Ellison v. Commonwealth

225 S.W.2d 470, 311 Ky. 757, 1949 Ky. LEXIS 1244
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 11, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 225 S.W.2d 470 (Ellison 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
Ellison v. Commonwealth, 225 S.W.2d 470, 311 Ky. 757, 1949 Ky. LEXIS 1244 (Ky. 1949).

Opinion

Chief Justice Sims

Affirming.

Baymond Ellison, about 37 years of age, was convicted of murdering his 12 year old wife and sentenced to death. He seeks to reverse the judgment on two grounds: 1. The verdict is not supported by the evidence and is the result of passion and prejudice; 2. incompetent evidence was admitted against him.

The evidence is wholly circumstantial, accompanied by proof of threats appellant made that he was going to get rid of his wife, together with some incriminating conduct on his part as well as remarks it was testified he made while a search was being’ conducted to find deceased. After the Commonwealth closed the case no proof was offered by or on behalf of accused and the case was submitted to the jury on the evidence for the Commonwealth.

' Deceased was- last seen on Friday afternoon, Mar. 26, 1948, and ten days thereafter, on Sunday, her body was found on the bank of Mud Biver with her head in the water and her legs and feet out of it. The river had been out of its banks' and the backwater was receding when the body was found. It was clothed in a sweater, skirt and underclothes and there were lowcut shoes on the feet. There was a rag around the neck which was tight enough to make a mark.

Dr. Herman ' S.. Parish, who examined the body when it was taken to a funeral home, testified there was no water in the lungs and the skull was fractured above the right ear by some blunt instrument. That there was a rag around the neck which left a mark and blood in the chest which could have been caused by strangulation. The doctor stated it was his opinion that the girl was dead when placed in the water and death was due to strangulation.

*760 Russell O’Neil, County Attorney, testified over appellant’s objection that accused had been charged with carnal knowledge of this girl in the Fall of 1947 and when he married her in December of that year this ■charge was dropped. Mrs. Harrison Sims, the mother of deceased, gave practically the same testimony as the county attorney relative to accused being charged with carnal knowledge of the girl and these charges against him being dropped when he married her in December 1947, just a few days before her twelfth birthday.

After their marriage the couple lived in an humble home in a remote section of Muhlenberg County about three-quarters of a mile from Mud River. Around 5 o’clock on Friday afternoon, March 26, 1948, appellant reported to his neighbor, Percy Beliles, that his wife was missing and requested Beliles to drive him to her father’s home at Dunbar in Butler County, which Beliles did. Appellant stated to J. L. Benton that during the afternoon he had started walking to the town of Rochester to get his mail and some cigarettes when a cloud came up and he turned back and went home. Upon arriving there he found his wife was gone, as were her best clothes. Beliles testified that appellant had previously said to him he was going to get rid of his wife when the nine months were up.

Floyd Hatcher and Ray Benton also testified that appellant had told them he was going to get rid of his wife when the nine months were up. Charles Taylor, an ex-convict, stated appellant said to him, “They can make me marry her, but they can’t make me keep her.”

Percy Beliles further testified that when they did not find the girl at the home of her father on Friday night, he took appellant to the office of the county attorney the next day and advised appellant, “The best way to find her is to get bloodhounds.” Appellant stated he had no money and when Beliles offered to raise the money, appellant said he did not want to do it and used these words, “I done looked at the electric chair once. The least I can have said about it, the better I can be.” Thereupon, Beliles suggested organizing a searching party to which appellant said, “I don’t want to do that. Me and you can go over there and look around.” Mrs. Beliles heard appellant tell her husband he did not want to get bloodhounds and that he had faced, the electric *761 chair once over this girl and didn’t want to do that any more.

A searching party was organized and looked for the girl several days. During the progress of the search appellant went to the home of his niece, Mrs. Agnes Beliles, and in the course of a conversation with her he expressed the opinion that his wife would never be found. She told him the girl would be found, to which appellant replied, “Yes, I guess that is so, but if they find her in the river, how are they going to prove I was the one that done it. It is hard to prove anyone done it when nobody seen them do it.”

J. L. Benton testified to .the effect that after the search had been unsuccessful some of the men said they would start dragging the river the next day. Thereupon, appellant voluntarily surrendered himself to the jailer. The county attorney also testified appellant did this when it was suggested that the river would be dragged. Charles Taylor stated there was no feeling or threats against appellant to cause him to surrender himself to the jailer, but that appellant told him that he would feel safer in jail. While in jail appellant said to Taylor, “I may be alive, and she may be dead, but when she was (is) found I guarantee she will have nothing in her mouth — no rags in her mouth. ’ ’

Thomas Givens,, a neighbor, saw a fire in appellant ’s garden as if he were burning it off the last day of March or the first day of April, while the search was in progress. Witness found a piece of cloth in the ashes which he wrapped up and gave to the sheriff. G. ft. Cannon, a merchant, • testified he had sold deceased a coat the last of February or the first of March, and he identified this cloth as being a piece of the coat he sold her.'

On Monday morning, following the disappearance of his wife on the previous Friday afternoon, a pair of wet trousers were found in appellant’s home. The sheriff testified appellant in accounting for this fact told him his house leaked. The county attorney testified appellant accounted to him for the wet trousers by saying he had washed them about midnight Sunday.

The Sheriff, Otis Robinson, described tracks of a *762 man and a child he followed from accused’s home to the river. He did not measure the man’s tracks, hut the child’s tracks measured the same as the oxfords on deceased’s feet when her body was found. Charles Taylor testified to these tracks and said only those made by the feet of the man went into the water and these tracks came out 8 or 10 feet upstream; that there was mud on some bushes about waist high some 30 feet from the ' water. According to Taylor, these tracks were the same as the size of appellant’s shoes and those of his wife. Ed Buchanan described these tracks as “a man’s tracks and a small woman’s tracks;” that the man’s tracks-measured the same as appellant’s shoes. Buchanan further testified there was mud on some bushes near the river which were broken off about waist high.

From this rather lengthy and detailed resume of the proof it is apparent there was sufficient evidence to take the case to the jury and to sustain the verdict even though the death penalty was inflicted.

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Related

Little v. Commonwealth
419 S.W.2d 332 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1967)
Shirley v. Commonwealth
378 S.W.2d 816 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1964)
Holt v. Commonwealth
354 S.W.2d 30 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1962)
Bowman v. Commonwealth
290 S.W.2d 814 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1956)
Ramsey v. Commonwealth
267 S.W.2d 730 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1954)
Warren v. Commonwealth
256 S.W.2d 368 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1953)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
225 S.W.2d 470, 311 Ky. 757, 1949 Ky. LEXIS 1244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellison-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1949.