McCown v. Commonwealth

111 S.W.2d 389, 271 Ky. 265, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 176
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 29, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 111 S.W.2d 389 (McCown 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
McCown v. Commonwealth, 111 S.W.2d 389, 271 Ky. 265, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 176 (Ky. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Morris, Commissioner—

Affirming.

Appellant was indicted by the Pike county grand, jury for the murder of Bernie Rowe, the homicide having been committed in the early part of April, 1936.. Upon a hearing of the case the jury returned a verdict of guilty, fixing the penalty at confinement in the penitentiary for five years, a period within the limitations, of the-prescribed penalty for manslaughter. Judgment, was entered, motion for a new trial overruled, and appeal prosecuted.

In the first ground here presented it is urged that the court erroneously overruled motion for a directed, verdict in appellant’s favor, made upon completion of' the Commonwealth’s evidence. Second, that the verdict of the jury is without sustaining evidence, and contrary to and flagrantly against the evidence, being the-result of bias, passion, and prejudice on the part of the-jury. These two grounds were the only ones set up in, the motion for a new trial.

"We will dispose of the first ground now by calling appellant’s attention to the fact that after the homicide he went to the home of Grlenn Osborne a deputy-constable, who lived within eight or nine miles of the camp where Rowe was shot, arriving, according to Osborne fs estimate of time, very soon after the shooting. Appellant surrendered to Osborne, asking him to go- *266 down and see “about him”; saying that he had shot a man and did not know whether he was dead or not. Appellant and his friends at • once went back to the camp with Osborne, and to the spot where Rowe lay dead with a bullet hole through, or almost through, his head. Another witness for the Commonwealth saw appellant fire his pistol near the cabin at the camp, but could not see Rowe at the time, but later saw Rowe dead from a pistol shot Another witness saw Rowe, and later appellant, go around the cabin and immediately heard a shot; witness went around the cabin shortly after the shot and found Rowe lying there wounded, and from which wounding he died shortly thereafter. All these witnesses testified for the Commonwealth.

Under our repeated rulings, where the accused admits the act which resulted in the homicide, a case is sufficiently made so as to take it to the jury. Hatfield v. Com., 264 Ky. 721, 95 S. W. (2d) 562; Simmons v. Com., 207 Ky. 570, 269 S. W. 732. See, also, Davis v. Com., 265 Ky. 488, 97 S. W. (2d) 43; Wireman v. Com., 268 Ky. 339, 104 S. W. (2d) 1083.

The cases above cited, which might be augmented by many others if deemed necessary, fully dispose of ground No. 1. A discussion of ground No. 2 requires some recitation of the facts, which may best be presented by first giving appellant’s version of the homicide.

On the day of the homicide, which occurred “about April 1, 1937,” appellant with a number of other persons, including Mrs. Norris, at whose tourist camp the killing occurred, had been to Prestonsburg to attend the trial of some friends in the Floyd circuit court. On their trip back home, at the head of Beaver creek, the persons who had attended court were in two groups, in two cars. For some of them to get home they had to pass Mrs Norris’ camp, where the proprietress also operated a restaurant and sold beer. The car in which appellant, Mrs. Norris, and others were traveling, got to the camp around 7 p. m. Appellant and some members of his party stopped at the camp, and others went on in the car to carry home a passenger whose desire was to get home. This car was to, and did, return to the camp later. Appellant and his party remained at the camp and had supper. Some time after their arrival, Rowe and other friends of his came to the camp *267 in a small Ford truck. Eowe had been drinking and showed definite signs of being intoxicated to a degree, and it appears continued to drink beer.

Later, and as near as we can gather from rather indefinite proof, about 10 p. m. Eowe became boisterous and the proprietress insisted on his leaving. All during this time the proprietress and appellant had been somewhat attentive to each other. After some persuasion Eowe’s friends succeeded in getting him to the truck, and some one handed him the crank with which to start the car. Shortly before this time appellant and the proprietress had gone to one of the cabins situated a short distance from the restaurant and kitchen, for the purpose it is said, of getting some photographs which. Mrs. Norris had promised to give appellant. It is impossible from the evidence to give a clear description of the cabin into which they went, or other surroundings. The two went into the cabin, closing the door, as Mrs. Norris says at one time, and at another saying it was left open. However this may be, Eowe instead of starting the car proceeded over to the cabin to which appellant and Mrs. Norris had gone, and with the crank struck heavily upon the door several times. Mrs. Norris says the blows struck the panel and splintered it, as appellant also claims, and he adds that something came through the panel, which he thought was the end of a pistol. From this point on the evidence is rather difficult to follow in regard to direction or position, made so by the use of such expressions as “from here to there,” “out this way,” or “over there” or “over here.”

Appellant says that when Eowe struck the door he stepped into another room. Mrs. Norris opened the door and “looked this way and that,” but did not see any one, and appellant thought it was time for him to get out. He said, “I went out the door and was going this way and out where the car was at, and got out. where this side door came out from the other building, and had to go through the light of that door; it was open. I stopped first as I got to the light, and seen somebody on the other side of me, and I thought if I go through that light, this way, whoever it is, they will kill me, and then I thought I better go in the dark, back the other way. I turned to go around the building, and just as I got to the corner he come just like that strik *268 :ing right at my face and I just thought I couldn’t be quick enough to save my life.”

Appellant says he thought Rowe had a pistol in his hand striking at him, and says Rowe struck him once, .knocking his right thumb nail loose. Appellant fired one shot and Rowe turned from him. Appellant turned in the opposite direction, went to the car in which his companions were, and suggested that they get away at once. He ran up the road and hid himself, and as his friends came by he got in the' car, and, as detailed' above, went to the deputy constable’s home, where he told the officer he had shot a man and wanted the officer to go back to the camp and see “if what the other man had was a pistol.” The officer did return, and found Rowe lying on his face, a bullet wound in his .head (the wound not accurately described), with the crank under his feet, but with no pistol or other weapon.

The foregoing is appellant’s version, and it is borne out with some immaterial differences, by Mrs. .Norris, up to the point where she went to the door just after the knocking. There is a slight bit of Commonwealth’s testimony interwoven in the foregoing, mainly with relation to Osborne’s observations after his arrival.

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Related

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289 N.W. 852 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1940)
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128 S.W.2d 600 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
111 S.W.2d 389, 271 Ky. 265, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccown-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1937.