Ferrell v. Commonwealth

195 S.W. 495, 176 Ky. 330, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 49
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 15, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 195 S.W. 495 (Ferrell v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ferrell v. Commonwealth, 195 S.W. 495, 176 Ky. 330, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 49 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Chiep Justice Settle

Affirming.

The appellant^ Joe Ferrell, a man of color, was jointly indicted with five other colored men in the Fayette circuit court for the murder of Thomas Kirkpat■rick, September 25, 1916. Upon his separate trial the jury returned a verdict of guilty of murder, as charged in the indictment, and fixed his punishment at death. His motion for a new trial having been overruled, he was duly sentenced by the circuit court; and from the judgment of conviction he now prosecutes this appeal.

The homicide in question occurred September 25, 1916, at night, on South Broadway street near its intersection with Chair -avenue, in the city of Lexington. It appears from the record that the appellant is a resident of Wilmore, Jessamine county, and that he and his five co-defendants were members of a crew employed on a construction train of the Southern Railway Company; that on the night of the killing they came to Lexington and about nine-thirty o ’clock, together entered the saloon of Cast & Company, on the corner of South Broadway and Christy streets, a block from the scene of the killing, for the purpose of obtaining drinks. When they entered the saloon the deceased, Thomas Kirkpatrick,- a white man, was in the saloon. Kirkpatrick had been drinking heavily and in fact was so drunk that he walked'with difficulty. It appears from the evidence that after en[332]*332tering the saloon appellant and his five companions stepped to the bar and each took a drink, and that Kirkpatrick, in his drunken condition, staggered or bumped against one of them. Jesse Morgan, a witness for the Commonwealth, who was in the saloon at the time and whose statements are not contradicted by any other witness, testified as to what then occurred as follows:

“Directly they came in. He (Kirkpatrick) was standing talking to somebody and he fell up against them. I don’t know who he was talking to, but he was talking to somebody and fell over against them and they said, 'Damn you, stay off me, don’t fall on me,’ and he said, 'I am not afraid of you’; and they were talking and one word brought on another and about a dozen words passed, and then these darkies went in the rear room and were all bunched up together in the back room, and they left him inside of the barroom or the partition, the partition door was wide open and one of them said, 'We will get him when we get him on the outside. ’ ”

"When testifying as a witness on appellant’s trial, Morgan identified him as the man who said in the saloon, “We will get him when we get him on the outside.” At .the beginning of the altercation, W. J. Rice, the bartender, was in the back part of the saloon, but upon hearing the disturbance he came to where the parties were and told them that he could not permit that kind of conduct in his place of business, and then took Kirkpatrick and led him out of the saloon through the front door, which opens on Broadway street. Immediately after Kirkpatrick was put out of the saloon, appellant and his companions, who were at that time, by order of Rice, in the back room, hurriedly left the saloon through a side door leading from the rear room of the saloon on to Christy street, and in the same hurried manner proceeded along Christy street into Broadway. When they turned the corner of the saloon, entering Broadway, Kirkpatrick, who upon leaving the saloon by the front entrance had talked down Broadway, had then reached a point more than half a block from the saloon. Appellant and his companions, upon reaching Broadway, rapidly walked in couples in the direction taken by Kirkpatrick, who was all the time in their view. Appellant and one of his companions composed the advance couple. The witnesses Brock, Terrell and Bosworth, all saw the appellant and his companions walking rapidly, and one or more of them say, almost running, in the direction of Kirkpatrick. Terrell testified that he was walking down Broadway-in the direction [333]*333taken by Kirkpatrick; that he’ saw him overtaken by the advance conple under the shed of McCrystal’s grocery, near the corner; that one of the men was leaning' up against the wall, but in the language of the witness, “the other man was working on the fellow. I thought he was hitting him with his fist, but on a little closer look I saw he was using a knife.” According to Terrell’s further testimony, when he got near enough to attract the attention of appellant and his companions they ran down Chair avenue. Kirkpatrick only lived a few minutes after receiving the wounds and died either while they were putting him in the ambulance or on the way to the hospital. Bosworth, another witness who saw the killing, was in the saloon when it was entered by appellant and his companions. He.testified, as did Morgan, to the occurrence in the saloon, agreeing with both Morgan and Rice, the bartender, that when Rice put Kirkpatrick out at the front door he told the appellant and his companions to leave by the rear door, at which time Bosworth, as did Morgan, heard one of them make the remark, “We will get him on the outside.” The witness further testified that he went out the front entrance as Kirkpatrick left, and saw him going down Broadway followed by appellant and his companions; that he saw them catch up with him and gang around him. From the point at which he viewed the scene he was unable to tell what they were doing, but shortly after they had surrounded Kirkpatrick, they broke and ran down Chair avenue, after which Kirkpatrick walked a short distance from where they left him to Jones’ restaurant and there fell.

Dr. L. R. Gordon, who is a physician and also the coroner of Fayette county, testified that he made an examination of the-wounds received by Kirkpatrick; that they were eleven in number, all in the back, and that these wounds were cuts or stabs made by a knife, at least two or more of them being sufficient to cause death. It further appears from the evidence that appellant and his companions made their escape from Lexington that night, but were arrested in Wilmore, Jessamine'county, early the next day; that when appellant was arrested, the constable making the arrest, found on his person a knife upon which there was blood, and also blood on his clothes. The identification of appellant and his five co-defendants as constituting the party in the Gast saloon and later engaged in the attack upon Kirkpatrick was complete. Appellant did not testify upon the trial of the case nor did any of his co-defendants. He, however, [334]*334introduced two or three witnesses who testified that Kirkpatrick had the reputation of being a quarrelsome man while under the influence of intoxicating liquors. It is believed that the outline here given of the evidence presents all the salient facts leading to and connected with the killing of Kirkpatrick.

The same grounds urged by appellant for a new trial in the court below are now relied on by his counsel for a reversal of the judgment of conviction. They are two in number: (1) Because appellant, upon the advice of his counsel, did not testify in his own behalf on the trial in the circuit court. (2) That the court erred in failing to instruct the jury on the law of self-defense.

The affidavit of appellant, filed in the court below in support of his motion for a new trial, admits that he alone inflicted the wounds which caused the death of the deceased, but claims that they were inflicted in his necessary self-defense, and recites the testimony he would have given in support of that claim had he testified in his own behalf, and which he would yet give, if granted a new trial.

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445 S.W.2d 845 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1969)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 S.W. 495, 176 Ky. 330, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferrell-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1917.