Etherton v. Commonwealth

55 S.W.2d 343, 246 Ky. 553, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 783
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 16, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 55 S.W.2d 343 (Etherton 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
Etherton v. Commonwealth, 55 S.W.2d 343, 246 Ky. 553, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 783 (Ky. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Hobson, Commissioner

Reversing.

Burr Etberton and Ms son-in-law Ernest Watts were indicted in the G-raves circuit court for the will *556 ful murder of Ira Graviett. Etherton was placed on trial; he was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter and his punishment feed at eight years’ imprisonment. He appeals.

Etherton was living with his son-in-law in Graves county. A neighborhood picnic or dance was given on June 29, 1930, near the home of Watts, and quite a crowd attended. While the dance was going on, about midnight, a fight occurred between Richard Boaz and Dock Mason near the dance ground. Ernest Watts and Chance Graviett, who was a brother of Ira Graviett, were dancing. Ernest Watts went up to Chance Graviett and spoke to him about the fight. Chance Graviett answered with an oath, and thereupon Ernest Watts struck him. A struggle ensued, and when they were separated Ernest Watts went to his father-in-law, Burr Etherton, to borrow his pistol. Etherton was standing outside of the dancing ground and near the corner,. between it and the road, and declined to give Watts the pistol. Ira Graviett was inside of the dancing ground with his wife, but near the other corner. She urged him to go home. He declined. The proof is conflicting as to what occurred. The proof for the commonwealth, briefly put, was this:

Watts knocked Chance Graviett’s hat off; ran backwards with his hand in his pocket, and said “I am going to put you where the dogs can’t lick you.” He went around to Etherton and asked him to give him his gun, and Etherton «aid: “I have got this gun myself.” Watts said: “Give it to me, by God you won’t do nothing.” Etherton said: “Yes, by God I will stop them, I will get the son-of-a-bitch. ” So Ira Graviett walked around and asked Etherton what he was going to do with that gun, and Watts said, “Shoot him.” Ira Graviett held out his hands and said: “See, I an’t got nothing, what are you going to do with that gun?” Watts said, “Shoot him,” as many as three or four times. Etherton threw the gun up, and when he did that Ira Graviett reached out to strike his arm and knocked it down, and when he knocked it down Etherton shot him in the stomach. As soon as Ether-ton shot Ira Graviett, Chance Graviett ran in and caught Etherton and went to the ground with him, and was trying to take the pistol away from him when Watts got a chair and knockefi Chance Graviett down and he was unconscious for some minutes.

*557 On the other hand, the proof for the defendant was, in substance, this: He had not gone to the picnic when it started, but had walked down later in the evening to see what was going on, and had taken no part in anything that had occurred. After he got there, Ira Graviett came up to the stand, mad a*nd cursing’; he had his knife in his hand and hit the stand and said“Let them fight, the whole God damn world fight.” His wife tried to get him to go home. He, with an oath, refused to go and swung from her facing Etherton, and about twelve or fifteen feet from him, and said: “You God damn son-of-a-bitch there ain’t nothing to you.” As he said this, he advanced on Etherton, and Etherton then said, “Ira don’t crowd rne.” He had his pistol in his pocket but had not drawn it. Graviett had his knife in his hand, and when he got near to Etherton, Etherton backed off. He backed something like fifteen or twenty feet, and when he got in the edge of the road he stepped in the ditch and fell to his knees. Graviett then advanced on him with his knife and he shot him. He makes these questions and .answers:

“Q. When did you take the pistol out of your pocket? A. When I knelt when I fell I came out with the gun.
“Q. Where was Chance Graviett? A. He was advancing with a coca cola bottle.
“Q. Did he ever hit at you? A. He hit me one lick. * * *
“Q. How come you to shoot Ira Graviett when you shot him? A. To keep him from killing me, to protect myself.”

The court gave the jury the usual self-defense instruction, telling them in substance to find the defendant not guilty if they believed, and had reasonable .ground to believe, that he was in danger of death or some great bodily harm at the hands of Ira Graviett. It is earnestly insisted for the appellant that the instruction was erroneous and that the court should have instructed the jury as indicated in the case of Buttery v. Com., 211 Ky. 23, 276 S. W. 969, 970, where, condemning a similar instruction, the court said:

“The instruction in this case only gave to the appellant the benefit of self-defense if he was, or believed he was, at the time in danger of death, or *558 the infliction of great bodily harm, at the hands of Shelby Marcum, and did not embrace those then present and acting in concert with him.”

The proof in this case is more like the proof in Simpson v. Commonwealth, 245 Ky. 202, 53 S. W. (2d) 364, decided October 7, 1932, where a like objection was urged and was held unavailing upon the ground that the evidence of the appellant himself showed that at the time he shot he apprehended, peril only at the hands of the decedent. The evidence of the defendant here does not show any facts warranting him in concluding that when he shot he was in danger at the hands of Chance Graviett. There had been no words between them and there had been no previous ill feeling. The trouble had been entirely between Chance Graviett and Watts and had grown out of what Graviett considered an improper view that Watts had taken of the difficulty between Boaz and Mason. His own testimony does not show that Chance Graviett had done anything of a hostile character to Etherton before Etherton shot Ira Graviett, and the evidence, as a whole, makes it perfectly clear that Chance Graviett did nothing until after his brother was shot. The statute provides that a judgment of conviction shall not be reversed for any error on the trial, unless upon the whole case it was prejudicial to the substantial rights of the defendant. Upon the whole case here the court is clearly of the opinion that if the instruction, worded as appellant now says it should have been worded, had been given, it could have had no effect whatever on the result of the trial under the proof.

Appellant insists that the court erred in the following rulings on the admission of evidence and other objections:

The court admitted evidence as to the fight between Boaz and Mason and the fight between Ernest Watts and Chance Graviett. But these occurred on the ground there and led up to the difficulty between Ira Graviett and Etherton; one followed practically on the other within a few minutes. The details were not shown but only the fact of the fighting, and without this what followed could not be properly understood. The facts were properly admitted.

Louis Graviett stated that when Watts asked Etherton for the pistol, Ira Graviett and Etherton *559 were making right at each other and then there was this question and answer:

“Q. Will you describe the appearance of Burr Etherton at that time? A. He looked pretty vigorous. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
55 S.W.2d 343, 246 Ky. 553, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/etherton-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1932.