Gilbert v. Commonwealth

14 S.W.2d 194, 228 Ky. 19, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 477
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 15, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 14 S.W.2d 194 (Gilbert 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
Gilbert v. Commonwealth, 14 S.W.2d 194, 228 Ky. 19, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 477 (Ky. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Drury, Commissioner

Affirming as to John Gilbert, and dismissing as to Robert Gilbert.

About 5 p. m. on Wednesday, July 6, 1927, Robert Gilbert shot and killed Grover Baker on Bar creek in Clay county. Robert Gilbert and John Gilbert were charged by indictment with murder, and, in the second count of the indictment, Robert Gilbert was charged with murder, and John Gilbert was charged with counseling, advising, encouraging, aiding, and abetting in the commission of the crime. Both were found guilty, and their punishment fixed at confinement in the penitentiary for life. They appealed. The record was filed in this court on March 26, 1928, and thereafter, on May 6, 1928, the defendant Robert Gilbert escaped from custody, and, *22 that fact being properly manifested, the appeal as to Robert Gilbert was, after notice to his attorney, dismissed upon motion of the Attorney General. We have before us now only the appeal of J ohn Gilbert, the father of Robert.

The man slain was 22 years of age. He was a single man, and had been paying some attentions to Miss Jane Gilbert, the 19 year old daughter of John Gilbert. John Gilbert objected to these attentions, and these two young people, perhaps as a result of that, had not met for about a month before the killing. Jane Gilbert had told Baker of her father’s objection to his attentions. On one occasion, Jane had ridden a part of the way home from a meeting behind Baker upon his mule. She dismounted before reaching home, but her father learned of that, and gave her a whipping for it. Baker knew of that. On the day of the killing, Baker, Robert Wilson, and Frank Sizemore were plowing and hoeing corn on the hillside near where the shooting took place. J ohn Gilbert, Robert Gilbert, and other members of the Gilbert family were engaged in a like pursuit upon an adjoining hillside. Between these two hillsides there was a stream known as Bar creek, and running along this creek there is a public road. According to the witnesses for the commonwealth, in the afternoon of this day, John and Robert Gilbert worked for a while, and then went to their house and remained there for about an hour, then returned to their work and worked a while longer. Robert Gilbert sang a vulgar song, and fired his pistol twice saying he felt like a G— d— sheriff. Susie Gilbert, the wife of John, and mother of Robert, came out and spoke to her husband about Robert’s conduct, and told him to bring the boy into the house and put him to bed, but that was not done. They worked for a brief time, and then went into the house. About 4:30 or later, Robert came out of the house with a pair of saddlebags on his arm, walked down to the road, and, when he passed where Baker and his companions were at work, he shook his saddlebags at Baker and motioned to him. Baker laid down his hoe and walked down to the road where Robert was, whereupon Robert said to him: “I am going to' the store. Won’t you go with me?” Baker stopped and turned as if to look at his companions, and dropped his head; then Robert Gilbert drew his pistol and fired four shots, three of which struck Baker, one in the left ear, one back of the left ear, and one just above the-last shot. - These shots ranged towárd *23 the forehead of Baker, but none of them passed through his head. Baker fell, and died in a short time. Robert went back up the road and halloaed, “I have killed the G— d— s— of a b — .” Whereupon John Gilbert said,‘ That is the very G— d— thing I sent you there to-do.” They then went into the house, stayed there a short time, came out with their guns, and went into the woods. The commonwealth’s witnesses, who testified to these things, say they were about 60 or 70 yards away from the spot where this killing occurred; that Baker was unarmed, and had made no effort to do Robert Gilbert any harm. It is admitted that, at the time this shooting took place, John Gilbert was standing about 30 or 40 yards away, with a rifle or shotgun; the witnesses merely speak of it as a gun, but John says he went into the house, got his gun off the rack, and came out. That would indicate it was either a shotgun or rifle, but there is no contention that he did any shooting. Other witnesses for the commonwealth testified to having heard two shots fired about 4 o’clock and to having heard four fast shots fired at the time of the killing.

The account of this killing, as given by the defendants and their witnesses, is practically this: That, during this afternoon, Baker was drunk, and had been mocking-John Gilbert. When John Gilbert would say “Whoa”' to his mule, Baker would repeat it. That Baker had a pistol and would wave and flourish it around when the Gilbert's had their backs turned. That Mrs. Gilbert came out and told them that, and that, on account of that, they went into the house and stayed a while. A little after 4 o’clock Robert Gilbert started down Bar creek to a store to get some sugar and coffee for his mother. That he saw Baker and his companions at work on the hillside, but he did not wave at Baker, but had started down the creek. That his father called to Wilson, one of Baker’s companions, and said, “What is the matter with Baker?” and he heard his father call a second time to Wilson, “Stop Baker, don’t let him go down there and hurt Bob.” About this time, he heard Baker say, “I’ll kill him if I have to run bim down. ’ ’ Robert Gilbert said he drew his pistol then. He could not see Baker for some sycamore bushes between them, but he heard the members of his family screaming and he looked back, and saw Baker coming running behind him. When Baker came up, he spoke and said to him, “Grover, let’s go to the store.” *24 Baker did not answer, but looked “fnnny,” and kept walking upon him, and, when he got within two or three steps of him, Baker said, “I want to know what is the matter with you sons of bitches.” Robert says he replied, “There is nothing the matter with me.” Baker said, “You fellows have been trying to report my still and I’ll kill you G— d — ■ you,” and fired, and that he (Robert Gilbert) then fired three times at Baker. That Baker fell, and his pistol flew out of his hand, and he picked it up and stuck it in his overall bib. All the witnesses for the. defendants say that Robert Gilbert did not holloa to his father and tell him that he had killed the G— d— s— of a b — , and that his father did not answer back, “That is the very G— d— thing I sent you there to do.” No pistol was found on or near Baker, but, if he had one, the absence of it is explained by Robert’s statement that he picked it up. John Gilbert, his wife, Susie, Robert, and his three sisters, Laura, Della, and Jane Gilbert, all say that the killing occurred in this way, whereas Robert Wilson and Frank Sizemore, who were working with Baker, say that it occurred as we have first stated. Just how it occurred was a question for the jury to determine, and the jury has found that it happened as the commonwealth contended. That verdict will have to stand, unless the court committed some error as a result of which the jury may have reached an erroneous conclusion.

In his first and second grounds for a new trial, he complains of alleged errors of the court in admitting and excluding evidence, but evidently he did not appraise these grounds very highly, for he has not discussed them in his brief, and, from our examination of the record, we are unable to find where he could have said very much in support of them.

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.W.2d 194, 228 Ky. 19, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilbert-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1929.