Lockard v. Commonwealth

237 S.W. 26, 193 Ky. 619, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 44
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 3, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 237 S.W. 26 (Lockard v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lockard v. Commonwealth, 237 S.W. 26, 193 Ky. 619, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 44 (Ky. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Opinion of The Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing the judgment in each appeal.

The appellants in the above two appeals, Lockard in the one and Morgan in the other, were jointly indicted in the Whitley circuit court, in which they were charged with murdering Wiley Smith. The killing occurred between one and two o’clock a. m. on October 19, 1920, in the city of Corbin on the pavement in front of the Busy Bee restaurant. The first count in the indictment charged the-two with committing the murder and the second one charged a conspiracy between them to commit it, and in pursuance thereto they did so. Appellant Lockard was separately tried at the January, 1921, term of the Whitley circuit court and was convicted of the crime of murder and his punishment fixed at confinement in the penitentiary for his natural life. The appellant Morgan was tried at the May, 1921, term and he was convicted of voluntary manslaughter with an attached punishment of eight years ’ confinement in the penitentiary. Defendants have prosecuted separate appeals with voluminous records in each of them, and upon motion and by agreement of parties they were heard together and will be disposed of- in one opinion.

We will first determine what we conceive to be the material errors complained of in the appeal of appellant Lockard, and will then direct our attention to the appeal of Morgan. In both them it is contended that the motion made by each appellant for a directed verdict of acquittal should have been sustained, and that the court erred in giving to the jury on each trial the conspiracy instruction. There are also objections common to both appellants concerning the introduction of alleged incompetent testimony introduced by the Commonwealth, and perhaps others, also relating to each of the appeals; [621]*621but we do not regard any of them, not herein referred to or discussed, of sufficient materiality or prejudicial effect to constitute reversible error, and we will therefore confine ourselves to a consideration of the matters urged .for a reversal which we deem sufficient therefor.

Lockard at the time of the killing was, and had been for some time prior thereto, chief of the fire department of the city of Corbin, and while that position did not vest him with the powers and duties of a police officer he seems to have performed those duties in the way of assisting the police of the city in making arrests and preserving the peace with the acquiescence and consent of the chief of police, as well as the city council. Morgan was a duly appointed and acting deputy constable in district number 6 of Knox county, a portion of which lay within the corporate limits of Corbin, which includes portions of both Whitley and Knox counties and, perhaps, a small portion of Laurel county.

Some five or six miles east of Corbin at a place where the railroad crosses the pike running to Barbourville was a store operated by Lockard’s son. Some time after supper on the 18th of October the owner of that store telephoned to the chief of police (Mr. Browning) that his store had been broken into by a person named by him, and that the culprit had escaped, and a request was made for the officers of the city to search and be on the lookout for the housebreaker. The office of the chief of police and that of fire chief, Lockard, were close together and the latter was called to the phone and his son had substantially the same conversation with him, whereupon the chief of police instructed Lockard to find the boys (meaning the night chief and the night policeman) and, in substance, to do what was legal and necessary to effect the apprehension and arrest of the person who had broken into the store, the supposition being that he would make his way to Corbin in trying to effect his escape. The night chief was named Mctlargue and the night policeman was named Weaver. Lockard found the two latter and they concluded it would be' proper to take along with them the appellant, Morgan, since he was a constable in Knox county where the crime had been committed, and they eventually agreed for two of them to walk along the railroad to the point where it crossed the pike and for the other two to travel the pike to that point, but the pike crossed over a large hill or mountain called Barbourville [622]*622Mil, and it was suggested that those who traveled it do so in an automobile. Weaver then made arrangements with deceased, Wiley Smith, to carry two of the officers over the pike, as had been determined upon, but the machine used belonged to Ed Rains, a warm friend of deceased and whose sister was unlawfully living with the latter, who was married to another woman.

Befoi*e starting on the trip deceased went to his room and procured a large pistol which he put upon the front seat and which he occupied with Rains, who drove the machine, and appellants occupied the rear seat. Defendants testified that after starting, Smith, whom they claim was more or less intoxicated and which fact is corroborated by other evidence in the case, suggested that he was going to sell them some whiskey but at a very high price. The machine went dead on Barbourville hill, a distance of less than a mile from where the parties smarted, and all of the occupants alighted therefrom and while efforts were being made by Rains, and perhaps Smith, to remedy the trouble (which turned out to be a scarcity of gasoline) the defendants say that Smith drew a bottle of whiskey and offered it to them but they declined to take any of it, and Morgan, in whose jurisdiction the parties were at the time, arrested him for transporting whiskey in his presence contrary to law. Some angry words were uttered by Smith and finally the parties got back into the machine and let it roll down the hill and when it got on level ground there was sufficient gasoline to run it and they went back to the office of the chief of police to whom Smith was delivered. After some delay he deposited $100.00 with that officer and was released, but during the time he was talking profanely and threateningly about the. officers. After he was released he procured his pistol and wandered about town, eventually landing at Kelly’s restaurant where there were gathered a considerable number of his pals and intimate associates. It is in proof, but in a very evasive way contradicted by some of the associates of the deceased, that he and one Lewis, a'most willing witness for the Commonwealth, made up a purse to purchase a pint of whiskey and that another Commonwealth’s witness, equally as willing, carried them away from Kelly’s restaurant in an automobile and was gone for some time when they returned. Lewis and the other witness referred to said that they were “just riding around town” [623]*623seeing’ what they could discover. Lockard saw the money the deceased had at the time he deposited the $100.00 with the- chief of police for his release, but there is no testimony showing that Morgan knew how much money, if any, deceased had, which, according to the testimony, was some four or five hundred dollars.

After Smith had been delivered to the chief of police the two defendants concluded to walk the pike to the point agreed upon and meet the policemen who had gone around the railroad. The latter had reached the point agreed upon and waited some fifteen or twenty minutes and then started back traveling the pike where they met the two defendants, who had been delayed in the manner stated, about a mile from Corbin, and the four returned to the city, arriving there about 12:50 in the night.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
237 S.W. 26, 193 Ky. 619, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lockard-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1922.