Martin v. Commonwealth

261 S.W. 851, 203 Ky. 44, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 845
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 6, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 261 S.W. 851 (Martin 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
Martin v. Commonwealth, 261 S.W. 851, 203 Ky. 44, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 845 (Ky. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

[45]*45Opinion op the Court by

Commissioner Hobson

Affirming.

Dr. J. E. Martin and Wallace Martin were indicted in the Ballard circuit court on August 26, 1921, for having in possession an illicit or moonshine still. The case was tried at the April term, 1922, and the jury failed to agree. They were tried again at the January term, 1923, and the jury again failed to agree. After that term and before the April term the indictment and accompanying papers were lost or stolen, and at the April term the court made an order so reciting, re-submitting the case to the grand jury under section 1140, Kentucky Statutes, which provides:

“If any indictment pending in any of the courts of this Commonwealth shall be stolen, destroyed or otherwise lost, it shall be lawful for the defendant or defendants to be again indicted for the offense by another grand jury, and when the offense is a misdemeanor, the time intervening between the finding of the first and new indictment shall not be computed in the lapse of time or limitation that will bar the prosecution for said offense, if a new indictment shall be found and filed at or before the second court which may be held in the county after the loss or destruction of the indictment.”

_ The jury at that term returned a new indictment, which, after setting out the offense, concluded with these words:

“This indictment is found in lieu of an indictment filed in the office of the Ballard circuit court clerk on August 5, 1921, endorsed Vert C. Fraser, clerk, and W. C. Titsworth, foreman of the grand jury. Said indictment above mentioned having since said time been stolen or misplaced from the office of the circuit court clerk. ’ ’

At the August term, 1923, the case was tried again. The defendants filed a demurrer to the indictment, which was overruled, also plea of limitation, and the evidence being heard the jury returned a verdict finding each of the defendants guilty as charged and fixing his punishment at a fine of $200.00 and confinement in the county jail for a period of one' day. A motion for a new trial was overruled and they appeal.

[46]*46The first objection urged by tbe defendants is that they could not be tried upon the second indictment until an order bad been entered dismissing tbe first indictment. Section 1140, Kentucky Statutes, simply provides ■a method of supplying tbe lost record and when it is supplied as provided in the statute tbe new indictment, showing on its face tbe facts, is but a continuation of the old indictment and no order dismissing tbe old indictment is necessary. By sections 90 and 118 of tbe Civil Code tbe pendency of prior action is ground of defense in a civil action, but this rule does not apply in criminal cases. There are no such provisions in tbe Criminal Code; on tbe other band section 172 of tbe Criminal Code is in these words:

‘ ‘ There are but three kinds of pleas to an indictment:
‘ ‘ 1. A plea of guilty.
“2. Not guilty.
“3. A former conviction or acquittal of tbe offense charged, either of which may be pleaded with or without tbe plea of not guilty.”

If tbe defendant is convicted or acquitted under one indictment this is a bar to another indictment against him for tbe same offense, but until be is so convicted or acquitted tbe pendency of another indictment is no bar to the prosecution.

It is earnestly insisted that tbe verdict of tbe jury is flagrantly against tbe evidence. Tbe facts are briefly these:

Dr. J. E. Martin was a physician living at La Center, four and one-half miles from a tract of land containing 175 acres which be owned. His brother,-tbe defendant Wallace Martin, lived a mile and a half from this tract of land, but was renting from his brother at tbe time all tbe land in cultivation on tbe farm and was on tbe farm every day about tbe time in controversy. There was a tenant bouse on tbe farm which bad been occupied up to January 1st, but tbe tenant bad then moved out and this bouse was vacant, also an outhouse about sixteen feet square in tbe same yard and a few feet from tbe dwelling bouse. Dr. Martin was feeding some bogs at one side of tbe yard and was there nearly every day feeding tbe bogs. He sold tbe hogs a week after the still was found. For something like two weeks before tbe still was found tbe attention of some neighbors was attracted by frequent [47]*47visits of T. L. Duley and J. O. Stahl to this house, and they concluded from the circumstances that they had whiskey. One of the neighbors went to this house; she found the door fastened, the windows nailed up and shaded so no one could see in; but she finally peeped in through a hole and saw a still. Thereupon a search warrant was taken out and when the house was broken open there were found four and a half gallons of whiskey, two barrels of mash and a well equipped still; at one side of the house a hole had been cut in the floor an inch or two wide and several inches long, through which the slop had been poured out. Under this hole in the floor was a considerable hole in the ground which smelled sour, and around it were hog tracks. The house set about three feet above the ground.

Dr. Martin and his brother were promptly informed of what had been found and their conduct and language at the time did not indicate any surprise or any special desire to locate a trespasser. The house stood only a few feet from the road in front and the condition of the windows and door could easily be seen by one in the road. There was as to- Wallace Martin some evidence that he was seen about the house shortly before the still was discovered, that smoke was seen going out of the chimney and that he was seen hauling some barrels in that direction and was seen with whiskey. All this evidence was contradicted by him and the proof on his behalf.

The defendants testified that the house was vacant and the door open and the windows clear when they last saw them and they proved by others that this condition continued until four or five days before the still was discovered.

The evidence is very conflicting but we cannot say that the verdict is flagrantly against the evidence. The well established rule is that a judgment in a criminal case where it is based upon a verdict sustained by any evidence will not be reversed unless it is palpably against the evidence. Johnson v. Commonwealth, 200 Ky. 345. In that ease and Adams v. Commonwealth, 201 Ky. 306, the court refused to disturb verdicts under this statute, resting upon evidence no stronger than that presented here. The defendants were men of wealth and position, a jury of their neighbors seeing and hearing the witnesses is the tribunal created by law for the trial of the facts and it is a sound rule that the jury’s verdict should not be dis[48]*48turbed here unless palpably against the evidence. On the whole record we cannot say that the verdict was palpably unwarranted by the facts.

After their motion and grounds for a new trial were filed and before, they were passed on the defendants at the fall term of the court filed additional grounds for a new trial showing that they had discovered since the trial that they could prove by T. L. Duley and J. O. Stahl that this still had been established in this house four days before the trial by Bob Willingham without the knowledge or consent of the defendants and the defendants knew nothing about it until it was discovered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
261 S.W. 851, 203 Ky. 44, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 845, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1924.