Davenport v. Commonwealth

148 S.W.2d 1054, 285 Ky. 628, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 444
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 7, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 148 S.W.2d 1054 (Davenport 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
Davenport v. Commonwealth, 148 S.W.2d 1054, 285 Ky. 628, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 444 (Ky. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Sims, Commissioner

Reversing.

The defendant, J. C. Davenport, was convicted of *632 murdering his wife and Ms punishment was fixed at life imprisonment. He assigns eight errors in seeking to reverse the judgment: 1. The indictment was defective; 2. he was entitled to a peremptory instruction, if not, then the verdict is flagrantly against the evidence; 3. evidence was introduced against him which was secured through an unlawful search of his home and store; 4. the court failed to instruct the jury on the whole law of the case, and an incorrect instruction was given; 5. the court erred in the admission of impeaching testimony against him and his witnesses, and in rejecting competent character testimony offered in his behalf; 6. as the sheriff and a deputy were material witnesses against defendant, they should not have been put in charge of the jury, also they failed to heed the court’s admonition; 7. the names of expert witnesses did not appear on the indictment, also they did not qualify as experts; 8. improper argument by counsel representing the Commonwealth.

A brief resume of the evidence is necessary for a decision of the case. Defendant was a widower with five children, all of whom were married and had homes of their own, except Junior, a 14 year old boy who lived' with his father. Mrs. Davenport was a divorcee with four children, ranging in ages from 7 to 17, all of whom resided with her in the home of their stepfather. She was 36 years of age and had been divorced about seven years. Defendant was 62 years of age when they married in the summer of 1938. He operated a general store at Salem in Livingston County, -with his residence immediately adjoining, and a door connected the store with the bed room occupied by, the couple. Their bed room was shared with Mrs. Davenport’s 7 year old daughter, Lavern. Her three boys ranging from 13 to 17 years of age and Junior Davenport slept upstairs almost directly over their parents’ room. The sleeping quarters of the boys was reached by a stairway ascending from the dining room just behind Mr. and Mrs. Davenport’s bed room.

The family appeared to be happy. Mrs. Davenport assisted her husband in the store; he usually had domestic help for her about the home; and the children and their stepfather got along well together. There was no trouble between defendant and his wife and her children outside of the small upsets occurring occasionally *633 in most families. The Commonwealth proved no motive which would prompt defendant to kill his wife.

About 4 o’clock on the morning of Friday, Oct. 27, 1939, James Hill, the 17 year old son of deceased, was awakened by the screams of his 7 year old sister and defendant calling him. The electric lights were off. He rushed downstairs partly dressed, obtained a flash light and found his mother dead lying across the bed in her night clothes with one arm almost reaching the floor and a large puddle of blood on the floor near the center of the bed. He found defendant in the adjoining living room lying on the floor in his underwear in which he had slept. James obtained an electric fuse, soon had the lights burning and he, or some near neighbors who had come in, summoned Dr. Waddell, Sheriff McCandless and an undertaker, all of whom arrived around 4:30.

Dr. Waddell testified Mrs. Davenport had been dead from one to two hours and that she died as a result of three wounds, each about one and a quarter or one and a half inches long, one over each ear and the third near the center of the back of her head. Each wound went to the brain and any of the three was capable of producing almost instant death. There were a couple of marks on each side of her throat. The doctor testified the defendant was lying on the floor in the living room with blood splotches on his underwear. His face was smeared with dry blood but upon looking in his nose with a flash light, no coagulated blood was revealed. Defendant testified his nose bled a good bit through the day, Saturday, and he was unconscious and does not remember talking to Dr. Waddell, the sheriff or others who testified he conversed rationally with them soon after the prime was discovered. His daughter, Miss Lovey, and his son, Junior, testified defendant’s nose was bleeding while he was lying on the floor and on the davenport soon after his wife’s body was found, and they gave him handkerchiefs which he used in blowing his bloody nose. Dr. Waddell found a slight swelling behind defendant’s right ear and a woimd in the back of his head but the skin was not broken, and he was perfectly conscious with good pulse and respiration. However, he gave defendant a hypodermic. In the opinion of Dr. Waddell, Mrs. Davenport’s wounds might have been inflicted by an iron bar (hereinafter referred to) by licks made with it when held in a position parallel *634 with the floor; also, that the bar could have inflicted defendant’s wounds had he been struck lightly with it. There were some 35 or 36 spots of blood on the wall between the bed room and the living room and some 5 or 6 such spots on the wall between the store and the bed room.

Defendant testified to the- effect that Friday was pay-day at the mines and he had taken in considerable cash and from $60 to $70 in cheeks. Upon closing his store that night he put the cash in his pants pocket, leaving the checks and some' change in the cash drawer. During the night his wife woke him, saying there was somebody breaking in the store. He regarded it as a false alarm, dosed off to sleep, and she aroused him again. This time he got out of bed, obtained his pistol from a nearby chiffonier and at the request of his wife threw his pants to her. Just as he passed from the bed room through the archway to the living room, going in the direction where he heard the noise, he was struck on the head and thrown against a chair. As he raised his arm he was hit again and this was the last he remembered until he regained consciousness sometime around 6 o ’clock in the morning. Besides the two licks on the head he was scratched on the right arm. He was robbed of some $165 in cash, his pistol, his watch; also, his wife’s watch and keys were taken. The cash drawer in the- store was found opened with the change taken from it, but the checks were intact. The next day 14c was found near a gas pump in front of the store.

Sheriff McCandléss and Albert Agee, night watchman in Marion, and Driskill, a deputy sheriff, were going through defendant’s home and store soon after their arrival on the scene looking for cines as to the perpetrator of the crime. Agee found an iron bar about an inch in diameter and some two and half feet long with a bent, or turned-up, end on a shelf in a feed room adjoining the store on the opposite side from defendant’s dwelling. A butcher knife was found on the floor near the bed. It and the iron bar, the cash drawer and a door knob from the front door were taken to a finger print expert in Paducah, but he was unable to develop any finger prints on any of these objects. Henry C. Freimuth, of Washington, D. C., thoroughly qualified as a technical chemist, with the degrees of Bachelor of Science and Doctor of Philosophy from New York Uni *635 versity.

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Bluebook (online)
148 S.W.2d 1054, 285 Ky. 628, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davenport-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1941.