Johnson v. Commonwealth

120 S.W.2d 411, 274 Ky. 799, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 346
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 7, 1938
StatusPublished

This text of 120 S.W.2d 411 (Johnson 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
Johnson v. Commonwealth, 120 S.W.2d 411, 274 Ky. 799, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 346 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Morris, Commissioner—

Affirming.

Accused was charged by indictment with the murder of one Kenton Slone, Noah Mullins being joined as an aider and abettor. Upon trial, following a motion by appellant for severance, the commonwealth elected to try him, with the result that the jury found him guilty of manslaughter, fixing his penalty at eleven years’ imprisonment. Judgment was entered in accord with the jury’s verdict, and he appeals.

Grounds set up in the motion for a new trial are many, but only three are urged here: (a) The verdict is not sustained by the evidence; (b) the jury’s verdict is flagrantly against the evidence, and (c) the court did not give the whole law of the case, in that, as counsel says, an accomplice instruction was not given under section 241 of the Criminal Code of Practice.

The evidence tends to show that appellant and deceased were friendly, never having had any prior difficulty. The homicide occurred at the home of appellant, around nine o’clock on the evening of August 14, 1937. One witness says that about six o’clock Noah Mullins came to Eli’s home, and he and his wife were sitting on the porch. He approached and one or the other asked him if he wanted a drink of liquor. The invitation was accepted, and the liquor was produced and imbibed. This witness left and later returned to Johnson’s home, and the Johnsons and others were in the kitchen eating melons. In a short time Dabber Johnson came in, apparently under the influence of liquor, and asserting that he was the “worse damn man on Long Pork” or in Pike County. He was asked who was with him, and he replied that it was Kenton Slone. When the latter came in, it was learned that he had not had supper, and *801 he was furnished food. Afterwards an argument arose, and appellant and Dabber, who had lain on a bed in an adjoining room, came into the kitchen, and the argument continued. Appellant, or his wife, insisted that they did not want any trouble. Mullins indicated that he was going home, and started. Appellant followed him out, insisting on Mullins coming back, and he started back but Dabber had gone out and engaged in a scuffle with Mullins; appellant had started out and had gotten on the steps when Slone got off the steps and he and appellant “yoked into a wrestle,” and in that wrestle Slone was shot and died soon afterwards.

Witnesses say that three shots were fired. They thought these shots were fired by appellant, who also fired some shots at Dabber Johnson. Witnesses saw no other pistol than the one used by appellant. The shots, not accurately described, took effect in the chest and in the side. After appellant came in the house he displayed a pistol and said: “Here is the thing I killed him with.” He later displayed it to others, with the same or similar remarks. It is shown that prior to the homicide there was considerable drinking by the various members of the party.

Noah Mullins testified in general as to the meeting of the various parties at the home of appellant. He says he heard Dabber Johnson cursing him when he started home. He says that as he came through the front room Dabber Johnson grabbed witness and hollered “shoot,” or something like that. He got loose from Dabber Johnson and asked some one to get appellant to do something with him, that he was drunk. Witness got off the porch, and Dabber again caught hold of him. Appellant came out, and Slone was behind him. Appellant motioned his hand for Slone to go back, saying, “I will get Noah to go home and there won’t be any trouble.” Witness then turned, and saw appellant and Slone run together, and immediately the three shots were fired. He heard no words said by either deceased or appellant.

It is gathered from the evidence, in a rather indefinite way, that some feeling manifested in an argument, existed between Slone and Mullins on account of some untoward attention on the part of Mullins to Slone’s estranged wife, and it is hinted that Slone had come to appellant’s home with the intention of doing harm to *802 Mullins., It is also argued that the shots which were fired were fired accidentally in the wrestle with deceased, to prevent him from killing Mullins, appellant or some member of his family.

Appellant, testifying for himself, says that there had been no ill feeling between himself and deceased. Dabber Johnson was a brother-in-law of deceased. On the day of the homicide appellant had been loading coal until .about dark, and as to what occurred immediately before the shooting, appellant agrees substantially with the testimony related. He says his brother-in-law came “dancing” through the door, saying, “I am the worst man in Pike County.” Slone followed him in, and ate .some supper, which appellant’s wife procured. They sat around for a while eating melons, and Dabber took a half tumbler of liquor, and later began cursing and abusing Mullins. Appellant interposed, saying, “This is the wrong time to commence threshing out things, for you know the difference between Kenton Slone and Noah Mullins, and might get a big trouble started.”' Things quieted down, and Dabber drank some more liquor and left the room. Appellant said, “Dabber is drunk, and going to cause trouble;” Slone saying there would be no trouble with Dabber. However, shortly thereafter an argument started again “in a pretty rough way,” and appellant said, “The first man that starts trouble in here I will put him outside and keep him out.” Mullins then walked out, saying, “I am going home, Dabber is going to start trouble.” Appellant then suggested that Mullins remain. Dabber followed Mullins, the two clinched and wrestled, and appellant says Mullins reached a knife over to appellant’s wife and said, “You already had one brother hilled, I don’t want to hurt him.” The two wrestled off the porch into the yard, and Mullins called for appellant’s wife to come and get Dabber, as he did not want to hurt him; he then got loose and started away, and as he got near the front gate Mullins called to appellant to come to him. He then says as he moved off the front step Slone ran against him, and he turned and told him to “stay in, I will go and get Dabber back, and there won’t be any trouble.” Appellant then took another step, and “as I did that I let my hand drop down behind him, and felt the gún, and gave it a clinch, and wrung it np to me, and it fired, and I thought I was shot in the *803 arm, bnt I never broke my hold, and hnng on trying to get him loose until I wrung the gun around about here on him, and me and him tussling over the gun it fired again, and I believe that shot hit him down here, and then when it done that that weakened his hold there and then he clinched with the other hand for the gun and made back and hit at me and we tussled and scuffled, and one of us pulled off the gun another time, I don’t know whether it was me or him, one of us did that.”

When the hold was broken by the fall of deceased, after the third shot, appellant had the gun and fired two ;shots at Dabber, as the latter ran rapidly away. He says he had seen the pistol before, but in the possession of Dabber Johnson. After the shooting appellant helped to carry deceased in the house and placed him on the bed, and later surrendered to an officer.

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Related

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58 S.W.2d 608 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1933)
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Bluebook (online)
120 S.W.2d 411, 274 Ky. 799, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1938.