Jackson v. Commonwealth

38 S.W. 422, 100 Ky. 239, 1896 Ky. LEXIS 170
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 8, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 38 S.W. 422 (Jackson 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
Jackson v. Commonwealth, 38 S.W. 422, 100 Ky. 239, 1896 Ky. LEXIS 170 (Ky. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

JUDGE HAZELRIGG

deeivebed the opinion of the court.

The appellant was jointly indicted with one Alonzo Walling in the Campbell Circuit Court for the murder of Pearl Bryan, and on his separate trial was found guilty and sentenced to be banged.

It will be necessary to submit only a brief summary of the facts disclosed in the voluminous record before us to render intelligible the various complaints urged on this appeal against the judgment of conviction.

On the morning of Saturday, February 1, 1896, the headless body of a woman was found on the farm of one Locke, near Newport, in Campbell county. Every effort to find the head proved futile, but the shoes the dead girl wore were marked “:Lewis & Hayes, Oreencastle, Indiana,” and this circumstance led to the identification of the body as that of Pearl Bryan, a young girl of that city. Her clothes were saturated with blood, particularly about the neck, and a large quantity of it was found on the ground near the neck, covering a circular spot some six or seven inches in diameter, and also a spot of similar kind some feet away. Extending [246]*246near to or over this last named spot there were some privet brushes, the leaves of which were spattered with blood, and drops were discovered pending under the leaves, as though the blood had reached the under side of them by spurting from the neck, which it might do as disclosed by the testimony if the decapitation had taken place or been commenced at the spot near the bushes, and if the victim were alive at the time.

These and other circumstances led the authorities to proceed on the theory that the murder — for such it evidently appeared to be — occurred in Campbell county.

An autopsy disclosed that the girl was pregnant, and a healthy foetus, of some five months development, was found, which, in the opinion of experts, was probably alive, until the death of the mother. The inquiries which led to the identification developed the fact that appellant, Scott Jackson, a dental student at the Ohio Medical College, but who formerly lived at Greencastle, was probably the author of the girl’s ruin.

It was established beyond question that Pearl Bryan, after trying without success certain remedies prescribed by the appellant, left home on the Monday preceding her death, ostensibly to go to Indianapolis to visit friends, but in fact to come to Cincinnati in order that appellant might in some way procure relief for her, and it was shoAvn that when she arrived in the city, where she was a stranger, she applied to him, or to him and Walling, the roommate and intimate associate of Jackson, for the purpose indicated.

On several days succeeding her arrival the three, [247]*247Jackson, Walling and Pearl Bryan, were seen together in different parts of the city, though where she stayed during this time does not clearly appeal.

By one witness, and by only one, does the Commonwealth directly connect the appellant and his associate Walling with the girl at about the time she must have been murdered. This witness, a negro, George H. Jackson, testifies that at about 1 o’clock on the night of Friday, the 31st (or rather the morning of February 1st), he was employed to drive, and did drive, a hack or cab from Cincinnati across to Newport, and out to a point near where the body Avas subsequently found, and was accompanied by Walling, Avko rode on the seat with him, and by appellant, avIio Avas in the interior of the vehicle with another person whom he could not see, but whom he took to be a Avoman in distress, etc.

This Avitness was discredited by proof seriously affecting his reputation for truth and veracity and by other circumstances, though it is fair to say that he appears to be corroborated in some material respects. To discard his testimony entirely is by no means to affect the State’s case against the prisoner.

It is shown that on the Wednesday preceding the murder the accused bought some seventeen grains of cocaine, and an analysis of the girl’s stomach discloses that cocaine had been administered to her. lie is shown to have had possession after the girl’s death of the valise belonging to her, on the inside of which were blood stains and in Avliich Avere also found some strands of hair, believed to-have come off her head, from its [248]*248color, etc., and also dirt or mud corresponding in microscopical appearance with that where the body was found.

On .Jackson’s pants, found, however, in Walling’s locker, were found blood stains, and on the knee was also found some earth which, under the microscope and by chemical analysis, is found identical with the earth found at the point where the body was discovered. His coat is also found in the sewer, where he admits having thrown it, stained with blood., He is found in possession of her clothing, which he attempted to dispose of. He admits that he attempted to get rid of the valise by throwing it in the river, and by attempting to place it on an outgoing train.

There is produced and he admits writing a letter to his friend and associate, one Wood, in which he asks Wood to write in Pearl’s name to her parents from Chicago, or elsewhere, saying she was tired of living at home and was at the place of Avriting, and concludes with these words: “Get the letter off without a second’s delay, and burn this at once. Stick by your old chum, Bill, and I will help you out the same way, or some other way, some time.”

The theory of the defense is, and the accused so testified, that Wood was the author of the girl’s misfortune, and sent her to Cincinnati, where he had made an arrangement to turn her over to Walling, who was to perform, or had performed, an abortion. Appellant says that he last saw the girl at noon of Wednesday, and affects not to have inquired of Walling thereafter [249]*249of tlie success or failure of the plan, or to have known anything of her whereabouts; that he knew nothing or suspected nothing wrong until while at supper with Walling, on Saturday evening, lie read a newspaper account of the finding of a headless body on the Locke farm, and at once had a presentiment that “this was Walling’s case.” He discovered from Walling’s conduct on that occasion, and from what Walling confessed to him, that his suspicion was well founded.

He then became panic-stricken, and attributes to this mental condition Ids subsequent conduct in helping Walling to dispose of the dead girl’s effects and in writing the damaging letter to Wood. All this he testifies was done at the instance of Walling, and while he was under Walling’s influence and in the mental condition named.

This recital, without an elaboration of the proof, some of which is wholly at variance with the theory of the defense, serves to show that the facts in evidence conduced to establish the guilt of the accused, and further than this we are not authorized to examine the testimony, being confined exclusively,under the express language of the law, to a review of errors of law appearing of record, and then only when they are such as to affect the substantial rights of the accused.

By his demurrer and motion in arrest of judgment the appellant first raises the question of the sufficiency of the indictment. This instrument is as follows: “The grand jury of Campbell county, in the name and by the authority of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, accuses [250]*250Scott Jackson and Alonzo Walling of tlie crime of murder committed as follows, to-wit: The said Scott.

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Bluebook (online)
38 S.W. 422, 100 Ky. 239, 1896 Ky. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1896.