Joiner v. Commonwealth

223 S.W.2d 1007, 311 Ky. 269
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 26, 1949
StatusPublished

This text of 223 S.W.2d 1007 (Joiner 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
Joiner v. Commonwealth, 223 S.W.2d 1007, 311 Ky. 269 (Ky. 1949).

Opinion

Judge Helm

Affirming.

The appellant, Pauline Joiner, was charged with the murder of John Blaney. The jury found her guilty of voluntary manslaughter and fixed her punishment at five years in prison. She appeals from the judgment entered on that verdict.

Appellant lived with her husband about one and one-half miles from Bowling Green in a small two-room house, with a front and a back door, near the Glen Lily road. About 10 o’clock on the night of June 17, Í947, appellant and her husband awakened Vick Smith, Jailer of Warren County, who lived on the Glen Lily road some 400 yards beyond the Joiner property. ' The husband in the presence of his wife, advised the jailer that his wife, Pauline, had killed John Blaney, and said, “I want to turn her over to you, she wants to give herself up.” Smith took her into custody and went at once to the Joiner home.

Smith found John Blaney on the outside of the house, near the front door, with his feet under the edge *270 of the house and his head away from the house. Blaney was dead. Smith opened,the front door and examined the front room. He found a shotgun lying across the foot of the bed, the barrel pointing toward the door. One shell had been fired from the gun; the other hammer was pulled back. He found a small rock on the inside of the house, between the door and the window. Smith found that the lower part of the upper panel of the door was out. He found a part of the panel in the room. The part was about two inches wide and extended about halfway across the door. The piece of panel found on the inside had been broken from the outside. He found a round gunshot hole about the size of a half-dollar through the door, five or six inches above the door knob. The hole was around 32 to 36 inches from the bottom of the door. He found blood on the door, just aboye the broken panel. Smith put appellant in jail, called the coroner, Chester Basham, and together they went back to the Joiner home.

Basham found the body of Blaney lying on the ground, right in front of the door of the house. The body had not been moved; Blaney was dead; the top of his head “was blown off;” his death was caused from “shotgun wounds.” As he recalls, about a four inch strip of the door panel was out; “there was a gunshot hole near the door knob.” On cross-examination, he was asked: “Prom your investigation of the body and from the hole in the door, would you tell this jury whether or not the shot that killed John Blaney came through the hole in the door?” Basham answered: “Yes.”

Jennie Blaney, mother of John, lived about a quarter of a mile from the Joiner home. She stated’ that appellant had married Joiner in March, 1947. Appellant had worked at the Blaney home for more than a year before she was married. On Sunday, before John was killed on Tuesday, appellant came up the road “hollering and singing” and cursing; she had been drinking; she said she had come after some clothes. Mrs. Blaney went to the cupboard where the clothes were kept; appellant jumped up and got behind the cupboard door, waved her hands and said she didn’t want the clothes. Mrs. Blaney told her to go home. John was sitting out at the end of the walk on a rock. *271 Pauline “went out to where John Henry was sitting. John Henry didn’t get up and make no move towards going with her and she said, ‘You had better go with me now or I bet I never see you again.’ And he just sit there and he never did make no move to go with her.” On the day John was killed, he and appellant went across the field towards Meador’s whiskey store. There appeared to be no trouble between them at that time.

Fred Blaney, brother of John, says that he had seen his brother and appellant together frequently. When asked if they were friendly or unfriendly, he said, “They were in arms * * * in love.” At the time his brother was going with Pauline she was “married to Joiner.” Henry Moore had seen Pauline and John walking together in Bowling Green a number of times. He had never seen them “fussing or quarreling, * # * They seemed to, be walking along kinder' like sweethearts to me.” John Meeks saw Pauline and John together about 5 p.m. the day John was killed. They were walking along together and seemed to be friendly.

About 6:30 p.m. of the evening John was killed,' Mrs. Blaney saw him at the Joiner home. She went there to tell him his supper was ready. As she went toward the house she saw Pauline come to the front door and look up and down the lane like she was looking for someone. When Mrs. Blaney got down where she could be seen, Pauline came out and said “ ‘You know, mamma, I didn’t have no business to come over there.’ ” John was “laying across the bed * * * in the front room.” When Mrs. Blaney asked John to go home with her, Pauline “put both arms around him and held him.” John said, “ ‘I will be home, mamma, in forty-five minutes’ Pauline said, “ ‘Yes, you will if I will let you,’ and she threw her arms around him and just held him there.” This was the last time his mother saw him alive. John was 22 years of age, single, a small man — about five feet five or six — and weighed around 108 pounds.

At the trial, appellant was asked to tell the jury what Blaney was doing at the time she fired the shotgun. She answered, “Well, he was throwing rocks at the door and cursing me and telling me he was going to kill me, was coming in after me. ’ ’ When asked to tell what *272 she did in regard to the shotgun, she stated, “Well, I was busy in the kitchen and I was scared too and I went and got the shotgun and loaded it when he said he was going to come on in, you know, and he had done knocked the panel off the door and then he went off some place and then I laid the gun down across the bed and went on back to work and in a few minutes he come back and began throwing rocks again and I took this gun and I told him I was going to shoot and shot out the door.” This was about 9 p. m. Asked when she found out that she had shot Blaney, she said, “I kept calling him and he didn’t answer and well, a good while after I got the lamp lit * * * I went to the door and I saw him laying out there.” She then went to a neighbor’s telephone and called her husband, who was working , for the Pet Milk Company. Asked if she intended to kill Blaney, she answered, “No, I thought it would scare him. * * * I didn’t know where he was. It was dark outside, I couldn’t see.”

On cross-examination she said she did not know where John "was at the time she shot, “He had been right there at the door and had been hitting the door and so I knew he was out that way, but I didn’t know just where he was. * * * He left several times and came back.” She did not go outside to see if the rocks had hit the door or dented it. When she fired the shotgun, the lamp which she had brought from the kitchen went out. She said, “I shot the gun through the door because I knew he was coming in. * * * The door was thumb-bolted.

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223 S.W.2d 1007, 311 Ky. 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joiner-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1949.