Jarvis v. Commonwealth

54 S.W.2d 315, 245 Ky. 790, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 670
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 7, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 54 S.W.2d 315 (Jarvis 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
Jarvis v. Commonwealth, 54 S.W.2d 315, 245 Ky. 790, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 670 (Ky. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Hobson, Commissioner—

Affirming.

Jess Jarvis was indicted in the Bell circuit court for the murder of Wadley Lee. Upon the trial of the case, he was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter, and his punishment was fixed at' two years and one day imprisonment. He appeals.

The facts shown by the commonwealth are these: Mrs. Ida Webb lived with her step daughter-in-law, Martha Webb, in a small cabin, 16 feet square, on the side of a mountain. There were two beds in the cabin and a chair between the two beds. At the other end of the cabin was a bench. Mrs. Webb and Martha left the cabin in the afternoon of June 27, 1931, shutting the door, but not locking it. They returned to the cabin about 8 o’clock that evening, and when they got back they found there Belle Bogers, Jess Jarvis, and Jonn *792 Baker. Baker was sitting on the bench, and the other two were on the bed. They were all drinking. The room was mnssed up; a bowl on the floor was broken in pieces, and things were thrown around. When they came up, Martha was carrying a little torch, which she dropped at the door. Lee told her to take it out or he would shoot it out. He asked who it was, and they told him, and he said to push the door. Lee was sitting on the side of the bed with his pistol in his hand and said to Martha Webb, “Come over here.” She said, “No I am tired.” Mrs. Webb told her to go over and not make him mad. She went to him, and he asked her to kiss him and she did so. He then called Mrs. Webb and asked her to kiss him. She said she did not want to, and he said, “I am going to call one of these other women.” Lee was a cousin of Mrs. Webb, and so was Belle Rogers. He then told Belle Rogers he would slap her, and he slapped her on the face and she said, “Did that make you rich?-” All of them were on the bed. Lee came to Belle Rogers and told her to get up. She was slow about getting up. He jerked his pistol and snapped it twice. She then got up and went over to the bed with John Baker. She called Lee to her. John Baker got up from the bed and' said to fix his bed he would lie down, that he was tired. He pulled his shoes off and got under the cover. Mrs. Webb, Martha, and Jess Jarvis were on the bed. Belle got up to go to Baker. Lee got up and asked for liquor. They told him that there was not any. He then got up and told Belle to get up. She was slow about getting up. He got her by the feet and pulled her off on the floor and told her to 'dance. She said she could not dance; to make Ida dance. He then threw a bottle down by her feet and bursted it and jerked his pistol out and said “Dance,” and she did. He said, “Ida get up.” Mrs. -Webb said, “All right I will fix the bed,” and she sat down on the bench by Belle Rogers, who then got up and sat on Lee’s lap, who was sitting in a chair between the beds. Mrs. Webb went over and fixed the bed on the far side from them, leaving Jess Jarvis and Martha sitting on the bed side by side, John Baker was still in the bed. Baker got up and walked to the center of the floor and went to rolling a cigarette and Lee said, “What do you want,” Mrs. Webb said, “Nothing, he is going to make a cigarette.” She went on fixing the bed. Just as she was getting the bed ready and *793 walked toward the other side of the house, Martha Webb and Jess Jarvis raised up. Jarvis said, “Wadley I have taken all that I am going to take off of you.” Lee said nothing, and Jarvis started towards him. Martha Webb screamed and grabbed her, and they both went out of the door together. When they got out in the yard, they heard a lick and a shot fired, and just after this she heard Lee say, “Jess what have I done to you? I haven’t done anything to you.” She then heard a gun fired three or four times. Jarvis came out and told them that he had killed Lee. She said, “He is not dead?” he said, “Yes, he is dead.” She said, “What made you do it?” He said, “I had to,” and his hands went up and he said, “Oh, that makes two.” When other people came to the house, Lee was lying on the floor dead. The shooting was about half past nine o’clock.

On the other hand, the proof for the defendant was in substance this: The defendant worked in a coal mine on a night shift. He went to the mine that evening to go to work, but the foreman laid him off. Soon after this he met John Baker, and they met Belle Rogers, who was a cousin of Mrs. Webb, and she said she was going over to Mrs. Webb’s. They went by home, and then overtook Belle Rogers, and were going along with her towards Mrs. Webb’s, which was some 4 miles away. When they got within a mile of Mrs. Webb’s house, Wadley Lee came running around the hill, threw a pistol on them, and told them to stick their hands up. Jarvis stuck up his hands, but Baker did not. Lee joined them. Baker had a bottle of whisky, and Lee had a bottle also. They drank freely from both bottles, and went on to the house of Mrs. Webb. When they got there, nobody was at home and Lee told Jarvis to open the door and they all went in. This was about 7 o’clock. Baker, Belle Rogers, and Lee sat down on the bed, and Jarvis sat down on the bench. There was a bowl on the floor by the side of Baker. Lee looked over and saw the bowl and shot it to pieces with his pistol. He then got a hat off the wall and threw it down on the floor and told Baker to shoot at it. Baker shot at it with his pistol, but missed it. He then told Jarvis to shoot, but Jarvis shot with his pistol into the floor. It was a rainy night, and they were there together about an hour before Mrs. Webb returned. *794 After they had come, and after Baker had pulled his shoes off, Belle Rogers asked Baker for a cigarette; she crawled over the bed to get it. Lee said, “By God get out of there, what are you treating me this way for?” He snapped the pistol at Belle Rogers, and said, “Baby you are lucky you are alive.” After this, when Baker got up to light his cigarette, Lee shoved Ida off his lap, and Jarvis and Martha Webb got up, and he fired at Jarvis with his pistol. Martha screamed and ran out of the door, and Ida Webb ran out with her before the shot was fired. Jarvis had done nothing and had said nothing to Webb up to this time. The shot which Lee fired went in Jarvis’ overalls, but did not strike his person. When Jarvis shot, Lee fell over on his left side and struck his head against the puncheon floor. J arvis did not strike him at all, and he shot Lee because Lee had shot at him and he shot in self-defense.

The proof shows that one shot passed through the palm of Lee’s left hand and then went up his arm and lodged about the elbow. Another shot passed through the left arm above the elbow; another struck him above the collar-bone in front, ranged downward, and lodged in his back. Another shot passed through his right arm about three inches below the top of the shoulder and passed through his lungs, ranging downwards and backward. There was a bruise on the side of Lee’s head as though he had been struck there with some heavy instrument. The flesh was cut and the wound bled. Lee was twenty-six years old and unmarried. He was about 6 feet tall. His pistol was lying by him with no loads in it and only one empty shell, which was two spaces to the right of the hammer.

The defendant earnestly insists that the judgment should be reversed for the following reasons:

(1) In the statement of the case to the jury this occurred: “Hon.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 S.W.2d 315, 245 Ky. 790, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jarvis-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1932.