Hurd v. Commonwealth

210 S.W.2d 938, 307 Ky. 300, 1948 Ky. LEXIS 725
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedApril 30, 1948
StatusPublished

This text of 210 S.W.2d 938 (Hurd 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
Hurd v. Commonwealth, 210 S.W.2d 938, 307 Ky. 300, 1948 Ky. LEXIS 725 (Ky. 1948).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Rees

Affirming.

Oris Hurd lias been convicted of tlie crime of wilful murder and Ms punishment fixed at life imprisonment. The principal ground relied upon for reversal of the judgment is alleged error of the court in overruling appellant’s motion for a directed verdict of acquittal.

Appellant and Roy Bridgeman were indicted jointly for the murder of Eugene Bowlin and were tried together. Bridgeman was acquitted. Bowlin’s death occurred on March 30, 1947. Bowlin and his wife had just moved into a house located in Russell County on the . north bank of the Cumberland River near the mouth of *302 Thomas’ Branch. Hurd and Bridgeman lived in Monticello, in Wayne County, 12 miles south of the river. On Sunday morning, March 30, 1947, Hurd and Bridge-man started in a truck to the Cumberland River to fish. Hurd took with him his shotgun, which he testified he intended to trade to Tom Arthur, who lived on the road to the river. Near the river the truck in which they were riding ran into a ditch and they walked to the south bank of the river. They saw several men fishing on the north bank near the mouth of Thomas’ Branch and-Hurd called and asked them to bring a boat and take him and Bridgeman across the river. One of the men called back "and told them there was a boat below them in the bushes. Hurd and Bridgeman got in the boat and crossed the river. Hurd secured from a hiding place on the bank of the river a one-half gallon fruit jar containing about a quart of whiskey which he had concealed a few days previously. The men fishing on the north bank of the river were Otha Lee Burton, Walter Denney, Curtis Littrell and the deceased, Gene Bowlin. Appellant asked them to cross the river, and assist, him in pushing the truck out of the ditch. They agreed, but the parties present first drank some whiskey. They then went to the home of Gene Bowlin which was near by and took the whiskey and shotgun with them. The only person at the Bowlin home when they arrived was Bowlin’s wife, Della Bowlin, who was the divorced wife of appellant. Soon thereafter Joe McClellan, owner of the land on which the Bowlin home was located,, and his grandson, Billy McClellan, appeared. The men present drank the remainder of the whiskey and went back to the river, leaving the shotgun and the empty fruit jar at the Bowlin home. Burton, Denney and Littrell got in a boat and started across the river. The boat in which appellant and Bridgeman had crossed was about 50 yards down the river and they and the deceased got in this boat, appellant in one end, Bridgeman in the other and the deceased in the center. Appellant and Bridgeman each had an oar. As the boat approached the middle of the river where the current was swift the deceased began undressing. He removed all of his clothing except his undershirt and either jumped or fell out of the boat. He began swimming downstream, and, according to the evidence for the Commonwealth, the boat *303 remained near him. It is the theory of the Commonwealth that the deceased jumped into the river because of threats made by appellant, or was thrown into the river when appellant rocked the boat and that appellant followed him in the boat and struck him with the oar or paddle. Bowlin disappeared and appellant and Bridge-man continued to the south shore of the river without making any effort to rescue him. The deceased’s body was recovered two weeks later five or six miles downstream from the point where he disappeared. Three witnesses, who were present when the body was removed from the river, testified that there was a bruise about two and one-half inches long on the deceased’s right shoulder. Della Bowlin, wife of the deceased and divorced wife of the appellant, testified in part as follows:

“Q. Tell the jury exactly what the defendants did and what they said when they came to your house on this day. A. Just come in. Oris 'brought the whisky in, had it in Ms shirt and set it on the table and all the rest went in the other room except him. He wouldn’t go. I was in the kitchen and he stayed in there. I asked him to go, but he said he wasn’t going, and I quit cooking and went in there myself.
“Q. Did Oris Hurd then come in the other room where you were? A. He come in there when they first come up.
“Q. After you left the kitchen and went in the other room, did Oris Hurd follow you in there ? A. No.
“Q. Tell what happened next. A.' Well I had been — we had moved some stuff over there that day. Fred Brummett had helped us with it. He had threatened Fred and told me if I didn’t leave Gene and go live with him that he would kill him.
“Q. Who told you that? A. Oris Hurd.
“Q. If you wouldn’t leave who? A. Gene.
“Q. That Oris Hurd would do what to you? A. Would kill Gene.
“Q. Where was he? A. Standing in the kitchen.
“Q. What else did he say to you in there? A. Well, I don’t know he was just talking. I asked him *304 who told him we moved over there and he said, ‘Luke Hill.’
“Q. When he told you if you didn’t live with him he would kill Gene Bowlin what did you say? A. I told him I wouldn’t leave him.”

Joe McClellan testified that when he arrived at the Bowlin home appellant approached him and said he intended to build a two-room house on the river bank and <£I God, if Gene Bowlin stays here, I mean to stay.” After testifying that he went in the kitchen and took one drink with appellant, the witness said:

“* * * I went on out and left them in there, and after while I starts through the kitchen before I went, to the river, and just as I was getting in the kitchen, there was nobody in there but Oris and Della and Oris says, ‘Well, if you don’t, I’ll kill the damn son-of-abiteh. ’ I moseyed ofi out and very quick Della went in the other room and Oris follows me out and we get on the left hand side of the house and Curtis Littrell comes around the house and meets me there and Oris said, ‘Are you going to let me put up a house down here?’ I said, ‘No.’ ‘Well,’ he said, ‘I aim to- stay if Gene stays.’ I said, ‘I aim for Gene to stay.’ He said, ‘I God I don’t aim for him ■ to stay. ’ ’ ’

McClellan and his grandson left the house and went to the river bank followed by the other men. A discussion took place between the sis men, the appellant insisting on crossing in the boat with Bowlin. Littrell,, Burton and Denney got in one boat and started across the river. Appellant, Bridgeman and the deceased walked down the river bank about 50 yards, got in the other boat and started across. About midstream someone began rocking the boat and appellant began taking-off his clothes. As to what occurred at this point Joe McClellan testified as follows:

“A. I hollered and said, ‘Boys, bring Gene back over here. They ain’t no use to take him over there.’ Bridgeman and Hurd raised up and looked at me and turned the skiff loose and pulled out in the current of the river and went on down floating, and went away on down and begin to rock it again.
“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
210 S.W.2d 938, 307 Ky. 300, 1948 Ky. LEXIS 725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurd-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1948.