Harris v. Commonwealth

174 S.W. 476, 163 Ky. 781, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 291
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 26, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 174 S.W. 476 (Harris 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
Harris v. Commonwealth, 174 S.W. 476, 163 Ky. 781, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 291 (Ky. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge. Settle

Affirming.

The appellant, Oce Harris, was tried and convicted in the Fulton Circuit Court, under an indictment charging him with the crime of grand larceny, the verdict of the jury fixing his punishment “at hot less than one year and not more than one year and one day in the State penitentiary.” He was refused a new trial and now seeks a reversal of the judgment on the grounds that the circuit court erred: (1) In overruling his motion for a continuance; (2) In refusing, when his case was called for trial, to allow him time to prepare an affidavit showing the absence of certain witnesses and the facts to which they would testify, in substance, on the trial; (3) In admitting incompetent evidence; (4) In not properly instructing the jury and failing to instruct them on the whole law of the case; (5) Because one of the jury had formed an opinion in the case before the trial; (6) Because of misconduct of a juror in permitting persons not of the jury to discuss the case in his presence; (7) Because the verdict is contrary to law and not sustained by the evidence.

In stating, the facts necessary to an understanding of the case the seventh and last ground urged for the [783]*783reversal can more properly be first disposed of. The following facts appear from the evidence: On Sunday night, June 21, 1914, a safe owned by E. Gr. and E. E. Stone, situated in their drug store in the City of Hickman, and used for storing their account books and money, was opened and as much as $200.00 in money and checks stolen therefrom. Appellant had;, some time pre-' viously, been in the employ of the Stones as a clerk in the drug store, and was familiar with the business, location of the safe and the purposes for which it was used. After leaving their employ it was his habit to spend much of his time about the drug store. The safe was one of old style, without a combination lock, and was locked and unlocked with a brass key.

On Saturday afternoon, June 20th, E. Gr. Stone, one of the proprietors and manager of the drug store, on account of a death in his family, was called to his former home in the State of Missouri, just across the Mississippi Eiver from Hickman. Before leaving the drug store - Stone placed about $120.00 in money and checks in the safe and left the store in charge of his clerks, Swain, Curlin and; a boy, Floyd Atkinson, who was the clerk in the soft drink department of the store. At 10:30 o ’clock on Saturday night Atkinson put in the safe with the other money left there by Stone in the afternoon, about $80.00, the proceeds of Saturday’s cash sales, and on Sunday night, June 21st, he also placed in the safe the money representing the cash sales of Sunday, the amount of which is not shown. There was, however, in the safe on Sunday night about $170.00 or $180.00 and $20.00 or $30.00 in checks. At seven o’clock on Sunday night Atkinson closed and locked the drug store and went to his home, a short distance from the store.

At about twelve o’clock Sunday night, according to his testimony, he was aroused; and called to the door of his home by appellant, who requested of him the keys to the drug store, saying that he wished to get Mr. Swain, one of the clerks, to get some medicine for his (appellant’s) baby, who, he said, was sick, whereupon Atkinson gave him the clrug store and safe keys, which were attached. Upon leaving, appellant said to Atkinson: “Mr. Swain will bring these keys back tonight.’” Appellant then left and Atkinson returned to his bed!, telling his mother, who had been awakened by the coming of appellant, that he had been “getting the keys for Mr. Harris.” The keys were not delivered by appellant [784]*784to Swain, nor was the latter asked by him to go to the drug store and get medicine for his baby. Swain did not return the keys that night to Atkinson, nor were they ever returned by anyone. "When Stone, the proprietor, returned to the store Monday morning he was informed by Atkinson as.-to what had taken place. It was discovered that the safe was locked as usual, but upon its being opened by a blacksmith, who was called in for that purpose, it was discovered that the money box, together with the money and checks which had been placed therein on Saturday and Sunday, was.missing. Atkinson having received information that appellant left Hickman Monday morning saying he was going to Paducah, tried to call him up there over the telephone. Instead of going to.Paducah, however, as he had told several persons he would do, appellant had, in fact, gone to Memphis, Tennessee, where he was, upon telegraphic order, arrested, and later brought back to Hickman. When arrested in Memphis he was intoxicated, and a ■search disclosed about $90.00 on his person.

It also appears from the evidence that appellant was a man of very limited means; that but a day or two before he left Hickman he had declined to pay some debts, on the ground that he had no money; and on the day before he left for Memphis, or to go, as he said, to Paducah, he had tried to borrow money for the trip. It further appears from the evidence that very early on Monday morning, after making some purchases for which he paid the cash, he arranged with the owner of an automobile to carry him in his machine to Pulton in time for the 6:30 a. m. train going to Paducah. The man with whom this arrangement was made did not take him to Pulton, but he managed by some means to reach that city in time for a 6:30 train going in the opposite direction from Paducah, before entering which he purchased a ticket to Memphis. To two acquaintances whom he saw on the train he said: "If anybody says anything about me over at Hickman I am supposed to be going the other way.”

After the foregoing facts had been established by the evidence for the Commonwealth, appellant, testifying in Ms own behalf, denied getting the keys from Atkinson or taking the money out of the safe in the drug store, and attempted to account for the money which was found upon him at Memphis by stating that after a restaurant, which he had owned, was destroyed by fire in [785]*785April, he had succeeded in collecting some small accounts, amounting altogether, to about the sum found on his person in Memphis. According to his further testimony, he had $500.00 insurance on the restaurant when it was burned, but he admitted that this insurance all went to his creditors and that none of it was received by him. He gave no account of his whereabouts on Sunday night.

We are at a loss to understand how, in the face of these facts, his counsel can claim that the verdict of the jury is not sustained by the evidence. We are unable to see how the jury could have reached any other conclusion than that expressed by the verdict.

Appellant’s first contention, making complaint of the court’s refusing him a continuance of his case, must necessarily be overruled. The affidavit upon which the motion for the continuance was based is by no means definite in its statements or clear in meaning; it, however, in substance, sets out the killing of one Tyler shortly before appellant’s trial; the prevalence of public excitement over that event; the existence of bad feeling between the friends, personal and political, of Tyler and those of his slayer; and that he (appellant) was accused of belonging to the faction composed of the friends of the latter, by reason of which he incurred the ill will of the other faction and lost the services of H. T.

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Bluebook (online)
174 S.W. 476, 163 Ky. 781, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1915.