Gilley v. Commonwealth

133 S.W.2d 67, 280 Ky. 306, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 119
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 3, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 133 S.W.2d 67 (Gilley 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
Gilley v. Commonwealth, 133 S.W.2d 67, 280 Ky. 306, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 119 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Morris, Commissioner

— Reversing.

On September 19, 1938, the grand jury of Whitley County returned a true bill charging appellant with the crime of rape upon Gracie Lee Partin, a female above the age of twelve and under the age of sixteen. Kentucky Statutes, Section 1155.- At the- conclusion of the trial, begun on September 30, 1938, the jury returned a verdict of guilty and inflicted the death penalty. Motion for a new trial was overruled and judgment entered.

In his motion for a new trial appellant advanced six grounds in support thereof, but in brief the following grounds for reversal are urged:

“(1) The record discloses no evidence which showed the alleged offense to have been committed in _Whitley County, or any' circumstances from which venue could lie reasonably inferred.
“ (2) Because the court failed to give the whole law of the case by his failure to instruct on attempted rape, which is a common law misdemeanor (Kitchen v. Com., 275 Ky. 564, 122 S. W. (2d) 121) or, under Section 1155, Kentucky Statutes, which denounces the offense (subsec. 2) of carnally knowing a female who is above the age of 12 and under the age of 16, with consent.
“(3) Misconduct of the commonwealth’s attorney in persistently asking incompetent questions after the court had sustained objections.”

Prosecutrix and her grandmother testified that she was fourteen years of age; there is no dispute on this point. The girl’s father was living, her mother dead; she had been living with her grandmother since she was eight months old.

Prior to June 3, 1938, the day the offense was committed, prosecutrix had never seen appellant but once, and did not then learn his name. Testifying, she says *308 that on the date named, and after 5 P. M. she left her grandmother’s to do the milking. She went to the milk gap, which was about 60 yards from their home. She says she did not see appellant, nor had she seen him that day, although he had been to the Owens’ home, and the home of a neighbor. She testifies as follows:

“I was milking'; this man came up behind me and grabbed me by the back of the neck and put the other hand in my mouth. He took me up the holler out of sight of the house in a sink hole. I hollered just a little, but he put his hand in my mouth. He had hold of my hand this way, and one hand in my mouth. He put me on my back and pulled my clothes up and mismtreated me. He held me by my wrist with one hand and pulled my clothes up with the other. I hollered about three times for Will.”

Will was a relative and testifies that he had been hunting that day; that after he returned home he found his “granny” worried because G-racie had not returned from the milk gap. He said that “granny had been calling her, but received no answer;” that she sent him up to_ the gap and he found the milk bucket overturned, the milk spilled on the ground. He went back and reported that Grade was not at the gap. Later he and another person began to look for her. At one time, not definitely fixed, he called Grade and she answered, “Come to me Will. ’ ’ Later a party was formed and search made for the girl, without result.

We have interpolated the above merely to show that the girl’s story was to some extent corroborated, and we note from a reading of appellant’s testimony that he in part corroborates this testimony.

Resuming her testimony, she further said that appellant “kept me up on the mountain from 5:30 p. m. til about eleven or eleven-thirty o’clock.” In this particular she is perhaps mistaken, since other proof shows that she finally got back to her grandmother’s home about 9:30. Under the testimony related by her it may be conceived that the time seemed much longer than would appear under ordinary circumstances. However, we do not treat the discrepancy to be of more than minor importance. She relates that after appellant had accomplished his designs, some two or three times, she got her hand loose and hit him with a rock and hurried back home.

*309 In detailing just what occurred during the time, she says she was kept in the “holier” up the mountain side. She said that appellant had his person about her private parts; that what he did was painful to her, and that there was nothing she could do to prevent him froBi carrying out his purpose. She said her neck, arms and legs were bruised and scratched, and that during the time she was held up on the mountain side, appellant had intercourse with her “three or four times.” Asked the particular question as to whether appellant’s privates entered, she said, “Yes, sir, sure did.” "When asked whether or not there were other hurts inflicted on her, she said: “It was right down here” (indicating lower private parts), which she said “hurt worse” than the other injuries..

Counsel for appellant, in a well prepared argument, insists that Gracie’s story was improbable, but as we look carefully at the record we are not impressed witu the suggested improbability. She was put through a grilling cross-examination, and held her ground well. Her cross-examination furnishes the basis, as appellant sees it, for some criticism of her testimony.

The testimony, to which we refer, related directly as to what happened after appellant had, as she says, taken her up to the “sink hole.” She more minutely describes how appellant held her-, by the back of the neck, threatened her and put his fingers in her mouth when she “hollered,” and how he pushed her from the milk gap “until he got me where he’wanted me.” She tried to bite his fingers, but says she could not as he had his “fingers bearing down on my mouth.”

She says it was 200 or 250 yards from the milk gap to the sink hole, and 50 or 60 yards from the milk gap to the Owens’ home. She relates: “Just as quick as he got me there he grabbed me 'and throwed me down.” Asked, “You don’t tell this jury his private parts entered you, do you? A. Yes, sir, I think they did.” By the Court: “Do you know whether or not his private parts entered you? A. Yes, sir, they did.” By the Court: “You still say you think they did? A. Yes, sir.” On redirect examination the following occurred:

“Q. With reference :there at the time he had you down, you said he mistreated you about three times; tell the jury whether or not any of these times you could tell his .private parts entered into *310 your private parts? Defendant objects. By the . Court: “Give your best judgment. A. Yes, sir. Q.
It did? A. Yes, sir.”

Prosecutrix says when she got home, after a searching party had failed to find her, her grandmother asked her where she had been and she told her, “A man grabbed me around the neck when I was milking and choked me so I couldn’t call you, and took me up on the mountain and mismtreated me. ’ ’ She told her the man' took her bloomers off.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 S.W.2d 67, 280 Ky. 306, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilley-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1939.