Keller v. Commonwealth

20 S.W.2d 998, 230 Ky. 815, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 186
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 8, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 20 S.W.2d 998 (Keller 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
Keller v. Commonwealth, 20 S.W.2d 998, 230 Ky. 815, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 186 (Ky. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Commissioner Stanley—

Affirming.

The appellants, John Keller and James Grigsby, colored, have been condemned to die for the murder of Harry S. Long, an elderly watchman at the Community Laundry, in Louisville. Their guilt is clearly established out of their own mouths, and that of their confederate in the crime, Richard Edmonds, who also has been given the extreme penalty on a separate trial and whose case has been affirmed within the past, few days. See Edmonds v. Commonwealth, 230 Ky. 725, 20 S. W. (2d) —.

There are no extenuating or mitigating circumstances. The murder is of a cruel and atrocious nature, accompanied by an Iscariotic betrayal by Edmonds, who was a fireman at the laundry and an apparent friend of the deceased. The motive was robbery.

Early in the evening of November 14,1928, Edmonds met Grigsby at a negro “Club” in an alley, and later the two met up with Keller at another bootlegging establishment where more whisky was obtained. According to Edmonds, who testified for the commonwealth on this trial, Grigsby asked him if there was any money at the laundry and he told him not as he knew of. They went to find Keller, and then the three proceeded to the laundry for the purpose of robbing the safe. When they arrived he knocked two or three times on windows and then on the door. Upon inquiry he told the watchman who he was. Long opened the door and he and appellant went in. Grigsby immediately grabbed Long and held him while Keller struck him twice with a bar of iron or furnace grate shaker and sent Edmonds to find a hatchet. Long cried out: “Oh, Rich, don’t let them do me this way.” Keller took the hatchet and Edmonds started to leave but was called back, and the three of them went into the office where he told them the money was, and *817 Keller used the hatchet to prize open a drawer in the safe and extracted the money, which was divided among the three.

Bourbon Unsel, colored, and members of his family, who lived next to the laundry, testified to seeing the three men at the laundry. Edmonds, whom they knew, took down a shutter arid put his head in the window and then beckoned the two men standing at the corner of the building to go in the door with him when it was opened. They heard Long crying out, “Don’t kill me Rich; please don’t kill me; Lord have mercy; please'don’t kill me, Rich; don’t do that Rich.” They saw Keller ánd Grigsby come out of the building. One of the witnesses, a boy, who was coming home throrigh an alley from a picture show, says he heard Edmonds call out from inside óf the building, “Come back in here; what is thfe matter with you, scared?” and the two men went back. Unsel says Keller started down the alley and Grigsby, who stood in the door a moment, called him back. ■ A few minutes later he heard a tinkering noise in the laundry arid saw no more of the three men. Unsel called the police and they arrived at the laundry shortly before 11 o’clock where they found Mr. Long unconscious; with blood around the boiler room. The safe and desk had been prized open and ransacked. Long died a short while later.

Within an hour the officers arrested the three men not far from the scene of the crime, took them first to the station house and then to the detective office, where each of them signed a confession. Grigsby’s statement was, in substance, that after they met up with each other Edmonds remarked that he had lost his rent money and had to get some some way; and they went to the laundry; Edmonds knocked on the window and the white man let him in the door; he stayed about 5 minutes and then called Keller and himself to come in; when he got inside he found Keller and Richard scuffling with the white man; Richard cursed him and told him to shut up and hit him in the head; and that Edmonds prized open the box in the safe, robbed it, and that they all went out the front door. The substance of Keller’s statement was that Edmonds invited him and Grigsby to go to the laundry '; that he went in and called the appellants, and later Richard told them after they had left the building “I got that boy. ’ ’ It appears that after making the signed statement Keller indicated that he wanted to tell more about the crime and made a more elaborate statement which *818 .was not reduced to writing. In this he told that Grigsby grabbed Long and Edmonds struck him, and that those two robbed the safe. He also told the officers where they could find the hatchet which had been thrown into the sewer. At his request Edmonds told them they could find Long’s pistol in his yard. The officers found the pistol and hatchet that night at the places indicated.

The defendants on the trial repudiated these confessions and testified that they had been obtained from them by “sweating;” that they had been grilled, beaten on the head with a blackjack, struck in the mouth and otherwise brutally treated; that they signed the confessions at a time when they were almost senseless and did not know what they were doing, and because they were scared not to do so and in order to secure relief. The officers in rebuttal denied this treatment, and testified .that the statements were voluntarily made.

The defendants’ testimony throughout is substantially the same. They both testified that they had gone with Edmonds'to the laundry to secure a truck to take a ride to a colored roadhouse; that they had done so on previous occasions; that when they reached the laundry Edmonds told them to wait and he would call Raymond and get the truck. Edmonds took down the shutter from the window and says, “This is Rich;” then went around and entered by a side ' door. They remained outside smoking, as testified by the Unsel family. After Edmonds had been inside 10 or 15 minutes the appellants went to the door and there they saw him strike Mr. Long .with some kind of an instrument, and Long was pleading with him not to kill him. They started out whereupon Edmonds called them back. He had a pistol and a hatchet in his hands when they went back into the laundry. They rushed right out through’ the building to St. Catherine street, and a little while afterwards met Edmonds on Jackson street. He asked why they ran since they had nothing to do with it, and there threw the hatchet in the sewer. Other witnesses introduced by the defendants testified that they had been out a time or two with Edmonds at night in the laundry truck. They also undertook to establish the appellants’ reputation as being good.

1. • The first ground urged for a.reversal of the judgment is that the court should have sustained defendants’ challenges for cause of several of the jury panel, and because he refused to discharge those already accepted *819 by both parties after one of them stated of his own accord: “This matter brings np another question; if these men or either of them were present when the act was committed and either one was running away at the time I would still hold him guilty, notwithstanding he ran away; I think that is the question that is up for consideration. This brings up the question. I feel he would be just as guilty although the other man committed the crime, yet he was present when it was being planned.” And, further: “If he was running away at the time it occurred I would still hold he was a party to it.” This statement was induced by a response of another member of the panel being interrogated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 S.W.2d 998, 230 Ky. 815, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keller-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1929.