Mannin v. Commonwealth

279 S.W. 945, 212 Ky. 529, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 1130
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 18, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 279 S.W. 945 (Mannin 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
Mannin v. Commonwealth, 279 S.W. 945, 212 Ky. 529, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 1130 (Ky. 1925).

Opinion

*530 OPINION op the Court by

Judge Dietzman

Affirming.

On Saturday, July 26, 1924, a church revival was being held in a schoolhouse in Elliott county, Kentucky. The services took up a little after dark and the schoolhouse was well filled. Attending these services were Warner and his brother, Preble Oreen, Ollie and his brother, Cottle Mannin, the appellant herein. Ollie had married a sister of the Greens but she and he had separated in the previous April. There seems to have been some ill feeling at this time between the Greens 'and Ollie. Ollie and Cottle had not gone to the services together nor by any agreement. They did not even sit together. During some singing, Ollie got up and went out of the house into the yard. A little bit later the two Green boys went out and sat on the stoop in front of the schoolhouse. This stoop was a small porch elevated some two or three feet from the ground. While the Green boys were sitting on the stoop, Ollie came up from the yard and seated himself .nearby, remarking as he did so: “I am the best God damned man on the ground.” At this Warner jumped up, came around to where Ollie was seated and said: “Take off your glasses and I will show you.” Ollie arose, and as he did so drew his Colt’s revolver. When Ollie started to draw his revolver both of the Green boys, who, it is fairly well established by the evidence, were unarmed and in their shirt sleeves, grabbed him. The gun went off, the bullet going into the floor of the porch. At this moment Cottle, who was then inside of the house, got up to go out and take a walk. He appeared on the porch just about the time the gun went off, whereupon he, too, jumped into the fight. In the struggle all four men fell off the porch on to the ground. While they were all mixed up on the ground another shot was fired and Cottle received a scalp wound on the side of his head. He says he does not know who fired this shot, but thinks it was Preble Green. The probabilities are that it was a shot from Ollie’s gun which was being fired in the melee. While the four men were wrestling on the ground, Ollie seems to have lost his gun. He and Preble Green then separated from the other two and struggled over to the edge of a little woods where some logs were lying. Up to this point there is not much dispute in the evidence, but from here on the parties differ radically as to what happened. The Commonwealth claims that as Ollie and *531 Preble moved away towards the woods, Warner Green arose from the ground and was standing with his hack to the sehoolhouse; that he looked around and saw Cottle, who had in the meantime drawn his Smith & Wesson, standing in front of him and pointing the gun toward him; that he begged Cottle not to shoot him, but that Cottle, despite his pleas, deliberately fired his gun twice into him, killing him immediately. On the other hand, Cottle claims that when he got up off the ground Warner Green then had a gun in his hand, presumably the one Ollie had dropped; that Warner then fired and shot him through the arm, whereupon he shot and killed Warner in what he believed to be his necessary self-defense. It is admitted that Cottle was shot through the arm, but the Commonwealth claims that the wound made in the arm could not have been inflicted as Cottle claims without the bullet- going through Cottle’s body. In support of this contention it produced a physician who attended Cottle on the day after this trouble and who testified that when he asked Cottle how he got such a wound without that bullet going through his body, Cottle replied that he had his arm around somebody when he received the shot. Cottle did not deny this statement. From this it is argued that Cottle received his wound at the time when all four men were fighting on the ground just after they fell off the porch and when Ollie was firing his gun. After Cottle had killed Warner he rushed over to where his brother Ollie and Preble Green were fighting. He here tried to shoot Preble but was disarmed by some third parties before he accomplished his purpose, but not before he was hit on the head by a rock thrown by Preble. On the intervention of the third parties, the fight came to an end. Cottle then went back into the sehoolhouse and in the presence of several people stated: “I got one of the s-b’s.” He does not deny making these statements but says that on account of the conditions of his wounds in the head and arm he was so addled that he did not know what he was saying.

Appellant was arrested on the following Monday, charged with the murder of Warner Green. Due to the fear of the high feeling against him then prevailing in Elliott county, he was removed to Winchester, in Clark county, for safekeeping. Here he remained until his case was called for trial on September 10, 1924, in Morgan county, where his case had been sent on a change of venue, except for a short period on the 5th and 6th of *532 August, during which he was in Elliott county for the purpose of answering the indictment found against him. At no time prior to his trial did he make any effort to procure bail. Some time before August 5th, Mr. James Clay, of Morehead, Kentucky, was employed to defend, the appellant and some time thereafter Mr. John Waugh, of Ashland, was likewise so employed. When the appellant was in Sandy Hook, the county seat of Elliott county, to plead to the indictment against him, Mr. Clay was also there, but he does not seem to have had any extended interview with his client. When his case was called for trial in September, appellant moved for a continuance on the ground that he and his counsel had had no opportunity to confer with one another, or to prepare the case for trial, or to interview the witnesses, and that certain witnesses whom he had summoned were not present to testify. He set -forth in his affidavit for the continuance what these witnesses would say if present. He also filed supporting affidavits of his counsel.'' 'The Commonwealth filed a counter affidavit and on this proof the court overruled the motion for continuance. The case proceeding to trial, appellant was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter and sentenced to eight years' in the penitentiary. From this judgment he appeals.

The first ground relied on for a reversal is the failure of the trial court to grant appellant the continuance he asked for. The proof shows Mr. Clay, who is an attorney for the C. & O. railroad, lived at Moreheiad, between which town and Winchester, a distance of only 47 miles, this railroad runs. It was far easier for Mr. Clay to interview his client- at Winchester than it would have been to go to Sandy Hook or West Liberty for the same purpose. Mr. Waugh lived at Ashland, 106 miles east of Winchester and on the same line of railroad. There is no satisfactory showing in this evidence why these two attorneys, during the period of almost two months which elapsed between the commission of the homicide and the time of the trial, could not have gone to Winchester and had all the interviews with their client necessary to properly present his defense. The record of this trial shows, and the result of it demonstrates, that they did all that skilled counsel could have done with the facts they had to work with. It is not shown that any different showing of facts could have been made had the continuance been granted. The court permitted appellant to, and he did, read to the jury what his absent witnesses would have tes *533

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
279 S.W. 945, 212 Ky. 529, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 1130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mannin-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1925.