House v. Commonwealth

65 S.W.2d 997, 251 Ky. 834, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 947
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 1, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 65 S.W.2d 997 (House 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
House v. Commonwealth, 65 S.W.2d 997, 251 Ky. 834, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 947 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

The appellant, Jasper House, was indicted by the grand jury of the Clay circuit court at its April term, 1932, for the willful murder of George Cupps. Upon his trial, he was convicted of voluntary manslaughter and sentenced to a term of twenty-one years in the* state penitentiary. .

He urges on his appeal from that judgment (1) that, as his conviction was secured upon circumstantial evidence alone, which was as consistent, he contends, with the defendant’s innocence as with his guilt, it was insufficient to support the verdict; (2) that the venue, of the prosecution was not proven by the commonwealth; (3) the admission of incompetent and highly prejudicial testimony; and (4) that the court erred in its instructions given'to the jury.

The evidence shows that on Monday, April 11, 1932, the appellant, Jasper House, and the decedent, George Cupps, went to London, Ky., for the purpose of trading mules and horses, as was the custom there on county and circuit court days. While there, they met up with each other and indulged in more or less drinking, and late in the afternoon, they, with five or six others living in their neighborhood, left London to ride back to their homes in Clay county, some fifteen or more miles distant. Further, the evidence shows that the appellant and the decedent were each riding a mule upon this occasion, the appellant’s being much the larger, and *836 that they arrived at Allen’s house about 6 o’clock p. m.,. or about “dusky dark,” as some of the witnesses termed it, where they stopped some minutes at the barn and talked with the Allens. It appears that, when they arrived and stopped at Joab Allen’s, they were out of' liquor, when Cupps looked up Marion Allen and secured another supply. The evidence is also that, as these three were riding from Allen’s home towards the gate, the appellant asked Cupps to give him a drink of the whisky, when he handed appellant his jar of whisky from which he drank some and then put the jar back into his own pocket, where he kept it.

In view of the appellant’s first contention made that the commonwealth’s evidence was insufficient to establish defendant’s guilt, in that he insists there were no eye witnesses bu't the evidence was circumstantial only, and such in its character and probative effect as' made it equally as consistent with his innocence as with his guilt, so claiming, he argues that the accused was entitled to an instruction to acquit him. To cleanly dispose of this criticism we deem it needful to here make a statement and analysis of the commonwealth’s evidence heard upon the prosecution.

The evidence is all pretty much in accord in so far as it shows the actions of the decedent and the accused in their journey to London, upon April 11, 1932, a county court day there, and the fact of their getting together in London and having some drinks and their later returning, with some five- or more neighbors', towards their homes, who all testified as to their being then friendly, and talking of a mule trade, and as to their stopping at the barn of Joab Allen, where, it is admitted, that the decedent secured a jar of whisky to resupply their exhausted store; also that while appellant, House, and Cupps were stopping there, they saw and talked with Joab Allen, his sons Marion and Ben Allen, and Tom Buttry, all of whom testified that the deceased, Greorge Cupps, was at the time reeling drunk in his saddle, and fell from the little mule on which he was riding; that appellant was also drinking, but showed-much less the influence of the liquor than Cupps; and, further, that Cupp’s condition was so bad that Marion Allen climbed up on the little mule behind Cupps to take him home, when they, together with the appellant, House, - riding-what they called his “big mule,” started down- *837 the road towards Cupps’ home, going as far as the gate or bars along the road some hundred and fifty yards below the Allen home, where Marion Allen got down and opened the gate for them to go through by a shorter way to the Cupps home. It appears that, during their ride down from the house to this gate near an old barn, some question arose between Allen and the appellant as to trading appellant’s mule for a cow and a calf of Allen’s, and that Allen told House to go back to the barn and look at his cow and calf with a view to making the trade, and that appellant left Cupps and Allen waiting at the gate while he went to the barn to look at the cow and calf.

From this point the evidence of the commonwealth’s witnesses and that of the appellant is conflicting, the appellant contending that, as he returned from looking at the cow and calf, he met Marion Allen returning from the gate to his home who told him that they could not trade, and that he, the appellant, passed on for a short distance when, failing to find or see the deceased at the gate or anywhere, he abandoned his purpose to go home with him and turned back and started for his own home and did not again see the deceased after having previously left him waiting at the gate with Allen.

Allen’s testimony, however, is as to this that he and the deceased, Cupps, waited at the gate for appellant to return from the barn, and that he did return and rejoined them there, when he advised the deceased and House to go through the gate and across the bottom, as being the nearer way to his home, when appellant suggested that they go the longer road around the hill, to avoid fences, which witness told him were down, but notwithstanding this the appellant and deceased, each astride his mule, started down the longer roadway, leading around the hill, where they together passed out of witness’ sight and after which George Cupps was not seen again by the witness Allen until about an hour later, when the Hubbard boys, his neighbors, came to his home and informed him of Cupps having been killed, when he, with others at the Allen home, went back up the road with them some two hundred and fifty yards beyond the gate and old barn from where Allen had last seen the deceased ride off with the appellant, *838 where they found Cupps, “lying upon his hack in the middle of the road, dead,” with one end of his mule’s hrid-le tied in a running noose about his neck, and the mule standing nearby, tied with its other end. The decedent was wearing what the witness termed a “slicker,” the back of which was very muddy, and worn, while upon his face there were found ugly wounds, cuts, and bruises, and his nose broken, yet there was no mud upon his face, which, according to the testimony of his wife, was “as bloody as a butchered hog.”

An examination was also made by the witnesses of the road about and around where the body was found, who testified that they found that Cupps’ body had been dragged, while thus tied to his mule’s bridle end, for a distance of some eighty or ninety steps down the road from an upper point thereon where it appeared a conflict or struggle had first occurred in the road between the deceased and his assailant, as was there indicated by the crossing of many tracks and three or four pools of blood there found some three or four feet apart, from the farthest of which the road signs showed that the body had been dragged down the road, to where it was found, as stated, with the ears bleeding and tongue hanging out.

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Related

Jones v. Commonwealth
457 S.W.2d 627 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1970)
Commonwealth v. Payne
245 S.W.2d 581 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1952)
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174 S.W.2d 526 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1943)
Alexander v. Commonwealth
110 S.W.2d 679 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1937)
Gee v. Commonwealth
94 S.W.2d 17 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1936)
Collingsworth v. Commonwealth
71 S.W.2d 1030 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
65 S.W.2d 997, 251 Ky. 834, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 947, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/house-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1933.