Idle v. Commonwealth

147 S.W. 381, 148 Ky. 618, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 510
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 29, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 147 S.W. 381 (Idle 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
Idle v. Commonwealth, 147 S.W. 381, 148 Ky. 618, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 510 (Ky. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Orinion' of the Court by

Judge Settle —

Affirming.

Tfi© appellant, Roy Idle, was jointly indicted in tlie Bell Circuit Court, with. Charley Balltrip, for the murder of Jim Mays. They were tried together and both found guilty as charged; the punishment of each being fixed by the verdict of the jury at confinement in the penitentiary for life. Judgment was duly rendered as to each in accordance with the verdict. No complaint is made by Balltrip of the judgment, but'Roy Idle, being dissatisfied therewith, has appealed.

[619]*619Mays, the victim of the homicide, was a resident of New Tazewell, Tennessee, from which place he came to Middlesboro, Kentucky, October 30, 1911, having in his possession $70.00. The evidence appearing in the record shows that he was seen in Middlesboro on the afternoon and night of November 3, 1911, and that he disappeared during the night and was not seen again until his body was found in a pond, November 28, 1911, in a suburb of Middlesboro. The body was identified by his father and two of his brothers. There seems to have been no mistake as to the identification; .the father and brothers recognized a peculiar scar which had long been on the ankle of the deceased. They also recognized his clothing and, in addition, there was found in a pocket of his clothing a note which had been executed by him, sometime, previously, to a local merchant of New Tazewell, for fertilizer, andi which note he was known to have paid shortly before leaving his home for the visit to'Middlesboro.

According to the testimony of the father and brothers the deceased was thirty years of age at the time of his death; about five feet eight inches in height and weighed 135 pounds. Following the finding of the body an inquest was held by the coroner of Bell county and, at the post mortem examination made at the inquest, by Dr. J. B. Tinsley, bruises were discovered on the head of the deceased, and it was also found that his neck had been broken. In the opinion of the physician expressed on appellant’s trial, the wounds on the head had been made with a blunt instrument; and he was further of the opinion that the death of deceased was caused by the wounds on his head or the dislocation of the neck, or both. Shortly after finding the body of Mays, appellant and his associate, Balltrip, were arrested under warrants charging them with the murder. The facts connecting them with the crime as shown by the evidence on the trial were, in brief, as follows:

Ned Minton, a witness for the Commonwealth, testified that he saw deceased about three p. m. on the 3d of November at the Middlesboro depot; and that from the depot he and .deceased went to the home of appellant, who was absent. It is apparent from the evidence that Minton and deceased called at appellant’s home to see his wife and another woman, who. was staying with her, and that both women were prostitutes. Indeed, it further appears from the evidence that such was the character of appellant’s wife before and at the time of his marriage [620]*620to her. Minton further testified, that he remained at appellant’s house from about four p. m. to six p. m., when he left, but that deceased remained at the house and was not seen alive by Minton again. Minton, however, saw appellant at a saloon, after leaving deceased at his home.

Harry Ford, another witness for the Commonwealth, testified that he lived with his mother on premises adjoining those of appellant and was at his mother’s house while Minton and deceased were at appellant’s house. Ford also testified that he knew deceased, appellant and Balltrip; that he saw deceased at the home of the appellant on the afternoon in question after Minton had taken his departure; that while standing at his mother’s gate that night appellant and Balltrip passed in leaving the former’s house while the deceased was there; that as appellant and Balltrip passed him at the gate he heard appellant say he was going to kill the deceased because he believed he had been, “laying up with Minnie,” his wife; that these words were spoken to Balltrip and that in reply thereto Balltrip told him he would help him.

On the day following this occurence the boy, Ford, was carried from this State to Tennessee by appellant’s brother-in-law and some days later he was, according to his testimony, visited in that State by appellant, who told him not to mention what he had heard appellant say to Balltrip about killing the deceased, that the latter was dead, and, that if he did tell of the statement made by appellant to Balltrip, he, appellant, would kill him.

Lily Peyton, another witness introduced in behalf of the Commonwealthi, testified that she lived near appellant and that on the night deceased disappeared, as she was returning to her home from church, between ten and eleven o’clock, she heard1 appellant’s voice, which she recognized, and a commotion in his house which she described as follows:

“I heard a rumbling like some fellow falling over a chair, then I heard some one crying; sounded like a woman’s voice; and; then some one holler 0! Lord, twice, and then a man said, Hush up, G- D- you; and then two men came out of the back door of Roy Idle’s house with a man between them and the man in the middle was shorter than either one of the others who had hold of his arms. ’ ’

She identified appellant as one of the tall men, but did not know the other tall man, and the description [621]*621which she gave of the smaller man who was being lead by the other two conformed to the description given of the deceased by his father, brothers and other witnesses, who knew him.

This witness also testified that after the three men had come ont of appellant’s house and gone some, distance she heard one of them call, “police;” immediately following which she heard appellant say, “Hush, G-D-you.”

' Hannah Kincaid, also introduced in behalf of the Commonwealth, testified that she too lived near appellant’s home; and that on the night in question, after she had returned to her residence from prayer meeting, she heard a man’s voice call in distress for the police; and upon looking in the direction of the voice she saw three men standing together; two of them tall men, who seemed to be holding a smaller man between them; that she was well acquainted with the appellant and knew his voice, and she heard him talking to the man who had called for the police whom he told to hush his mouth; that immediately following these remarks she heard two blows that made a noise similar to striking on a barrel, and then heard appellant say to some one that they would come back in the morning and get it. The witness said she did not know to what these remarks referred, but early next morning she went out to the place where she had seen the three men and found the grass much trampled.

Other witnesses saw the three men that night; one of these, Eliza Ready, heard the call for the police and heard appellant, whose voice she recognized, say, “GD-you, shut your mouth.” Another of them, Blanch Thomas, also saw the three men, two of them tall men and a smaller man between them. One of the tall men had a stick in his hand. She heard the small man holler in distress and heard him' say to the taller ones, “not. to do him this way;” to which one of them replied, “they were going to kill him,” and the one with the stick in his hand struck him. After this she saw the three men go down the road, and watched them until they got to an elm tree; then she went into her own home.

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Related

Smith v. Commonwealth
141 S.W.2d 881 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1940)
Brown v. Rose
26 S.W.2d 503 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1930)
Allen v. Commonwealth
21 S.W.2d 800 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
147 S.W. 381, 148 Ky. 618, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/idle-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1912.