Hensley v. Commonwealth

43 S.W.2d 996, 241 Ky. 367, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 70
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 4, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 43 S.W.2d 996 (Hensley 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
Hensley v. Commonwealth, 43 S.W.2d 996, 241 Ky. 367, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 70 (Ky. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Drury, Commissioner

Reversing.

About 9 p. m., May 21,1929, Angie Hensley shot and killed her husband, George Hensley. Upon her trial, which began on September 10, 1930, under an indictment charging her with murder, her claim of self-defense was rejected by the jury, she was found guilty of manslaughter, her punishment was fixed at five years in the penitentiary, and, the court having overruled her motion for a new trial, she has appealed. As one of her grounds for reversal is a claim that this verdict is flagrantly against the evidence, we shall state the evidence briefly.

It shows that these parties had been married just six weeks. They had lived together in peace, according to Mrs. Hensley, until the day of the shooting. The evidence for the commonwealth and that for the defendant cannot be reconciled. The commonwealth showed that Mrs. Hensley had tired of her husband, that she felt she had no ground for divorce, and in her anxiety to rid herself of him and to get the insurance on his life, which she thought he had, she proposed to the witness ¥m. Smiley, Jr., so he says, to give him $250 and one-half of what she got out of this insurance if he would kill her husband. The witness did not accept this oft-repeated proposition, and Mrs. Hensley said she would kill him herself, but was afraid, if she did so, she could not collect this insurance. It was the theory of the commonwealth that she( killed her husband to get this insurance and to rid herself of him, in order that she might be free to bestow her favors upon another man, who soon after thig homicide became a member of her household, ostensively as a boarder.

*369 The commonwealth showed by ¥m. Smiley, Jr., that this shooting occurred in the house at a time when all was apparently peaceful, without warning or previous altercation; that her husband was seated on a davenette; that she shot him as he was in the act of arising; and that some one caught him and eased him down upon the davenette again. It showed by Dr. Bichardson, the coroner, that the ball entered her husband’s left side above the hip, passed out his left leg near his crotch, then entered his right leg, in which it severed a blood vessel of such size that he bled to death in a short time without ever saying a word, so far as this record discloses. ¥m. Smiley, Jr., testifies that Mrs. Hensley then placed a pistol near the right hand of the dying man and directed those present to leave it there, and, when it was suggested that a doctor be called, that she said: “Well, I will wait until he gets a damn good bleeding and then I will call ’em after he gets too weak to talk any.”

For Mrs. Hensley it .was shown that her husband came home in the early evening in a towering rage, apparently under the influence of liquor or dope; that he tried to start a difficulty with his .wife; that he refused to eat any dinner, and left, saying he was going to his mother’s to get his big pistol and would then “come back and kill the whole damn bunch.” The household was alarmed, and the members thereof telephoned his mother to keep him there and to disarm him. A few minutes before 9 o’clock her husband returned, went out on the back porch where a workman was making some repairs, talked to him for a few moments, then the workman left, and her husband came in and renewed the quarrel.. Soon an active fight was in progress between Mrs. Hensley and her daughter by a former marriage on one side, and her husband on the other, while another female member of the household, unrelated to any of them, fled for safety and to procure assistance. The husband got the better of the fight, whereupon Mrs. Hensley, having got her pistol, fled to the front porch, while a young man, a suitor of her daughter, entered the brawl. The husband struck this young man over the head with a pistol, and soon freed himself of him, thereupon he turned his pistol upon Mrs. Hensley, whereupon she shot him through the half-opened screen door, and he walked back into the house, sat down on a davenette, let his pistol fall on the floor, and bled to death while she was frantically tele *370 phoning for a doctor. In support of her story, the defendant points to the hole in the screen door (made as she says by the fatal bullet) and to some spots of blood on the step of the front porch, while the commonwealth attacks this story as untrue, because of entire lack of evidence of cuts, bruises, broken fruniture, or other indications of a struggle, and it accounts for the blood spots on the step of the porch by the fact that the bleeding, bloody, dying man was carried across the porch on the way to the hospital. This account of the blood on the porch step is in harmony with the evidence, as no witness says the victim was on or about the step. It also seems highly improbable that the defendant could have shot her husband under the circumstances shown by the witnesses for her and have inflicted upon him the wound she did. The range of the fatal bullet .indicated it as fired while she was above her husband and he was in the act of rising.

It cannot be said that this verdict is without support in the evidence or is flagrantly against the evidence as now presented. When Mrs. Hensley admitted she slew her husband, it then became incumbent on her to justify or excuse her act. See Simmons v. Com., 207 Ky. 570, 269 S. W. 732.

The witness Donald Miles, who went over just after the shooting, did not then see the hole in the screen door. No witness for the commonwealth, or the defendant, says he saw any hole in the screen door until the next morning. The jury saw these witnesses and heard them testify. They heard witness after witness testify that Mrs. Hensley’s moral reputation was bad.

Appeal op Attorney to Passion and Prejudice.

A vigorous attack is made upon the things said by the attorney for the commonwealth in his closing argument to the jury, and that argument, in full, together with the objections and the rulings of the court thereon, is in this record, but, as the alleged misconduct' of the commonwealth’s attorney was not made a ground for a new trial, we cannot consider it.

Rulings on the Evidence.

Mrs. Hensley testified that some time before this homicide, her husband and Sam Searce had been fined *371 for bootlegging, that on the day of the shooting Searee had come to her home and claimed he had paid the fines of both of them, and he wanted to see her husband to get him to pay the fine which Searee claimed he had paid for him. The court refused to allow her to go into fhe conversation with Searee any further, and she avowed that she told Searee she had given her husband the money to pay him, that Searee saw her husband later at a pool room in Catlettsburg, and told him that, whereupon he became angry and a brawl ensued in which he threatened to kill Searee. The court refused to allow her to detail this pool room conversation. This was properly excluded. Mrs. Hensley was not present in the pool room, and whatever she might know of that brawl is hearsay, and her conversation with Searee was not admissible.

The principal witness against Mrs. Hensley was William Smiley, Jr., who was then under a death sentence for the murder of Joe Deskins, which was done on July 7,1929. See Smiley v. Commonwealth, 235 Ky. 735, 32 S. W. (2d) 51. Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
43 S.W.2d 996, 241 Ky. 367, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hensley-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1931.