Helton v. Commonwealth

46 S.W.2d 487, 242 Ky. 386, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 273
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 9, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 46 S.W.2d 487 (Helton 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
Helton v. Commonwealth, 46 S.W.2d 487, 242 Ky. 386, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 273 (Ky. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner—

Reversing.

There is no conflict concerning the fact that Omer Mackey was shot and killed while running upon the approach of officers of the law, or that three of the officers fired their pistols at almost the same moment. Each of them insists that he fired into the ground. The question at issue in the case was and is who- fired the shot which struck Mackey, or specifically whether the evidence introduced on the trial of the appellant, Nat B. Helton, is sufficient to sustain the verdict of. the jury finding him guilty and sentencing him to serve seven years in prison.

The appellant is a man 66 years old and had been for many years an officer of Knox county. On the morning of November 5,1930, on request of Guy Tuggle, Federal Prohibition Agent, J. R. Selvey, deputy sheriff of Laurel county, and Alex Knuckles and Thiary Helton, deputy .sheriffsi of - Knox county, the appellant accompanied them on a moonshine still raid in the country. The officers stopped their automobile below the home of John Rose, which was on a hillside about 150 feet north of the road. Knuckles, Selvey, and Thiary- Helton together went to a point a short distance off the road and west of the house. Tuggle and the appellant went towards the front of the house. At the immediate time concerned, the appellant was farther east and apparently beyond the east wall of the house and below Tuggle. Mackey ran out of a door on the west side and started *387 running up the hill hack of the house in a northeasterly direction, which put his hack to Knuckles and Selvey and almost his right side toward Helton,

The relation of the parties to each other is important in a consideration of the case. Perhaps it will be made clearer by describing the position of the parties as being in the form of a triangle, with the base below the house, consisting of a line drawn from Knuckles et al. to the appellant, a perpendicular extending on an obtuse angle from him to Mackey on the hill back of the house, and the hypotenuse formed by a line between him and Knuckles et al. The house, a small one, was on a steep hillside. About 100 feet back of it was a ledge of rock, from one to two feet high, running east and west. Its elevation was nearly 100 feet above and 280 feet distant from the point where Knuckles, Selvey, and Thiary • Helton were, and about 50 feet above and 100 feet distant from the appellant. There was a semblance of a path which the fleeing man was following.

We note first the evidence of Tuggle, the Federal Prohibition Agent. After Mackey ran from the west door of the house and up the hill back of it, Tuggle called to him to wait. About the time he reached the ledge of rock and while he was on or nearly on his hands and knees in a crawling position, as though climbing over the ledge, Knuckles and Selvey, who were back of the witness, each fired his pistol. He remonstrated with them, although he did not see in what direction they fired. He testified that at that moment Mackey put his. hand to his back and had it there when, a second later, the appellant fired. But Tuggle was not looking at the appellant. When he shot, Mackey immediately holloed, “Oh, Lordy!” or something of the kind. He crawled on several yards into the bushes, where he was found, brought to the house,- and shortly thereafter died.

Selvey testified that he called to Tuggle that somebody was running off when Mackey ran out of the house, and that Tuggle holloed to him. Then he (Selvey) fired his pistol in the ground, which waa a signal that had been used before to, attract the attention of the other officers not -within hailing distance. Knuckles, by his side, also fired into the ground about the same time. Hi a moment the appellant fired and Mackey holloed, “Oh, Lordy!” He testified that after Mackey ran around the *388 house he passed from his view aud never came in sight again.

Knuckles corroborated Selvey, except to say that each of them fired in the direction of the fleeing man, but into the garden, while he was 50 or 60 yards above it; that is, higher up on the hillside. However, he contradicts Selvey by saying that Mackey came within the range of their vision for a minute or two and then passed out of sight. On going to. the wounded man an empty whisky bottle was found at the ledge of the rock where he had been running and 6 or 8 feet below the point where he had fallen.

Enos Rose, a fifteen-year-old brother-in-law of the deceased, ran out of the house when he heard the shooting. He saw the appellant and Tuggle below the house and Mackey running or crawling up the hill with his hand on his right hip. lie had turned to hisi .right and was going along the side of the hill above the ledge, and then had “kindly his face and'his right side” towards Helton. This was before he heard Helton shoot. Mackey then called out “Oh, Lordy!” He says that Helton had his pistol pointed towards the fleeing man.

Richard Martin testified that that afternoon he had a talk with the appellant and Thiary Helton about how the tragedy occurred, and appellant stated that he saw somebody above the house run and fall “kinder” down on his knees and put Ms hand to his pocket; thinMng he was drawing a weapon, he (the appellant) pulled Ms own pistol, for he knew if Omer Mackey commenced shooting he would be in sight of him, but instead of shooting his pistol Mackey had pulled a bottle and thrown it down. Then, he had stated, after Mackey got to Ms feet he fired, but said, “I don’t think I shot in twenty feet of him or near about the man.” He didn’t know Mackey, but swore he believed at the time it was “Peg-leg Ed’’ trying to get away on his wooden leg. Martin’s son substantially corroborated him.

There was some proof that the appellant was not on friendly terms with his cousin, Ed Helton, wlm had a wooden leg and was called “Peg-leg Ed.” The inference drawn from his testimony is a motive on the part of the appellant to shoot at Mackey .believing Mm to be “Peg-leg Ed.”

The defendant insisted on the trial, and now insista, that Knuckles or Selvey fired the fatal shot, and that *389 they are laying the crime at his door in order to save themselves. He testified that they were, holloing for the fleeing man to halt; that they fired twice when Mackey fell on his hands and knees, and holloed, “Oh, Lordy!” That he then partially straightened np and with his hand to his back turned more to the right. This placed his right side towards him. Then he -shot into the hillside much below and in front of him, that is, if he had elevated his pistol the ball would have gone in front of Mackey; and says that it would have been impossible for his bullet to have struck Mackey. He was running directly from the other officers and his (back was squarely towards them when they fired. The accused was sure of the place where he was standing by the location of a tree. While in jail the next day he drew a map from memory of the situation, though he had never been at the place before that day. He did not know Mackey and fired only because he thought it might stop him and without any intention to kill him.

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Helton v. Commonwealth
71 S.W.2d 625 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 S.W.2d 487, 242 Ky. 386, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helton-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1932.