Lankford v. Commonwealth

277 S.W. 239, 211 Ky. 219, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 851
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 13, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 277 S.W. 239 (Lankford 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
Lankford v. Commonwealth, 277 S.W. 239, 211 Ky. 219, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 851 (Ky. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Turner, Commissioner

Affirming. -

Melvin Gregory was shot and killed on the night of August 26, 1924, about 9:30- p. m. at a point just across the river from Harlantown,- in the county -of, that name.

Appellant and Smith Ball were jointly 'Charged with his murder, and with being in a conspiracy with each other to murder Gregory, and that while such conspiracy existed, and pursuant thereto, appellant shot and killed Gregory.

The Commonwealth sought and obtained a change of venue, and the case was by proper orders transferred to the Clay circuit court, where appellant on his separate trial was found guilty and sentenced to- confinement in the penitentiary for life. From that judgment this- appeal is prosecuted.

Gregory lived at a small town called Baxter, across the Cumberland river from Harlantown, and there was a footbridge across the river from Harlantown to- a point near his home. Appellant lived some three or four hundred yards down the railroad track, and on the opposite side of the river, 'where he conducted a store -and resided in the same house. His store and living quarters were owned by Ball, and Ball had previously lived adjoining or near the s-ame property -with his family, but had shortly theretofore removed some two or three miles down the river to a town named Loyal. The Cumberland river at that time at the point between appellant’s store and the town of Baxter was very low and easily crossed, even on foot.

*221 Gregory, some weeks prior to the homicide, had been appointed 'by the county court a county patrolman, and as such had been active in ferreting out and prosecuting persons charged with infractions of the law, and particularly "those of the prohibition law. It appears that both appellant and Ball were under suspicion as to such latter infractions, and Gregory is shown to have been around appellant’s place of business several times shortly before the killing, presumably for the purpose of procuring evidence and instituting proceedings against him. Some weeks before the homicide, at or near appellant’s ' store, while Gregory had custody of a man he had arrested for drunkenness, Ball and his son took the prisoner from him, and Gregory claimed that Ball’s son had done so under the pretext that he was a federal officer. Accordingly Gregory instituted proceedings before a federal commissioner at Pineville charging Ball and his son with impersonating federal officers, and such proceeding was still pending at the time of the killing. Likewise upon one occasion a short time before the homicide, when Gregory was at or near the store of appel- . lant, the latter discharged a pistol in his store, and, as claimed by Gregory, made threats and otherwise recklessly handled the firearm. As the result of this incident Gregory caused a warrant to be sworn out against appellant in the county court charging him with the reckless use of firearms, and that charge had only recently been heard and disposed of in the county court when the homicide occurred. Ball and his son made frequent visits to the store of appellant, stopping there on their way to and from Ilarlantown as many as two or three times a day, and it is apparent from the great amount of circumstantial evidence in the record that Gregory believed they were cooperating with each other in the illicit handling and selling of intoxicants. He likewise believed that the store was the base or headquarters of such operations, and probably went there often with the view of obtaining evidence, and with the ultimate purpose of instituting proceedings which would result in its cessation. There is likewise evidence that each appellant and Ball had upon more occasions than one made threats against Gregory, some of them more or less indirect.

The evidence as to the actual killing is wholly circumstantial. There was used on the trial in the circuit court a map which is not in this transcript, and which *222 would doubtless'eiflighten this court greatly as to the relationship of the various places referred to in the evidence to each other.

Gregory and a young man 17 years of age named Hall crossed the footbridge together and then went a short distance to the railroad track near a cattle guard, and stood there a while talking before they were to separate, Hall living on the hill above the railroad track, and Gregory down the railroad track. Near the cattle guard a few feet from them were some high weeds, and while they were so standing on the railroad track a shot flashed from those woods, and Hall immediately ran towards-his home. Two other shots quickly followed the first, and then there was a short lull when four other shots were . fired. Hall did’ not see or recognize anybody, but only saw the flash of the shot coming from the weeds. When the firing was over Gregory was found with three wounds, two in the back to the right of his spine, and another over or near his right hip bone, all' three ranging upward and two of them going through. He lived only a few hours, and died without having made' a statement so far as this record discloses, except that one witness testifies he stated when first reached that he did not know who shot him. The condition of the weeds indicated that one person, and only one, had been secreted there, and that person probably lying down. Gome distance down the railroad, and in the direction of where appellant lived, there resided Hugh Smith and his wife in a home about 65 or 75 feet from the railroad track; they together with many other residents of the locality heard the shooting and went out into their yard toward the railroad track, and while they were there a man ran rapifliy down the railroad track. Mrs. Smith positively identifies appellant as that man, while her husband testifies in sulbstance - that he and his wife walked out toward the railroad track within about fifty feet of it, his wife being a little nearer to the track than he, when they -saw' a man come running fast down the railroad, coming from the direction of the shooting; and that while he did not recognize the man he believed it was appellant because he was about his size, and the clothing he wore looked like his clothing; that he knew appellant well and the person continued down the railroad. There was evidence that it was quite a dark night, although Smith and his wife each say it was not so' dark that they could not have recognized the man. There is also evidence that some dis *223 tance away was an electric light burning, and that the' lights from the main town of Harlan across the river, to some extent cast their rays to that point. The Smiths also had boarding with them at the time three persons who were either on the front porch or some little distance further from the railroad track than were the Smiths; but only one of those persons was introduced as a witness, and he testifies that he saw the man running rapidly down .the railroad track, but did not know him at the time, but that he was a small man.

Upon appellant’s arrest there were found at his home certain articles of wearing apparel, some.of which, were wet as if he had crossed the river in them the night before they were found.

In addition to this bloodhounds were telephoned for on the night of the homicide, and one of. them reached the scene and was put upon the trail the next morning about eleven hours after the shooting.

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Related

Cook v. Commonwealth
24 S.W.2d 269 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1930)
Hogan and Phelps v. Commonwealth
280 S.W. 104 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
277 S.W. 239, 211 Ky. 219, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 851, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lankford-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1925.