Hill v. Commonwealth

230 S.W. 910, 191 Ky. 477, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 333
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 13, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 230 S.W. 910 (Hill 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
Hill v. Commonwealth, 230 S.W. 910, 191 Ky. 477, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 333 (Ky. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Clarke

Affirming.

The defendant Wolford Hill was convicted of murdering Luther Hatfield and his punishment fixed at confinement in the penitentiary -for life.

[478]*478For reversal of the judgment it is insisted:

1. That error was committed in refusing a continuance,

(a) Because there was no regular jury impanelled.

(b) Because appellant did not have a'reasonable opportunity to prepare for trial.

2. That the verdict of the jury was largely based upon circumstantial evidence and is not supported by sufficient evidence.

3. Errors in admission of testimony and failure to admonish as to its effect.

1. Decedent, Luther Platfield, was killed on October 1,1920. The next day defendant was arrested and placed in jail, chargied with the crime. An indictment was returned against him on the 3rd day of November and on the next day thereafter same was called and set for trial on the 8th day of November. When the case was called for trial on the 8th day of November, defendant moved for a continuance and filed his affidavit in support of the motion. The first ground set up therein is that only eight jurors had been selected and impanelled as the regular petit jury for the term; that there was a great deal of feeling against the defendant; that it would be greatly to his prejudice to be compelled to .select a jury from bystanders summoned by the sheriff whom he was advised was hostile to him because of some difficulty between the sheriff and defendant’s brother.

Counsel for defendant concede that section 281 of the Criminal Code denies this court jurisdiction to review decisions of the trial court relating to the selection of the jury in a criminal case; but they nevertheless insist that we may consider the manner in which the jury was selected, alleged to be erroneous, as ground for a continuance. •Manifestly, this is not true since, so far as this ground is concerned, the refusal to continue the case was error only if the selection of the jury was erroneous, a question which by statute we arie forbidden to review. We cannot of course do indirectly what we are forbidden to do directly, but that is just what counsel are asking by this contention. The cases cited by appellant in support of the contention (except Eisner v. Commonwealth, 95 Ky. .539, which was overruled in Curtis v. Commonwealth, 110 Ky. 853,) are civil cases and therefore not applicable because this court has jurisdiction in civil but not in criminal cases to review the trial court’s decisions with [479]*479reference to the selection of a jury. Leaclingham v. Commonwealth, 182 Ky. 291.

It is further insisted that the court erred in refusing the continuance because defendant did not have a reasonable opportunity to prepare for his trial, but there is nothing in his affidavit to show this is true. The names of several absent witnesses are given, with a statement of the facts to which each would testify if present, but there is no showing of diligence to obtain the presence of those residing in the county and the only one alleged to reside out of the county appeared and gave her evidence. The allegation of the affidavit that the defendant had not had a reasonable opportunity to select and confer with attorneys and prepare the case is but the statement of the defendant’s opinion and is not supported by any allegations of fact. It had been more than a month since the homicide was committed and four days elapsed between the filing of the indictment and the day it was set for trial. Defendant was represented not only by local counsel but by an attorney from an adjoining county and there is nothing in the record to indicate when they were employed or that the case was not well prepared and tried. We are therefore of the opinion the court did not abuse a sound discretion in overruling the motion for a continuance.

2. It is next insisted that the verdict is not supported by sufficient evidence; that the only evidence to sustain it is circumstantial evidence which is as consistent with defendant’s innocence as his guilt, but with this view of the evidence we cannot agree. A conviction may be had upon circumstantial evidence alone and this character of evidence is of equal efficacy as direct proof. In fact it is sometimes even more satisfactory and conclusive than direct testimony. Smith v. Commonwealth, 140 Ky. 599; Wendling v. Commonwealth, 143 Ky. 587; Taylor v. Commonwealth, 182 Ky. 728. It is only where the entire evidence may be as reasonably reconciled with the innocence of the accused that a conviction will not be sustained upon circumstantial evidence alone. Denton v. Commonwealth, 188 Ky. 30.

About one o’clock in the afternoon of the day of the homicide, decedent's stepbrother, T. Lay Dolan passed along the road near where the defendant was working in his field. They had not been friendly for more than two [480]*480years and their hostile feelings toward each other had been intensified by a difficulty which defendant and Dolan’s father had about a week before. Both parties were armed and they had some words but there was no encounter and Dolan went on up the road to his home about four hundred yards distant. Between three and four o’clock that afternoon he and his stepbrother, Luther Hatfield, started, as Dolan claims, to a steam shovel where he was employed as night watchman and to reach which they would pass by the field where defendant was working. Dolan was seventeen years of age and had a rifle. Hatfield was fourteen years of age and had a 38-C’olts revolver. As they were passing by where defendant was working and without anything being said all parties began to shoot and it is impossible from the evidence to tell who fired the first shot. There is some evidence to support Dolan’s testimony that defendant shot first, since he was armed with a shot gun and several of the witnesses who heard but did not see the shooting testified that the first shot sounded like a shot gun. Other witnesses, however, testified that it was impossible to tell the character of the first shot as there were several almost together and defendant testified Iíátfield fired the first shot. But whoever'fired the first shot, each of the parties was wounded by the first three or four shots that were fired.' Defendant was shot through the right arm by Hatfield, both Hatfield and Dolan were shot by the defendant and after being shot both Hatfield and Dolan retreated, Dolan backed down the road toward his home as he had come to the place of the encounter; while Hatfield left the road and climbed up the mountain side to where there was a thicket and a bench which led toward his home almost parallel to the road below. As Dolan retreated down the road, defendant followed him inside his fence and at or near a drain shot Dolan the third time. Thus far there is little if any conflict in the evidence of Dolan and defendant, the only eye witnesses, except that each claims the other fired the first shot. A number of people heard the shooting and practically all of them agree that there were some seven or eight shots fired and that after an interval there were three more shots fired. The witnesses do not agree as to the length of time that intervened between the two volleys, but no witness fixes it at less than a minute or two while others fix it all the way up to four or five minutes and longer. Dolan te-sti[481]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
230 S.W. 910, 191 Ky. 477, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1921.