Hatfield v. Commonwealth

109 S.W.2d 821, 270 Ky. 395, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 85
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 29, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 109 S.W.2d 821 (Hatfield 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
Hatfield v. Commonwealth, 109 S.W.2d 821, 270 Ky. 395, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 85 (Ky. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Morris, Commissioner

Affirming.

Appellants, with John Downey, were indicted by the Olay county grand jury on a charge of robbery with and by the use of deadly weapons as denounced by section 1160, Ky. Stats. 1936. When the case was called for trial, Downey moved for and was granted severance, and the Commonwealth elected to try appellants. Upon submission, after proof and instructions, the jury returned a verdict of guilty, assessing a penalty of life imprisonment against each of the accused. Their joint motion for new trial was overruled; judgment entered according to the verdict; and from this order joint appeal is prosecuted.

In support of their motion for a new trial appellants tendered five or more grounds. On appeal here it is only urged that the court below erred in not allowing ■a new trial, because (1) the verdict of the jury is not supported by the evidence; (2) the court gave erroneous and highly prejudicial instructions to the jury,, and lastly, the Commonwealth’s attorney was guilty of gross misconduct in his final argument to the jury.

The robbery and assault occurred around 11 o’clocE *397 on the night of October 12, 1936. Finley Smith, then about 70 years of age, operated a small store at the-mouth of Mud Lick in Clay county. He lived some distance from the store, but he and his son Osba, aged 23,. slept in the rear of the store. They had retired, and at a time not exactly fixed, but around 11 o ’clock, some one called, “Hello Finley, I want some flash light batteries and bulbs.”1 The father told the boy to get up and get the batteries. The boy got up, lighted a lamp, and. opened the door. Two men came into the store, identified later as Tommy Hatfield and Henry Smith. The boy went behind the counter and he and Smith began “dickering” about the proposed purchase. While this was going on, Tommy Hatfield went to the old man’s, bed, jumped on him and struck him, with what the old gentleman thought was a black-jack, stunning him for a. brief time. Henry Smith asked for some tobacco, and Osba turned to get it, but, when he heard what was happening to his father, he turned around and when he did so faced a pistol, as he says, in Smith’s hand. The boy started from behind the counter and walked toward the bed. Smith said, “be still or I’ll kill you.” The boy said, “don’t shoot me,” and at that point the gun fired, a bullet striking the boy in the breast and wounding him severely. The boy begged him not to shoot any more and fell on the floor towards the front, and Smith then started toward the bed, and the boy thought he could get out the front door. Smith struck him and advised him not to go out the door, made him go to the rear of the store, and there Henry Smith and Tommy Hatfield went through the clothing of the father and son, obtaining about $75 and a government check. The boy succeeded in escaping in some way and ran out the door, where he was met by another man who caught him and threw him back in the house. He and this man fell, and as the boy raised up there was still another man with a gun. He identified this man as “Red” Letcher Hatfield. Smith then walked behind the counter and got some shells. Smith and Tommy Hatfield then walked to the door, and “were talking to the other fellows.”'

About this time the father jumped up from the bed, and Letcher Hatfield jumped in the door; went to the bed and said, “Lay down old man or I will shoot you.”' The old man begged him not to shoot, and Tommy Hatfield and Smith tied both* the old man and the boy to the bed, using some new rope which was in the store, *398 •and a belt which they took from Osba. They also gagged Osba hy tying a cloth around his mouth. They then blew the light out and left by a back door, walking down the road. The story as told so far is a combination of the testimony of the father and son.

The three appellants denied that they were in or near the Smith store on the night of the robbery and assault. Letcher Hatfield was the owner of a green International %-ton “Pick Up” truck. He says that on the day of the robbery he was engaged in hauling some mine lumber from his place to Bill and Ed White’s on Horse creek, a distance of about four and a half miles. He and his boy left home with a load of timber about 2 p. m. On this trip they had tire trouble which delayed them something over two hours, but they finally delivered the load about 6 o’clock. When they left on the return trip, Henry Ike Smith joined them. They stopped on the way home at one or two places, and a delay was also occasioned on this return trip. On Reed’s hill, about three-fourths of a mile from the Hatfield home, the truck overturned, the result of which was to injure the boy’s leg. The boy caught his leg in the door in some way, and when the truck turned over he was ■caught under it. Some travelers assisted in righting the truck, and one took the boy in another truck to take him home, but he was finally transferred to the Hatfield truck, and the three appellants resumed their journey towards Hatfield’s home, and on the way let Smith out near his home.

It appears from the record that the Hatfields lived some distance out on a road which left the road which. led on toward the Smith store. The Hatfields say that they arrived home about 8:30 p. m., and never left that night. They also insist that the truck was not moved after their arrival at home, and in this they are corroborated to some extent by witnesses who lived on the side road going up to the Hatfield home. They say that they either heard or saw the Hatfield truck go up the side road around 8 o ’clock or thereafter, but none heard or saw it later that night, which testimony would be significant, if any proof showed, or tended to show, that such persons as robbed the Smiths went to or left the store in a truck. The proof tends to show that they did not come or leave in a truck.

Letcher Hatfield said that he was never at the Smith, store in his life, and had no acquaintance with Finley *399 Smith or the son. Without repeating the testimony of Smith and Tommy Hatfield, it may be said that their evidence is in accord with the details given by Letcher Hatfield. They both denied the charge, and further testified that they had never been in Smith’s store. Tommy did not know either of the Smiths; Henry .Smith had seen Finley Smith several times and had seen Osba several times “up and down the road.” All the persons involved lived, as best we can gather., from the record, within a radius of four and a half to five miles. Henry Smith lived within three-fourths of a mile of the Hat-fields, and Downey (codefendant, but not on trial) lived about 200 yards from the Hatfield home.

Counsel’s contention is based first on the alibi, which, it is urged, is lent more strength because it is said the identification of appellants was weak; that the condition of the two Smiths who were assaulted was such that their statements as to who the parties were are not to be given value.

An alibi is efficacious, and should be a complete defense when all the links in the chain are complete. If there is an incomplete chain, it fails. In this case there is no sort of doubt that the alibi is complete up to the point where the accident occurred to Hatfield’s truck on Reed’s hill; perhaps it is complete up to 8:30 p. m., when the parties went to their respective homes. After that it is not, except for appellants’ testimony alone.

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Related

Sewell v. Commonwealth
144 S.W.2d 223 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 S.W.2d 821, 270 Ky. 395, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hatfield-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1937.