Ledford v. Commonwealth

102 S.W.2d 38, 267 Ky. 289, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 319
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 19, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 102 S.W.2d 38 (Ledford 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
Ledford v. Commonwealth, 102 S.W.2d 38, 267 Ky. 289, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 319 (Ky. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

■Somewhere near 6 o’clock on the evening of April 22, 1936, the appellant, Herbert Ledford, a yonth 20 years of age, shot and killed his uncle, Steve Turner, about twice his age, and for which he was later indicted,' charged with murder. The fatal shooting occurred on a public road in a remote section of Breathitt county, Ky., known as “War Creek Road.” It traverses the narrow valley through which the creek runs and along both the creek and the road there are a number of residences and also a rural store conducted by Noah Johnson. The place of the shooting was located about 200 yards from Johnson’s store, and it happened apparently in the middle of the road where many of the neighborhood residents later discovered' the victim’s body. They found it lying on the left side with the face down with two bullet holes entering his back, one of which passed entirely through, while the other was lodged under the skin on the front part of the body and was taken out. There were two other shots penetrating the body from the left side, but more to the back than to the front. No shot, according to the great number of witnesses who testified, entered from the front.

At the trial defendant asked for a continuance because of the absence of a witness by whom he stated in his affidavit he could prove a threat made by deceased against him prior to the shooting. The Commonwealth’s attorney agreed for the affidavit to be read as the evidence of the absent witness and the motion *291 for a continuance was overruled, hut the affidavit was not introduced or offered to be read, and the only testimony heard at the trial on -behalf of defendant was that given by himself alone. The jury convicted him of voluntary manslaughter with an attached punishment of confinement in the penitentiary for 21 years. His motion for a new trial was overruled and from the verdict and judgment pronounced thereon he prosecutes this appeal, urging through his counsel only one ground for a reversal, and which is — that the testimony of the Commonwealth, as a whole, was (a) insufficient to authorize a submission of the case to the jury, but if mistaken in that, then (b) that the verdict of guilty was flagrantly against the evidence and unsustained by it. All other alleged errors incorporated in the motion for a new trial are waived, but none of them possessed the remotest merit. The argued ground for a reversal as so subdivided calls for a sufficient statement of the substance of the testimony heard at the trial as will determine whether or not the argument has support.

There was a girl in the neighborhood by the name of Jane Johnson, who, unfortunately, appears tp have thrown away and discarded all of her moral character. Appellant nevertheless was infatuated with her and became engaged to marry her; but his parents interposed serious objections, according to his testimony, neither of the parents, however, testifying in the case concerning that fact. Because of such alleged opposition defendant also stated that he and the girl had agreed on the week before the fatal day to meet at Noah Johnson’s store the following Saturday — which was the fatal day — for the purpose of devising ways and means of circumventing such alleged parental objections. But instead of meeting at the store they met at a place , a short distance therefrom on the road and seated themselves upon some present settee for the purpose of talking over matters. Beforehand defendant had equipped himself with a bottle of liquor and a 38 caliber pistol. A part of the liquor both he and the girl had consumed before decedent appeared about fifteen minutes after their arrival. He was traveling along the road and' was equipped with a 32 caliber pistol in a scabbard and also a bottle of liquor — both being breeders of evil consequences. Thus the two participants in *292 the later tragedy were equipped and armed, with the favors of the girl as a possible casus belli. After decedent’s arrival the three continued to imbibe, and it appears to have produced a spirit of restlessness on the part of the three and they began a series of walks up and down the road over a distance of, perhaps, a mile of its length and which they kept up until they became so intoxicated as to greatly lessen their power of locomotion, and which was particularly true of the deceased, who became so drunk as to be practically unable to walk, and he was partially assisted in his efforts to do so by the other two, upon whose bodies he leaned while engaged in the effort.- At last they arrived shortly before the killing at a spot where the deceased announced that he could go no farther without something to eat.

The girl was dispatched to the store of Noah Johnson to procure some food, but prior to starting on that errand she had taken decedent’s scabbard and pistol from around his body and buckled it on to hers, after which she shot all the shells in his pistol at nothing more than random, but when decedent was shot his pistol had been rebuckled upon his body but with no shells, either empty or loaded, in it, and which was the condition found by arrivals immediately after the shooting. The girl returned from Johnson’s store with some crackers and sausage, and perhaps other articles of food, and the deceased insisted on sitting by the side of the road until he ate it, which he began doing. However, prior to that time defendant had endeavored to relieve decedent of his pistol, but to which he objected. Decedent was persuaded by defendant not to separate from him and the'girl on one occasion during their aimless traveling of the road in the manner described, and not to go home with a neighbor. But during none of the time did he inform decedent that he (defendant) and the girl had in contemplation a trip to Powell county where they might be married without interference from defendant’s parents, but which fact defendant testified was the purpose of his meeting the girl at that place on that occasion.

When the deceased sat down by the side of the road to eat his lunch that the girl had procured from Johnson’s store it was near the time of the arrival of *293 a train at Oakdale, a neighboring depot (which train defendant stated he and the girl expected to take for their trip to Powell county), but the depot was three and a half miles from the place where the parties then were, and when it was impossible for them to walk to it in time to catch that train. Nevertheless, defendant stated that he and the girl waited for defendant to consume his meal “about four or five minutes,” after which he said: “I told him we couldn’t wait any longer we had to go on to Oakdale to catch the train. He asked what for and I told him we was going to Powell county to get married, when I told him that he jumped up wild and said I shouldn’t take her down there and marry her, said he would kill me before I should take her.

“Q. "What happened after that? A. I talked to him and the girl talked to him. I told him that he was my uncle and I was his nephew and he cussed me. He said G-od dam the nephew, a nephew wasn’t any more to him than anybody else. I told him to set down and eat I wouldn’t have no trouble with him for nothing in the world, I was a friend to him and always had been. Finally he set back down to eating again, I told him we was going and we started out. He jumped up and grabbed a rock and throwed it at me.

“Q. How far apart were you? A. Eight or ten feet.

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Related

Banks v. Commonwealth
126 S.W.2d 1122 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 S.W.2d 38, 267 Ky. 289, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ledford-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1937.