Epperson v. Commonwealth

13 S.W.2d 247, 227 Ky. 404, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 875
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 18, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 13 S.W.2d 247 (Epperson 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
Epperson v. Commonwealth, 13 S.W.2d 247, 227 Ky. 404, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 875 (Ky. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Drury, Commissioner—

Reversing.

The defendant, Roy Epperson, was charged with the murder of his wife, Blanche Epperson. He was found guilty of manslaughter and his punishment fixed at confinement in the penitentiary for ten years. About 1:30 *406 on the morning of April 12, 1927, Blanche Epperson was shot with a pistol, from which she died about 20 minutes later. Whether this wound was self-inflicted, or was inflicted by her husband, is a question sharply disputed.

About 1:15 on the morning of April 12th, Nelson Armstrong, a crew caller for the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company, by which Roy Epperson was employed, called him by telephone, and a woman’s voice answered. Armstrong asked her if Roy Epperson was there, and she replied, “Yes.” He asked her if she would call him for the 2:15 train, and she said, “Yes.” Armstrong hung up, and aside from Roy Epperson, no one ever spoke to Mrs. Epperson thereafter. About 20 minutes to 2, Roy Epperson called the desk sergeant of the Ashland police force and said to him, “Blanche has shot herself.” Immediately thereafter, according to the testimony of G-oldie Maggard, a telephone operator, the defendant called for Dr. W. O. Eaton, and she says he was crying and screaming at the time. The defendant claims that he also endeavored to call Mrs. Hiram Pope, his wife’s mother, by telephone, but could not get her, so, barefooted and in his nightclothing, he ran to the home of his wife’s parents, and waked them and told them what had happened. As he returned to his home, he met policemen • Orpin and Justice of the city of Ashland. These officers testified that when they entered the house, they found Mrs. Epperson on the floor, clad only in her nightgown, and that there was a bullet wound in her chest, close to the heart. There was no powder burn on the clothing of the- dying woman, nor was there any bullet hole therein. There was no powder burn on her body. The room was in great disorder. The bedclothing was scattered over the floor, some feathers from a pillow were scattered about the room, a catch on the door leading to the dining room had been recently broken off and was lying’ on the floor. A pistol was discovered on a chifferobe in the room, an umbrella was found which was bent, and there was some other evidence of a struggle. Mrs. Epperson was alive, but was in a moribund.condition. There is no evidence that she said a word after the officers got there. She lived about ten minutes. Roy Epperson’s account of this is that he was aroused by his wife’s effort to wake him, that she had pulled the cover off of him and had slapped and spanked him, and in her efforts to wake him had scratched him on the face. While he was yet half *407 awake, his wife took from the drawer of the chifferobe a pistol and shot herself. That is about all the evidence there is that directly bears on the question presented.

Roy Epperson now insists that he was entitled to a directed acquittal, but he arrives at that conclusion because his explanation of the matter makes this clearly a case of suicide, so he says. In determining whether a peremptory instruction should be given or not, the question is not, does the weight of the evidence indicate the defendant is innocent? but is there any evidence of his guilt? and here there was some evidence of his guilt. If Roy Epperson had offered no evidence, the evidence offered by the commonwealth would have been sufficient to have sustained the verdict, and if a peremptory instruction is authorized, it is because there is no evidence to sustain a conviction. This woman was dead, and her husband was there with her at the time, and admitted that they had had a sort of tussle in her efforts to awake him, so the court did not err in refusing to direct his acquittal. Nor did the court err in giving an instruction on voluntary manslaughter. He insists that this was either a case of murder or a case of suicide, but instructions must present to the jury every question that is raised by the evidence, and what we have said about evidence of a struggle was sufficient to authorize the giving of a manslaughter instruction.

His next complaint is directed to the action of the court in refusing and admitting evidence. Mrs. Epperson was a woman five feet five inches tall. She was 27 years old, and weighed 325 pounds. She was very sensitive about her age, and her size; talked of it; and Epperson offered evidence to show that; to show that her health was bad, and that she had threatened to commit suicide. This the court improperly excluded. See Wilkerson v. Com., 76 S. W. 359, 25 Ky. Law Rep. 780. The court should not have permitted evidence to be introduced to show that his father-in-law paid his house rent, as that threw no light on the question before the jury. In a search of the premises, the officers found some moonshine whisky in a bottle in the pantry, and the court erroneously permitted that to be proven. We cannot see that that illustrated anything touching’ defendant’s guilt or innocence of his wife’s death. The court declined to permit him to say whether or not he loved his wife. This was improper, though we will admit that any *408 statement lie might make on that subject'would have but little probative force.

Something over twelve hours after this woman died, the commonwealth’s attorney and others made some experiments by trying to bend her arm around to see whether or not it would have been possible for her to have shot herself where she was shot, and the court improperly permitted that evidence to be introduced. The living human body is a wonderful piece of mechanism, and what it can do while-living cannot ordinarily be determined by experiments conducted on it when dead. Some measurements were made of her arms in her then cold and stiffened state. The court improperly permitted that to be proven as a part of the efforts of the commonwealth to show this woman could not have shot herself. None of this evidence about the experiments made on this corpse or the measurements of the corpse should have been admitted. The sheriff of the county was introduced, and he was permitted to testify that he had taken a towel and tacked it on a log and had fired into it with Epperson’s pistol at a distance of six inches, at a distance of one foot, and at a distance of two feet, and was permitted to exhibit this towel, with powder stains thereon, to the jury. The courts have been very careful about admitting evidence of such experiments. See 22 C. J. sec. 849 et seq., particularly section 852.

In the case of State v. Justus, 11 Or. 178, 8 P. 337, 50 Am. Rep. 470, where a material question was the distance between the muzzle of the gun and the body of the victim of an alleged murderous design, evidence of the result of experiments as to powder marks, made upon pasteboard targets by firing a gun at varying distances, was excluded upon the ground that the human body is fundamentally different in nature and texture from the substances upon which the experiments were made. To the same effect is People v. Solani, 6 Cal. App. 103, 91 P. 654, where white paper was used; McAlpine v. Fidelity & Cas. Co., 334 Minn. 192, 158 N. W. 967, where white paper was used; Morton v. State (Tex. Cr. App.) 71 S. W. 281, where pasteboard was used; Reagan v. State, 84 Tex. Cr. R. 468, 208 S. W. 523, where white paper was used; People v. Fiori, 123 App. Div. 174, 108 N. Y. S. 416, where cloth was used.

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Bluebook (online)
13 S.W.2d 247, 227 Ky. 404, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 875, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/epperson-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1929.