Dewberry v. Commonwealth

44 S.W.2d 1076, 241 Ky. 726, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 156
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 18, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 44 S.W.2d 1076 (Dewberry 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
Dewberry v. Commonwealth, 44 S.W.2d 1076, 241 Ky. 726, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 156 (Ky. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Richardson

Affirming.

This appeal brings to us for review the indictment, trial, and conviction of Walter Dewberry of the charge of willful murder alleged to have been committed in Hardin county, Ky., by the shooting and killing of *728 Thomas Tillery on. the 8'th of April, 1931. He was convicted by a verdict] of the jury and his punishment fixed at death, and from the judgment sentencing him, he appeals. ,

Walter Dewberry, Charles Kogers, and Walter Holmes, alias Jack Strong (negroes), about April 6, 19-31, left the city of Chicago, 111., for Nashville, Tenn. They were armed with pistols and traveling in an automobile. They arrived in Elizabethtown, Hardin county, Ky., in the nighttime. On observing men trying to flag them to stop, and hearing shots which they construed as an effort to stop them, they turned their car into a short street. Coming to the end of it they turned the car with the intention of returning, when on observing another car coming into that street, and hearing another shot, they jumped out of their car and ran. They traveled four or five miles across the country through the fields. They came to a railroad track which they followed until they came to the home of Thomas Tillery. This appellant claims that while crossing a fence in making the trip, and before they came to Tillery’s home, he sprained his ankle, and for that reason he was walking behind his two companions. He states, that before reaching the borne of Tillery, Ms two companions “passed a motion” to rob Tillery of his automobile. When they reached Tillery’s home, his two companions went onto the porch of his residence, and he, the appellant, stopped at the edge of the porch. One of Ms companions knocked on the door, while he himself was resting on the porch. Her got up and went toward them while they were stating to Tillery they wanted to borrow Ms automobile pump. He heard Mr. Tillery state that he had no pump. His companion stated to Tillery, “We will leave money for the pump.” He saw one of his compafflons break and enter through the window, and the other one turned to go in. They began to fire pistols on the inside of the room. There were two shots fired inside the house and when he heard the shots he began to shoot Ms pistol, and continued to do so until he had no more cartridges in it. He claims that a white man came out of the home of Tillery and struck at Mm with a stick, and he grabbed him and they scuffled until he felt the arm of Tillery, or the man he was grappling with, give way, “the man was shot”; that he saw blood come through his shirt. He used this language: “I don’t know whose pistol he was *729 shot from — I don’t know whether it was my pistol that shot him, but it was not in my mind anyway to kill him. . . . The shot was fired but it was done unintentionally by my pistol, anyhow after that I got a chance to get away from him, I felt he was weakening and I left him to lay on the ground and when I got up to run off and leave him he was up on his feet again just_ like a jack-out-of-the-box. ... I ran on down to the highway and saw this boy Charlie . . . and I .said, ‘I don’t know whether I shot him or who shot him, ... we better move on out of the way before we get caught.’ ” He claimed that on account of his sprained ankle he went to a field and remained all night. When he awoke next morning he heard voices calling, when a man came out of the field and asked him if he was in the killing.

Dewberry made a confession to the county attorney of Hardin county and, on another occasion, to a detective in Louisville. His confessions are more favorable to him than his testimony before the jury.

The appellant and his two companions arrived at the home of Mr. Tillery about 1 o’clock in the nighttime, on April 8, 1931. Tillery and his wife were occupying a bed in one room; a boarder was occupying a room directly over their bedroom, and his son-in-law and daughter were occupying a bedroom in a different part of the residence. There were double windows in the room occupied by Tillery and his wife. Mrs. Tillery, on hearing a knock at the door, got out of bed, looked through a window and saw a negro passing it; a knock was heard by her at the door opening onto the porch. Then her husband got out of bed and went to the window which opened onto the porch. On reaching the window, Tillery raised the shade when a negro addressed him, saying he wanted to get an “auto pump”; wanted to borrow it. Tillery stated to him that he did not know him, and did not want to let him have the pump. Then the negro proposed to leave money for it until he could bring it back. Her husband then told them that he would not go out and get it for them, and he refused to do so; then the -window pane crashed, a shot fired, her husband screamed and groaned, when she leaped and crawled under the bed. 'She heard two voices inside the room saying “Stick ’em up, stick ’em up.” She did not know when her husband went out of the house. There was no light in the room at the time the shooting was occurring. She could only see by the flash of the fire of the *730 pistols. After Tillery and the men left the room there was firing outside; the bullets went through the walls of the house; two of them striking the door facing over the bed. She aroused her daughter and son-in-law, and they listened on the porch where they heard and recognized her husband’s voice, coming from the direction of the cattle guard on the railroad; he was calling for help. They got him to the house, found he was shot through the abdomen, the bullet passing through the body. A doctor was called and examined Tillery and advised that he be taken, and he was taken immediately, to the hospital, arriving there about 5 o’clock the next morning. He died at 12:10 p. m. There were other wounds and lacerations on Tillery, one on the scalp, one along the frontal region of the head, one along the hair line, superficial wounds on the left hand and the bottom of his feet. The gunshot entered directly under the rib, practically at the nipple line, and its exit was almost directly behind, just below the rib posterior. The gunshot wound produced his death.

The appellant, Dewberry, was arrested next morning in a field and immediately conveyed to, and confined in, jail. On April 20, 1931, a special term of court was held, a grand jury was impaneled and an indictment returned, charging the three negroes with the crime of willful murder committed by the shooting- and killing of Tillery. The defendants were brought into court and the Honorables Haynes Carter and J. E. Wise, able and distinguished attorneys practicing at that bar, were appointed by the court to represent the appellant, Walter Dewberry. They accepted the appointment and undertook to, and did, represent him in the preparation of his defense of the crime, charged, until the calling of the prosecution for trial on the day the trial began. After waiving formal arraignment and entering a plea of not guilty, the case was set over to April 28, 1931; the defendants were remanded to jail in Jefferson county. On the 28th day of April, the prosecution against Walter Dewberry was again called for trial and Carter and Wise again appeared as his counsel, when defendant informed the -court that “he had employed counsel in the person of C.

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Bluebook (online)
44 S.W.2d 1076, 241 Ky. 726, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dewberry-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1931.