Lickliter v. Commonwealth

60 S.W.2d 355, 249 Ky. 95, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 485
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 9, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 60 S.W.2d 355 (Lickliter 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
Lickliter v. Commonwealth, 60 S.W.2d 355, 249 Ky. 95, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 485 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion op the Couet by

Stanley, Commissioneb

Reversing.

*96 The appellant, John Liclditer, seeks a reversal of a judgment sentencing him to imprisonment for five years for having killed Claude Bowling on Sunday evening, August 28, 1932. He was indicted jointly with his "brother, Roy, and sister, Alice.'

We state the substance of the evidence presented "by the commonwealth. The deceased, who was about 22 years old, had been keeping company with Alice Liclditer, who was about 17 years of age. The families lived a mile or so apart, and all were upon friendly terms. Early Saturday night, Alice and her sister, Annie, had gone to the home of the deceased near London in’company with two young men and were.intoxicated. By a subterfuge, the boys got the girls out of the automobile and then went off and left them. Shortly thereafter they left Bowling’s home with him. About eleven o’clock Sunday morning Alice came back, and. his mother let her come in to wash her face and comb her hair. In answer to her inquiry, Mrs. Bowling told her that Claude had gone up the road, and she went in that direction. About five o’clock that afternoon he and the girl got a drink of water at a housei about three-quarters of a mile from his home. Claude came home and ate his supper, and his mother said he took some food out of the house, going in the direction of the barn. About half past seven he left, and in a few minutes some shooting was heard in the direction he had gone. His mother and brother went there immediately, and found him dead in the road about 200 yards from his home. His pistol was in his right front pocket and had not been fired. John Creech testified that that evening he had gone by the Liclditer home, and the girl’s parents asked him to go help hunt for their daughter who had been gone a day or two. The defendant was present part of the time, but the witness did not know whether he heard this conversation. News had been brought that Claude had been killed and may have committed suicide. Later on when Creech came bacir to the Liclditer home the defendant suggested that they might be of some help and that they should go over to the Bowling home. He said nothing whatever about having shot or killed Claude Bowling a few minutes before. On the way they met up with several men who expressed the opinion that Claude could not have killed himself, and then the defendant turned and went back home. There was evidence of the defendant and his *97 brother, Roy, having been seen in different places, apparently going toward the point where the body was found, but, as we understand the record, neither was shown to have been within a half mile of it. One witness said that after the shooting he saw the defendant and his brother, Roy, and his sister, Alice, not far away. Charles Buck testified that about 4:30 that afternoon at the drug store the defendant said, “He liked to have had to put a man off the night before.” He mentioned no names and made no explanation of his remark. A colored woman, who lived across the road or street from the Lickiiters, stated that about half past six Sunday evening the defendant left home saying that he was going to get his sister, and asked Roy to go along. Roy said he was not going because “They were to stay in the woods until morning and get married;” and John said, “If you are not going I will go; she is my sister and she is not going to stay in the woods; I will go and get her if it takes death.” A deputy sheriff testified to finding the body in the road. Bowling had been shot once in the breast near the heart and had a little skinned place by his eye. His shirt was powder burned. A witness heard only one shot fired, and another witness heard two.

The court overruled the motion for a peremptory instruction to find the defendant not guilty. Of this the appellant now complains. He did not rest his case upon the commonwealth’s evidence, which was obviously insufficient to connect the accused with the crime, but proceeded to introduce his defense, which admitted the killing and sought to justify it. So the motion and the case must now be considered on the entire record.

The proof of the defendant is stated in substance. "When Annie Lickliter, the older sister, came home Sunday afternoon and found that Alice was not there, she went to the home of the deceased looking for her. Not finding her there, she came back home and told her parents that Alice had been with Claude Bowling the night before. It appears that the folks at home thought Alice had stayed with her sister that night. It was then getting dark, and the father started to go to find his daughter, but felt that he could not see well enough, and asked his son, John, the defendant, to go and find her. Roy, who had been working that day, was chang *98 ing Ms. cloth.es, and said he was coming on np town. The defendant denied the testimony of the colored woman that when Roy had refused to go with him he said he would get.'hisj sister “if it takes death.” In this denial he is corroborated by his father, mother, and brother. The defendant went out the road and came suddenly upon the deceased and his sister. She was crying, and he told her their mother was sick and she was needed at home; whereupon Bowling shoved her over in some briers and bushes and against the fence, cursed him, and said she was not going. He also added that “When they find you all the undertaker will find you laying there with your G-- d- brains shot out,” and made for his pistol. He grabbed him and said: “Claude, let’s not have any trouble; I thought we were friends.” Bowling continued cursing and said he was going to kill him, and when he got his pistol about half way out of his pocket he shot him. His efforts to defend himself and to pacify Bowling are further detailed. The sister fully corroborates the defendant, and there is no contradiction or any evidence tending to contradict their testimony. The defendant had been in the habit of carrying a pistol. Afterward he and his sister went home and told their father what had happened. The defendant admits having started with Creech to go to Bowling’s home, and that he did not tell him what had happened. On the way he changed his mind and returned home. He had not heard of any suggestion of suicide.

The sisters testified that Saturday night, when they went to Bowling’s home with the other boys, Bowling compelled them to get out of the machine, and then the boys left. Bowling, who was drinking, forced them to remain with him around on the streets of London all that night. • The next morning, when Annie went to her place of work and where she stayed, Bowling promised to take Alice home. Instead of doing so, Alice testified that he threatened to kill her if she tried to go home. He took her into the woods, where they remained until about 11 o’clock, and then went to his home. Testimony of what occurred during Sunday between Bowling and the girl was heard by the judge and held inadmissible.

The question whether the verdict is flagrantly against the evidence is a close one, but, inasmuch as *99 errors in the trial require a reversal of the judgment, we have concluded it well to express no opinion upon the point.

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Bluebook (online)
60 S.W.2d 355, 249 Ky. 95, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lickliter-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1933.