McIntire v. Commonwealth

230 S.W. 41, 191 Ky. 299, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 303
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 26, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 230 S.W. 41 (McIntire 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
McIntire v. Commonwealth, 230 S.W. 41, 191 Ky. 299, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 303 (Ky. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Chief Justice Hurt

Affirming.

The appellant, Alex Mclntire, was by indictment, .accused of the crime of willful murder, and upon a trial was found guilty of the crime of voluntary manslaughter, and his punishment fixed at imprisonment for twenty-one years, by the verdict of the jury, and the judgment of the court. His motion for a new trial was overruled, and he has appealed. The grounds upon which he sought a new trial were (1) that the court misinstructed the jury and failed to properly instruct it, and (2) erred to his prejudice in the admission of testimony against him and in excluding evidence offered by him.

(a) Touching the admission of testimony, which was not competent as-evidence against him, and the exclusion of competent evidence in his behalf, he, here, makes no complaint, and an examination of the record demon-' strates, that there is no substantial ground for such contention, as no evidence, which he offered was excluded and the evidence admitted against him, to which he offered' objections was competent and relevant.

(b) The contention, that the court erroneously failed to instruct the jury, and misinstructed it, as to the law of the case, makes necessary a statement of the facts, which were developed by the evidence. Richmond Mclntire the father of appellant was a merchant, in a village called Hombre, in Perry county. His residence was a few steps away from the store house. The building*, in which the elder Mclntire kept his store was divided by a partition, making it into two rooms, in one of which the store of merchandise was kept and in the other room Robert Mclntire, a brother of appellant, conducted a pool room. A door was in the partition which separated the rooms, and a door, also, opened into the pool room from the outside. Two young men, Link Cole and Nicholas Hurt, were at the place and in a more or less drunken condition from the effects of intoxicating liquors. Cole and two persons of the name of Maggard, accompanied by Robert Mclntire, [301]*301went into the pool room and engaged or were preparing to engage in a game of pool. Hurt entered the room and declaring that no game should be played, either with his hand, or a cue scattered the ricked balls over the table. Robert Melntire thereiipon declared, that he would not permit such conduct and that Hurt would have to pay for the game, which was then being’ played or the preparations for its playing commenced. Hurt declared that he would not pay for the game. Link Cole deposes, that he offered to pay for the game, but no other mentions this offer. At this point a fight was precipitated between Robert Melntire, Hurt and Cole. Cole deposes that Melntire was the aggressor, while Melntire deposes that Hurt and Cole were the aggressors. While this scuffle and fight was in progress, the elder Melntire attracted by the noise entered the room, and according to Cole made an assault upon Hurt, with a cue, which was broken over a table, in an attempt to strike Hurt with it. According to the Mclntires, when the elder Melntire entered the room, he commanded the fighting to cease, when Hurt struck him in the face with a pool or billiard ball, cutting his face and causing the blood to run. He then retired into his store room to procure an axe to use in the fight, but returned to the pool room without it. In the meantime the mother of the appellant and Robert Melntire entered the pool room and participated in the scuffle and fighting, which was going on, and she claims that she was struck in the face by Cole, but he denies striking her or striking anyone during the melee. Robert Melntire, his mother and Cole were scuffling over the possession of a cue, upon one side of the room, and there is some evidence to the effect, that Hurt at some time during the melee was kicking Robert Melntire. The appellant, Alex Melntire, was nearby when the quarrel and fighting commenced, and although he could not see the parties, he could hear the noise of the fighting, and as he deposes, being a deputy sheriff he determined to arrest the participants, and to prepare himself to do so, to defend himself and to overcome opposition, if any, he went to the dwelling of a neighbor, which was from 75 to 150 yards distant' from the pool room, to procure a pistol. On the way, he met the neighbor, to whom he said, that he desired the pistol to effect an arrest of the fighters, and when he had secured the pistol, he returned with it in his hand to the pool room. He further deposed that after [302]*302procuring the pistol, he came hurriedly back in the direction of the pool room, and again passed the neighbor, whose pistol he had secured, and that the neighbor said to him to hurry, that they were killing each other in the room, but not to use the pistol and he said that he would not, and when passing the window of the pool room, before arriving at the entrance, he heard shouting and looking in, he saw Hurt throw a pool ball at his father, Richmond Mclntire, and saw the latter dodge it and heard the ball strike the wall with a loud report, and when he entered the room, Hurt was near a pool table, with a ball in his hand and in the attitude of throwing it at Richmond Mclntire, who from The effects of a very recent severe attack of “flu” was partially incapacitated to use his arms, and he saw Cole, Robert Mclntire and his mother over near the wall to one side, in a scuffle for the possession of a cue, and that the face of his mother bore evidences of rough treatment, in the way of a knot over her eye and discoloration .around the eyes, and believing that his father, Richmond Mclntire, was then and there in imminent danger of being killed by Hurt, he instantly shot Hurt to protect his father from death or serious bodily harm. Hurt immediately fell and died, and appellant then discharged a shot at Cole which, however, did not take effect upon him. The father, mother and brother of appellant substantially corroborate him as to the circumstances that existed at the time of the shooting, while Cole, as before stated, deposed that the elder Mclntire, as well as Robert Mclntire, had made an assault upon Hurt, and that the attack of Robert Mclntire, upon Hurt precipitated the fighting which was going on when the elder Mclntire arrived upon the scene and assaulted Hurt wdth a cue. The evidence of Cole, if believed, would have had the effect to deny the right of Richmond Mclntire to have killed Hurt at the time he was shot and killed by the appellant. There was evidence from others which tended to prove that when appellant shot Hurt the elder Mclntire was not in the room, and that Hurt was standing by a pool table, with his hand resting upon it, and not attempting to assault any one when shot. A pool ball was, however, lying in near proximity to the hand of Hurt after he was dead, which was some evidence tending to prove that he had the ball in his hand at the time he was killed. As a result of the fighting, it was proven that the face of the elder Mclntire had a wound upon it, [303]*303and the face of the mother of appellant showed unmistakable evidences of having participated in a fight, or at least of having come in forcible contact with objects which would,, and did produce contusions. There was, also, evidence, which tended to prove that appellant bore an unfriendly feeling toward Hurt previous to the homicide, and had recently threatened him with violence. Other witnesses deposed to the general bad moral character of appellant and his father.

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Related

Miller v. Commonwealth
27 S.W.2d 683 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1930)
Green v. Commonwealth
4 S.W.2d 1109 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1927)
Noble v. Commonwealth
290 S.W. 330 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
230 S.W. 41, 191 Ky. 299, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcintire-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1921.