife, having seen their detoured approach and entrance into the barn and having heard the disturbing report given just before by little Leo, as to her apprehension for her Uncle Willie, at once left the house and went to the barn, where she ordered Miller and Hensley to leave.

Her testimony is not clear as to just what was the condition of things she found there at the barn, or as to what she found these drinking companions doing, but states that her husband, Willie, then drew his pistol and fired four shots in the barn, after which Miller left, saying that he didn’t want to have any trouble; that Willie then reloaded his pistol, took her by the shoulder ■and said, “You need not think I am afraid of your G- d- brother either,” and, slinging her back into the barn, started forth; that she soon followed him, when the first thing she saw was the meeting of her husband and dad, Ira Combs, who, his gun in hand, ■called, “Bill, drop that gun,” when Willie dropped *459 his hand and pistol, and she hollered, “Daddy, he has. it down,” bnt before she conld reach her father, Jane-had grabbed at his gnn, drawn on her brother, when he' shot her; that, when Willie saw his sister shot, he grabbed her by the hair and slnng her into the creek on a. rock pile and shot three times at her dad. She testifies-that she was dazed by her fall apon the rocks and did. not see the farther stages of this family fight then, going on, bat apon regaining conscioasness, after the war clonds had cleared, she foand her hasband, Willie,, lying across the branch, dead, and heard her father,, Ira Combs, calling to her brother, “Tarn me over, Marshall, I am dying,” and saw, too, her sister-in-law, Jane-Combs, there lying close by him, dead.

The appellant, Marshall Combs, states that he had’, started ap Grapevine creek to serve some warrants, and in passing had stopped by his sister’s and father’s. ■ home jnst a few minates before his brother-in-law,. Willie, and his friends, retarned and went to the barn; that he did not see them come in, bat had heard Leo tell her mother, Jane Combs, of having jnst seen Willie- and his companions while on her way home from school,, and that they had better get him away from them or they woald kill him. Jast a few minates after this,, hearing the foar shots fired at the barn, Ira Combs arid, the appellant, Marshall Combs, each holding in their hands a .45 calibre pistol, started from the hoase towards the barn, followed by Jane Combs, when the-appellant states he saw Jesse Miller come oat of the barn and get off his horse and his brother-in-law, Willie Eversole, come oat of the barn, running with his-pistol in his hands, when his father said something to Willie and Willie said, “I am the worst G- d-man yoa ever seen. Yoa Combses ain’t nothing,” and looking ap and seeing appellant also coming, he told, him to get on down the creek and that he woald kill, him if he didn’t go; that, hearing this, his father, Ira. Combs, then drew his pistol on Willie and said, “Yoa ain’t seen no bad man,” and aboat the same time Jesse Miller “stepped in” with his pistol in his hand, when appellant said, “Willie Eversole, yoa are ander arrest. Give me that pistol and let’s go to the hoase”; that, aboat that time Jane grabbed his father’s pistol and Nora jnmped in front of Willie, when Willie grabbed her by the hair and slang her down into a rock pile and Dad’s pistol went off and shot Jane, and Willie. *460 Eversole fired two shots at his father and two shots at him, when his father fell on the ground; that Jesse .Miller fired three shots, either at him, the appellant, or Willie Eversole; that appellant thought he heard his father, Ira Comhs, again fire his gun after the shot that killed Jane Combs, but didn’t know, as he was ■dodging Willie Eversole, who was shooting at him at that time; that, as soon as the shooting was over, his father called, “Marshall, come to me. I am dying,” when he ran over and took his pistol, in which there were five empty shells; and that he looked around and saw Willie lying over there dead, and Nora, his sister, •came up and said, “Go to Shade Davidson’s and get the car and take these people to the hospital,” as his father and Jane were still then living, but Willie Ever-sole was dead.

Further, he testifies:

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.W.2d 663, 248 Ky. 456, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/combs-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1933.