Foure v. Commonwealth

265 S.W. 443, 205 Ky. 62, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 35
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 14, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 265 S.W. 443 (Foure 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
Foure v. Commonwealth, 265 S.W. 443, 205 Ky. 62, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 35 (Ky. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Commissioner Sandidge

Beversing.

■ Appellant, Mat Foure, was tried in the Bockcastle circuit court under an indictment charging him with [64]*64murder. The jury found him guilty and fixed his punishment at confinement in the penitentiary for life. Judgment of the court was duly entered and he prosecutes this appeal. This appellant is one of four defendants jointly indicted for the murder of Chester Mullins. The appeal of another of the defendants has heretofore been considered by this court in Gillis v. Commonwealth, reported in 202 Ky. 827. The facts introduced in evidence upon the trial of the two cases are substantially the same and théy may be had by reference to the Gillis case. In this opinion we shall confine ourselves to only such of the facts as affect the questions being considered.

When the difficulty arose that resulted in a number of shots being fired, some of which struck and killed Chester Mullins, it appears that appellant, who was the police judge of Livingston, Kentucky, and who was and had been totally blind for eighteen years, was in company with W. F. Gillis, the marshal of that town, and James Roberts, and that Mullins, who was killed, was in company with John Poynter. The meeting of the parties occurred on one of the streets of that town and in the nighttime. Shots were fired from both sides, the evidence being conflicting as to the number of persons on either side who took part in the shooting. Poynter, testifying for the Commonwealth, stated that Gillis began the difficulty by shooting at him. Appellant Foure and the two above named who were with him stated that .the difficulty began by either Poynter or Mullins first shooting at appellant Foure. About thirty minutes before the difficulty in which Mullins was killed some one fired several shots in the vicinity of the place where the killing later occurred. Each side charges the other with having fired those shots. Between the time the first shots were fired and that when the second shots were fired the Commonwealth’s witness, Poynter, went to the home of Mullins, who later was killed. The surviving widow of the deceased, while testifying for the Commonwealth, was permitted to testify over the objection and exception of appellant that when Poynter came to her home at that time he told her husband that somebody had been shooting at him and that he wanted Mullins to go home with him because he was afraid to go by himself. .It was proper for the Commonwealth to prove that Poynter went to the home of Mullins and requested him to go. home with him, but it was erroneous to permit the witness to testify as to what Poynter said to Mullins about the shooting that had occurred shortly before then. That [65]*65evidence was incompetent for two reasons. First, coming from Mrs. Mullins it was mere hearsay, and second, Poynter’s statements on that occasion were in the nature of self-serving declarations. The same rule should apply to the testimony of the witness Poynter with reference to what occurred at the home of Chester Mullins when he went there after the first shooting had occurred, because anything he may have said to Mullins on that occasion in the way of making testimony for himself as to who was responsible for the shooting that had occurred were but self-serving declarations.

While testifying for the Commonwealth, the surviving widow of the deceased stated that her husband took no weapon with him when he left home to go with Poynter. That clearly was competent. Mullins was killed within a short distance of his home. He was carried back to his home by some of his neighbors immediately after the shooting. He lived some half to three-quarters of an hour after reaching home. To further strengthen her testimony that her husband had no weapon with him that night, Mrs. Mullins testified that when the neighbors brought her husband in she told them that he had no pistol with him that night, and called their attention to the fact that his pistol was at home by turning back the mattress of the bed and showing it to them. This testimony was not objected to. What she said and did to establish that her husband had no pistol on the occasion in question was not competent but was admitted without objection or exception. The defendant offered to contradict her and to show her bias as a witness in the following way: She was asked on cross-examination if, at the time she stated to those who brought her husband home after the shooting that he did not have his pistol and pointed out to them the pistol under the mattress, her little boy, Tom, didn’t speak up and say, “Chester took the big pistol,” and if she didn’t then say to the boy, “hush.” We hold that as Mrs. Mullins had testified as she did about telling those who brought her husband home that he had no pistol and about showing the pistol to them, it was competent to contradict her in the manner offered by the defense. Upon another trial none of that testimony should be admitted.

Poynter, the Commonwealth’s witness, who, with Mullins, was engaged on one side in the difficulty that resulted in Mullins ’ death, is the stepson of the appellant Foure. It appears from the record that some domestic trouble arose in the Foure family because of rumors that [66]*66had gotten abroad that Foure was paying too much attention to a Mrs. Martin, who lived in the town of Livingston. Poynter resided elsewhere but had returned to Livingston about a week previous to the homicide upon receipt of a letter advising him of that fact. It is the theory of the Commonwealth that appellant desired to have Poynter killed because he interfered in that matter; that' the shooting which resulted in Mullins’ death was done by the Foure crowd in an attempt to kill Poynter. It was proper for the Commonwealth to introduce sufficient evidence if it could to establish that motive for Foure desiring to have Poynter killed, but upon the trial of appellant upon the charge of having aided and abetted the murder of Chester Mullins it was highly improper and prejudicial to go into the details or undertake to establish the truth or falsity of the rumors that appellant Foure had been guilty of misconduct with the Martin woman. Upon his cross-examination the court below permitted the Commonwealth’s attorney to go,much further into that question than was proper. Over the objection of'the defendant the court permitted the Commonwealth’s attorney to ask appellant and required him to answer how many times he had taken the Martin woman out of town or brought her back, and how many times she had been out car-riding with him, and whether or not he had taken her to London, and whether or not while there they registered as husband and wife, and whether or not they stayed in- the same hotel and how long they remained in London, and whether or not appellant paid for their dinner and other questions of like import. That testimony was not material to the issue under the charge for which appellant was being tried and was highly prejudicial to him.

The witness, Eliza Westerfield, who testified for the Commonwealth, told of seeing some man near her gate shortly before the shooting occurred from which Mullins was killed. After stating that she did not recognize the man or know who he was and other facts that establish that -she did not and could not have known who it was, she was permitted, over the objection of defendant, to testify that she thought it was W. F.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
265 S.W. 443, 205 Ky. 62, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foure-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1924.