Martin v. Commonwealth

4 S.W.2d 419, 223 Ky. 762, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 404
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 23, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 S.W.2d 419 (Martin 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
Martin v. Commonwealth, 4 S.W.2d 419, 223 Ky. 762, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 404 (Ky. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

The appellants Jake Martin, Ben Martin, Stanley Nicholson, and one Clarence Layton were jointly indicted in the Campbell circuit court charged with the offense of murdering Owen Campbell, and upon their joint trial the first three were convicted of voluntary manslaughter and punished by confinement in the penitentiary for a period of 15 years each, but Layton was acquitted. The convicted defendants have appealed to this court and through their counsel urge as grounds for reversal: (1) that the verdict is flagrantly against the evidence; (2) erroneous instructions and failure to instruct on the whole law of the case; and (3) prejudicial conduct on the part of the court and commonwealth’s attorney during the progress of the trial. Some of the grounds are subdivided in the argument as made in the briefs, many of which are wholly immaterial and altogether without merit, and during the course of this opinion we will refer to and discuss only such of them as we conclude the facts of the case justify.

1. In disposing of ground (1) it becomes necessary to make a brief statement of the substance of the facts as *764 given by tbe testimony of tbe witnesses introduced by the commonwealth. On the 29th day of May, 1926, and for about one week prior thereto, appellant Nicholson was the lessee of a one-story concrete building consisting of three rooms located at No. 317 Isabella street, in Newport, Ky. It was used by him as a rendezvous for all sorts of law violators, both male and female, and in which many disreputable and prohibited acts and conduct were performed and engaged in. It was, in every sense of the term, a most disorderly house wherein intoxicating liquor was manufactured, sold, and consumed by those who resorted there, including lewd women from Cincinnati and surrounding territory. G-ambling was also indulged in, and, according to the testimony of the commonwealth’s witnesses (all of which on that subject was virtually admitted by defendants), the establishment was a menace to peace and good order in that community. The other two appellants, Jake Martin and Ben Martin, were brothers and seemed to have been secret partners of Nicholson, or in some manner connected with the prosecution of the unlawful operations of the establishment. On the late afternoon of the day mentioned the deceased went to the house at 317 Isabella street and remained there for some time, when he left and later returned in company with one Tony Buekholz, a Hungarian, who spoke the English language with difficulty. They immediately commenced, with others present, to consume a quantity of home-brew that was manufactured in the house, and later engaged with others in a game of draw poker in which defendants appear to have participated, and during which time at least three demimondes from Cincinnati were present and also participated in the drinking, a part of which was the consumption of moonshine liquor mixed with the home-brew. Somewhere between 8 and 9 o’clock (the testimony being indefinite), the Martins and Nicholson became involved in a physical imbroglio with deceased and also with Buekholz, in ■which the latter was beaten over the head with beer bottles and with chairs, resulting in injuries that confined him to his bed for three weeks thereafter. He escaped by running out of the door of the building, but, according to his testimony, he was knocked down after he left the steps going into the building, and he testified that while he Was being so punished similar or worse chastisement *765 was being administered to deceased by defendants, and he was calling for help, and as the witness left the premises he saw deceased lying on the floor moaning and groaning with a bloody head and face and almost lifeless.

•Pat Atwell, a boy residing in the neighborhood and who was about 12 years of age, was working at the place in the capacity of waiter and in the performance of other errands required in the entertainment of the patrons, corroborated the testimony of Buckholz in almost every particular, but he tarried a few minutes longer and emphasized in his testimony the serious, bloody, and apparently lifeless condition of deceased when he left. Two incidents appear to have been the immediate cause of the trouble, one of which was that some one had hidden the straw hat of deceased which culminated in a controversy followed by the fight, and the other was that Buckholz was not given the change for a $10 bill with which he was paying either for poker chips or beer, and they appear to have occurred almost simultaneously, resulting in the double-barreled fight between the deceased and Buckholz on one side and defendants on the other. Two of the females who were present stated that at the time they were in an adjoining room and heard angry words and saw one of the defendants with a raised chair, followed almost instantly with a noise as if made by striking the floor with the chair, immediately after which the witnesses disappeared. About 30 minutes after Atwell left he returned to the house with a companion about his age, and it was closed and all the lights extinguished, with no appearances of any one being therein, and which was near 10 o ’clock p. m.

At about 10:50 p. m. a street car was rounding a horseshoe curve in the track laid in Eden Park, in Cincinnati, Ohio, and as it arrived at the sharp point of the curve and at a place where there were no lights the motorman discovered about 15 feet ahead of his car the body of deceased lying on his back between the rails, with blood on and over his face, and it had the appearance of being dry and much darker than fresh blood. The car could not be stopped before reaching the body, and it was run. over and moved along the track for a distance of from 8 to 20 feet according to the testimony of the witnesses. "While under the car the right arm of deceased was completely severed and some scattering bruises *766 made -upon, his body. There were also sharp cuts on his-forehead and face and one small thrust of a sharp instrument into his heart. It required an hour or more to jack up the car so as to extricate the body of deceased from under it. -Some of the witnesses testified that his flesh was cold and perhaps one testified that rigormortis was; present, and the great majority of them testified that the blood on decedent’s face was coagulated and dark, as was-also true with a large clot of blood extending from his-nose. It was also shown, practically without contradiction, that there was no blood of any consequence at the-place where the body lay at the time it was first discovered by the motorman, but there was some blood immediately under or near to the right side of decedent upon which he rested when the car was stopped, and every witness testified that life was extinct. An autopsy held, within from four to six hours afterwards established the-fact that the stab in the heart with the sharp instrument, was sufficient to produce death, and also developed a large quantity of coagulated blood in the lungs and in the cavity of the heart gathered there by internal hemorrhage, the wound being of such a nature as to prevent, external flowing. Prom the facts -discovered by the physician performing the autopsy, together with a history of the case obtained from the witnesses who were present; at the removal of decedent’s body from under the- car,, he was enabled to and he did state as his fixed opinion, that deceased was dead at the time the car ran over his; body.

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Related

Marcum v. Commonwealth
483 S.W.2d 122 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1972)
Mabe v. Commonwealth
130 S.W.2d 805 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1939)
Botnick v. Commonwealth
99 S.W.2d 188 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 S.W.2d 419, 223 Ky. 762, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1928.