Hall v. Commonwealth

97 S.W.2d 29, 265 Ky. 516, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 518
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 9, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 97 S.W.2d 29 (Hall 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
Hall v. Commonwealth, 97 S.W.2d 29, 265 Ky. 516, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 518 (Ky. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge 'Perry

— Affirming. At the July, 1935, term of the Letcher circuit court, Morg and Bill Hall were jointly indicted and accused of the offense denounced by section 1166. Kentucky Statutes (as amended by Acts 1934, c. 47), of having maliciously shot and wounded with intent to kill Sink Meade.

Upon trial thereon, Bill Hall was acquitted in obedience to a directed verdict granted him, and Morg Hall was by the jury found guilty as charged and his punishment fixed at two years confinement in the penitentiary. Complaining of this verdict and judgment thereon, he has. appealed.

It is disclosed by the record that this shooting and wounding, for which appellant was here prosecuted, may be considered as the culmination- ofi a long period of strained and hostile relations between Sink Meade and the appellant Morg Hall, and kinsmen, Bill Hall, Clifton Hall, and others of the Hall clan,

Such condition of long-continuing bad feeling between Meade and the Halls is shown by the uncontradicted evidence of the Meades, given in narrative form and depicting numerous prior clashes and hostile skirmishes and militant demonstrations between them, extending as far back as some eight or nine-years before the occurrence of the shooting here involved-, and commencing upon an occasion when the Meades were visiting at the home of Manuel Meade, when a number of the Halls; including the appellant, surrounded and shot into the house at them.

Further, the Meades testify that a later boisterous and hostile demonstration was made by the appellant and others of the Hall clan against them along about the •second Christmas before this last shooting here .in evidence, when it appears that Morg Hall and Clifton. Hall, -with several others of their crowd, rode up, and down ■the road in front of Meade’s home, cursing and waving *518 their pistols as they abused and threatened him and his family, and yet other like instances, manifesting the Halls’ continuing animosity towards them, are recounted in their evidence. Also Sink Meade testifies that so strong has been their hostility to him that for years he has avoided even the risk taken in his passing by their homes, lest they would fire upon him.

Further, it is shown that, soon following the last one of these repeated feudal displays of the Halls’ enmity, early in the afternoon of the same day upon which occurred the later shooting and wounding of Sink Meade by the appellant Morg Hall, Sink Meade shot and wounded the appellant’s uncle, Clifton Hall, as he was returning from work on a neighboring farm and passing through Meade’s place.

This shooting by Meade of Clifton Hall, it was testified, was at once communicated by Jonas Meade, who saw it, to his' kinsmen, the appellant Morg Hall and Bill Hall, who went at once to Clifton Halks home, told his family of it, and then armed themselves with a gun and pistol, and, accompanied by Cliff’s wife, eleven year old son, and a younger child, started up the road to find their father and kinsman Cliff Hall and learn if he had been killed.

The road along which they went in looking for him led them between Sink Meade’s house on the one side, and his barn on the other, where, as the Halls passed by the barn, an interchange of pistol and rifle shots ensued, wherein Sink Meade was shot and wounded by the appellant, Morg Hall.

According to the account given by the Meades, as commonwealth witnesses, of this shooting affray, the Halls, including the appellant Morg Hall, were coming down the road on an avenging mission, not looking for Clifton Hall, but hunting for Sink Meade, who testifies that he was at the time they came sitting in the shed of his barn, with his back to the road, and didn’t know of their approach until warned by his wife; that his wife and daughter were at the time with him, doing chores, - preparatory to his leaving home because of their apprehension of his having further difficulty with the Halls, sought by way of reprisal for his having that afternoon shot their kinsman Clifton Hall. He states that his wife first saw the Halls as they came down the road towards *519 the barn, looking for him, and that, when they were near enough to see him through the open end of the barn, the appellant, Morg Hall, drew his pistol, aimed and fired two shots at him; that seeing this, his wife called and warned him, when Meade grabbed his gun and stepped out of the shed, where he exchanged two shots with appellant, who continued firing at him from the road until one of his shots took effect in Meade’s shoulder blade, when, being thereby disabled for further conflict, he hurriedly retreated back into the barn.

All of the prosecuting witnesses testify that Bill Hall, who was present, passed by the barn without firing.

This version of the encounter given by Meade is fully corroborated in practically all particulars by the testimony of his wife and daughter, eyewitnesses to it.

On the other hand, the evidence for the defense, as given by the appellant and his witnesses, is to the effect that upon being informed that Clifton Hall, his uncle, had been shot by Meade, when passing near Meade’s home, he at once with Bill Hall went to Clifton’s home, telling his wife and family of Meade’s having shot Clifton, when they armed themselves and all started out to find him; that as they were all going down the road, looking for the wounded Hall, and were passing Meade’s barn, he rushed out with a highpowered gun and opened fire upon them, barely missing some, of the party. They state that Meade fired the first shots at them, when the appellant, Morg Hall, then drew his pistol and began firing “shot for shot” with Meade.

Upon the conclusion of the evidence and instructions given thereon, upon submission of the case to the jury, it returned a verdict finding the accused, Morg Hall, guilty as charged. The appellant seeks a reversal of the judgment entered upon that verdict.

Of the several assignments of error set out in appellant’s motion and grounds for a new trial, his counsel has seen fit to here only argue and insist upon two of them, which are: (1) That the verdict of the jury is not supported by the evidence; and (2) that the court erred in the admission of incompetent evidence.

Disposing of the first of these objections, it is sufficient to say that appellant does not contend that the commonwealth’s evidence was not sufficient to support *520 'the verdict but criticizes the jury ’s finding of it as erroneous, for the reason, he insists, that the jury should have believed the witnesses for the. defense rather than those who testified for the commonwealth, as they gave •a more reasonable account, or plausible theory, of,the shooting than did the commonwealth witnesses, and which strongly tended to show that Meade, rather than the appellant, was the first to shoot upon this occasion •and that Hall, when he shot Meade, was merely firing back at Meade in self-defense.

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Related

Sherrill v. Commonwealth
161 S.W.2d 615 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
97 S.W.2d 29, 265 Ky. 516, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1936.