Edwards v. Commonwealth

74 S.W.2d 949, 255 Ky. 492, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 272
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedSeptember 28, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 74 S.W.2d 949 (Edwards 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
Edwards v. Commonwealth, 74 S.W.2d 949, 255 Ky. 492, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 272 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

OPINION op the Court by

Drury, 'Commissioner

Affirming.

Emmet Edwards has been convicted of robbing the Crab Orchard Banking Company, has been sentenced to seven years’ imprisonment, and has appealed.

The Evidence.

Two men entered this bank about noon on July 7, 1933, and by putting the cashier in fear, by exhibition of guns, robbed it of $2,748.63 in currency, and of $10,-000,. or $15,000 in securities, the latter belonging to its customers. They then locked the cashier in the vault' and escaped. There is evidence that shortly thereafter two men driving rapidly in a blue Chevrolet roadster (this we call car No. 1) came from the direction of Crab Orchard to an underpass under the L. & N. R. R. They got out of the blue roadster and got into a maroon or wine-colored Chevrolet coupe with green wheels that had been parked there a few moments before, and left, going back through the underpass and in the direction of Crab Orchard. They had with them two guns and a sack or sacks which they transferred to the wine-colored car with the green wheels; this we call car No. 2.

*494 Defendant’s Connection.

The defendant had been seen that morning at a rock quarry near Crab Orchard with two men who got in a car and concealed their features. In a few minutes Edwards got in the car and left with them. Later in the day, and near noon, Edwards was seen riding in a wine-colored car with green wheels. This car stopped near the Edwards home, he got out and went in, and the other two men in the car left, going in the direction of Crab Orchard. About a half hour later this wine-colored car (No. 2) came back from Crab Orchard and turned into a road known as the Deep Well Woods road. Later Emmet Edwards was seen driving' this car (No. 2) and driving fast. Later this car (No. 2) was found backed off the road and concealed behind some willows.

Defendant’s Story.

The defendant tells a puny tale that in the early afternoon he started out to get a mess of fish. He heard' a car coming; he thumbed it for a ride. The car stopped and he got in. He claims that he did not know the occupants. They were excited, were driving fast, and refused to let him out. They had a machine gun. Finally they came to a place where a car was parked. This is car No. 3 in the transaction. These two men got out of car No. 2 and told him to get under the wheel of the car he was in (No. 2) and drive off. This was the wine-colored car with the green wheels (No. 2), and they told him, so he says, it would be too sad if he opened his mouth. He then drove to and concealed it (No. 2) in the willows mentioned. Then he started home. About a mile from where he left the car some officers picked him up, which he says was the first he had heard of the robbery of the bank. He expressed great surprise, but, strange to say, instead of mentioning that he had been kidnapped that afternoon and how he had been treated, he told them he had been killing fish. They came to a road intersection, and, instead of telling the officers the direction he now says his alleged kidnappers had gone, he suggested to the officers that perhaps they had gone in the direction of Maywood, which is in the opposite direction from the place where his alleged kidnappers had got out of the wine-colored car (No. 2) and forced him to drive it away.

The Money Pound.

There was some evidence that one of the men seen with Edwards that morning at the rock quarry and that *495 was riding around in (¿bis wine-colored ear (No. 2) was Alfred Moore. Moore was arrested in Tennessee, and the officers found $562 in a suitcase belonging to him. Some $300 of the money taken from the bank had just come in that morning; it was in new $1 hills. Something like 150 such hills were recovered.

The Securities Found.

On a side road in or near this Deep Well Woods road which Edwards had traveled on the afternoon of this robbery there is a culvert, in which there was a broken plank. Some days after the robbery a Mr. Catron passed there. He dismounted and replaced the plank. Something was obstructing the flow of the water, and in removing that obstruction Mr. Catron found some notes, school bonds, shares of Crab Orchard Bank stock, and other papers, which he delivered to the assistant cashier of the bank. A day or so after that, having got out on bond, Edwards was seen apparently looking for something at or near this culvert, and, when he saw the witness, Edwards got in his car and left.

The Conspiracy.

> Since Edwards was not at the bank, there participating in the robbery, he cannot be convicted therefor unless he had conspired with the active participants to aid them in its doing or to assist them in escaping after it was done.

The court in the instructions told the jury:

“* * * And if you believe beyond a reasonable doubt from the evidence in this case that said Em-met Edwards wilfully and feloniously provided the means of transportation to or from said Bank, or aided and assisted therein, and feloniously being then and there present in convenient distance to receive, hide and conceal the automobiles used in said robbery, and in going to and from said Bank, and abetting and aiding and encouraging therein and present at a convenient distance for said purpose, you will find the defendant, Emmet Edwards guilty. ft ft ft 9 y

That does not mean Edwards must own all or any of the three cars used, but, if he owned none of them, and only knowingly placed or helped to plan the placing of any of these three cars, or knowingly and willingly took any part in the planning of the placing, in the placing, the driving or the concealment of any of them, he *496 was guilty. Of course, the evidence of Ms participation in this conspiracy is only circumstantial, but such is so almost always. Parties forming a conspiracy do not send a herald with a horn to sound alarm and make announcement of what they are doing or going to do, as is done when a circus comes to town, but they plan and operate in secret, and we must discover what they have done from the circumstances of its doing. Space forbids our recounting here all of the various circumstances connecting Edwards with what was done, but we have given enough to show his guilt was properly submitted to the jury and that its verdict is sustained by the evidence.

Alleged Errors in the Evidence.

Edwards objected to a number of questions relative to the identification of Moore and of the money found in Moore’s suitcase, and his objections were overruled. This was not erroneous. Of course, Moore’s guilt is not the guilt of Edwards unless he had some part,in the doing of what Moore is said to have done, which was properly submitted under the instruction from which we have quoted.

The defendant testifies the two men with whom he was seen at the rock quarry on the morning of the robbery were Ebb Jones and Clarence Jones. Their home is in Rockcastle county, but they are now somewhere in Ohio. When Edwards was first tried on November 21, 1933, the jury failed to agree. He was convicted on his second trial, which was begun on March 6, 1934. These Jones men did not attend either trial.

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Bluebook (online)
74 S.W.2d 949, 255 Ky. 492, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1934.