Jackson v. Commonwealth

147 S.W.2d 715, 285 Ky. 313, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 379
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 31, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 147 S.W.2d 715 (Jackson 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
Jackson v. Commonwealth, 147 S.W.2d 715, 285 Ky. 313, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 379 (Ky. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Morris, Commissioner—

Under indictment charging appellant with the murder of Lillie Mae Huff on February 5, 1940, he was found guilty, the jury inflicting a life sentence. In motion for a new trial which the court overruled, he charged .that:

(a) The court erred in admitting incompetent evidence, prejudicially to his substantial rights.

(b) The court failed to give the whole law of the case, and committed prejudicial error in the giving of instructions.

(c) The verdict was the result of passion and prejudice, and not supported by the evidence, and is excessive.

In brief appellant’s counsel does not point out any evidence conceived to be objectionable. Under repeated rulings we assume that on appeal objections to admission of evidence which might appear in the transcript, but not pointed out are waived. An inspection of the bill of evidence shows neither objection nor exception.

The facts may be best stated by giving appellant’s version, since there were no other eyewitnesses to the acts which resulted in almost instant death. The parties were colored people. Appellant at the time was about 21 years of age; deceased was a woman in middle age. The homicide occurred in the home and place of *315 business of America Hogg, who in connection with her rooming house operated a dance hall.

Appellant lived at Wheelright, up the Big Sandy. He had there met deceased in August, 1939, at the home of one Bryant, who also operaied a dance hall, and where they lived together until October, when they moved to the home of appellant’s mother, there remaining until February 4. During these periods appellant and deceased were unquestionably sustaining illicit relations. He testified that during their association they had at one time had a misunderstanding in the Bryant dance hall, at which time she drew a knife on him and undertook to stab him. But they continued relations after moving to the mother’s home.

On the night prior to the stabbing, he and a companion started to Lexington, with an idea of later going to Nashville. They arrived in Hazard about 4:00 p. m. and appellant soon went to the place of America Hogg, where deceased was staying. He says he slept that night in the room with Lillie Mae, after he, his traveling-companion and Lillie Mae had several drinks. About eight o’clock the next morning the proprietress came into the room and ordered them to get up. They got up and dressed and Lillie Mae left the room first; he followed into the room where she had gone and entered into conversation with Lillie Mae’s son. Lillie Mae was sweeping- the floor and singing. He says upon signal from Lillie Mae they returned to the bedroom; Lillie Mae drank some more liquor and insisted on appellant taking- a drink. She urged appellant to go back to his home taking her, and to abandon his trip to Tennessee. “About this time she pushed the door as you go in there, and jerked back and had her hand up, and said ‘I had rather see you dead than leaving. I will kill you or you will kill me one; if you don’t get me I will get you.’ It was dark in there; I couldn’t see so good; I said £I wouldn’t do that; and she shook her head and I knowed she was mad; I felt for the window, and couldn’t jump out, and seen she was by the door, and I run my hand in my pocket and got my knife and commenced cutting her, and she run to the door and pitched out, and went out into the other room. I cut her because I knowed she could handle me; she would have killed me, or I-would have to kill her.”

Appellant denied that as he followed Lillie Mae into *316 the kitchen he stabbed or endeavored to stab her. He says after she had fallen in the dance hall, he saw she was dying, and he leaned over and kissed her, and he and Ms traveling companion left at once, though he walked into the “arms of the law.”

On cross-examination it was developed that when he got to America Hogg’s place he found Lillie Mae in company with other men. Appellant admits that he never saw a knife in her hand. It was also brought out that when the two were in bed on the morning of the tragedy they began an argument as to which one was the cause of the trouble between them, and Lillie Mae called out to a man in an adjoining room, “You don’t know who is in here with me; Bill Jackson is in here, and then we got up, ’ ’ and shortly thereafter the killing occurred.

The only other witness for accused was his mother, who told of appellant and deceased living together at her home. The importance of her evidence, if any at all, was to the effect that during the time they were there, the two had a quarrel during which Lillie Mae called to her and said: “Miss Goldie, if you don’t make Bill let me alone I am going to kill him,” and she replied, “I can’t do nothing with him, and the best thing I know for you to do is go somewhere and get out of my house.” She also saw Lillie Mae with a knife which she carried in her dress pocket. She said that “Lillie Mae was his woman.”

America Hogg testified that on the morning when the stabbing occurred she and a helper were in the kitchen, which was between the bedroom and dance hall; she heard Lillie Mae scream, and come hurriedly out of the room; that she ran into the stove, turned from the stove into witness’ arms and fell dead in the floor. This witness was positive in her statement that appellant was following Lillie Mae and stabbing at her as she came into the kitchen. She stated that appellant went to the front door of the dance hall and held it shut, apparently for the purpose of preventing any one from leaving the room. A son of the witness at once went out a rear door and called the police.

Neither this witness nor others saw any knife in her hand, nor was any found in the bedroom. The undertaker, who shortly after her death took charge of *317 her body, found an ordinary pocket knife, unopened, which dropped out of a pocket in some part of her clothing. The undertaker said she had one 3%-inch deep wound just below the collar bone; one in the right breast ranging downward about 3 inches; another in the left side lower down, and one in the left side of the back, and one in the arm and another on the right hand.

The proprietress said that appellant had come to her home some time in the summer prior to the killing, in company with deceased and her daughter, and remained a short while, and that at some later date he came to the home and induced Lillie Mae to return to Wheelright with him. “She cried and said he had come to her and she would go with him.” She was unable to say whether or not on the last visit appellant had used his effort to get her to return. Appellant admits that he came to Hazard to see Lillie Mae at a time when her daughter was ill, which must have been some time in November. He denied that he used his effort to get her back to Wheelright, but that she did go back. Several witnesses corroborated the proprietress as to occurrences the night before and on the morning of the homicide; some of them were positive that appellant followed Lillie Mae, either stabbing her, or making effort to stab her. On other points the evidence was corroborative.

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Related

Carson v. Commonwealth
382 S.W.2d 85 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1964)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
147 S.W.2d 715, 285 Ky. 313, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1941.