McPeak v. Commonwealth

213 S.W.2d 447, 308 Ky. 29, 1948 Ky. LEXIS 860
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 1, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 213 S.W.2d 447 (McPeak 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
McPeak v. Commonwealth, 213 S.W.2d 447, 308 Ky. 29, 1948 Ky. LEXIS 860 (Ky. 1948).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Van Sant, Commissioner

—Affirming.

This is an appeal by the secondly convicted member of a trio, all of whom, on separate trials before different juries, were found guilty and sentenced to death for the offense denounced by KRS 433.140, by robbing Vernon Hodges with the use of a deadly weapon. Jasper Nease and Herbert Workman were appellant’s accomplices. Nease was convicted first, and the opinion affirming the-judgment in that case was rendered by this Court ou April 23, 1948, and is reported in 307 Ky. 640, 211 S. W. 2d 826. Since the evidence for the Commonwealth in this case, except as to the letters hereinafter referred to, is identical with that of the Commonwealth in Nease v. Commonwealth, supra, even to the confessions of Nease and McPeak, we will not iterate those facts, but will refer the reader to that opinion.

Appellant took the stand in his own behalf, and admitted all the facts introduced by the Commonwealth, except that he contended that he did not participate in the crime, but was forced to accompany his accomplices *31 through fear of death at their hands. He admitted, however, that he knew Nease and Workman to he desperate characters; but despite this fact, while all three were military prisoners at Fort Knox, he helped them overpower a guard from whom they secured an Army carbine, which is the deadly weapon alleged and proved to have been the one used in the commission of the crime. He further admitted that when they escaped imprisonment at Fort Knox, he knew it was the intention of his accomplices to steal an automobile. He testified that, after they had walked for some distance, they obtained a ride with Prentice Knopf, who let them out at the intersection of Old Third Street Road and the New Cut Road in Jefferson County; that shortly thereafter Nease and Workman obtained a ride with Vernon Hodges, the victim of this atrocious crime. He testified that he did not enter the Hodges car at that time, “because I knowed they (Nease and Workman) was going to get into some kind of trouble sooner or later.” He stated that about twenty minutes later the Hodges car returned; Nease was driving and “Workman was sitting in the back seat with the carbine on Hodges, in Hodges ’ back, and Hodges had his hands up.” He then related that he was compelled by Nease and Workman to get in the car. That between Louisville and Frankfort Nease exchanged clothes with Hodges and took $20 in cash and a $12 check from Hodges. They stopped at a filling station near Frankfort and filled the gasoline tank of the automobile, bought three beers, one for appellant, one for Hodges, and one for Workman, and Nease drank one beer inside “the joint.” After they drove through Frankfort, Nease stopped the car on the side of the road, took the gun from Workman, and directed appellant to tie Hodges’ hands, which, under compulsion, he did. Workman then tied handkerchiefs around Hodges ’ mouth and eyes, thereupon they placed Hodges in the back seat. He then related that they drove to or near Hazard on Highway.No. 7, where they forced Hodges to get out of the car; there they fastened a rock to Hodges’ body; and, at Nease’s direction, Workman pushed him into the Kentucky River. Thereupon Hodges freed his hands and removed the handkerchief from his face; but Workman tore a piece from his shirt and gagged Hodges with it. Appellant testified that he immediately left the scene *32 and returned to- the road; started toward Hazard to report the crime; and on his way thumbed a car which happened to be occupied by Nease and Workman. II§ stated that then he was threatened by both Nease and Workman if he reported the crime to the police. That afterward they went to the home of Nease’s aunt, where they obtained something to eat and refilled the car with gasoline. They then went to the home of Nease’s mother and father, who were absent. This was early on the morning’ of Friday, March 14, 1947. Nease instructed Workman and appellant to remain at his father’s house while he endeavored to find his mother and father. Nease returned after dark on Friday night after his mother and father had returned to the house. On Saturday morning Nease’s father drove to the town of Neon, purchased a can of black paint which he gave to Nease, and the three then caught a bus and went to the home of Nease’s sister, where the car was parked, at which place Ne"ase and Workman painted the fenders of the car. Nease called on his “girl” that night, and appellant stayed at the home of Nease’s parents until Tuesday morning, when he hitchhiked a ride to his home in- Virginia. Appellant thereafter was arrested in Virginia, and confessed his participation in the crime. While he was confined in jail he and his accomplice Workman exchanged letters, of which appellant was the author of three. The letters from Workman to him were not introduced in evidence, but the letters from McPeak were. These letters, with their implications, conclusively show appellant to have been one of the principal participants in the crime of which he was convicted. Some of the language contained in the letters is so obscene as to impel us not to publish them in full. Deleted of the obscene language, the letters read as follows:

First Letter
“In answer to your letter — now, this is what I want you to say and nothing else but this, for I have made my statement and if I change it, it will look bad for you and me. So this is what I want you to say. My statement: Fort Knox, I hold the guard and Jasper grabbed the gun and you got the belts and Jasper tied him up, and we stayed in the field until dark and walked all night. The next day we came to a farm house and some man gave us fifty cents and we got the bread and dough *33 nuts, and we went on walk all day. About 5:30 we got the first car and went to the forks and Jasper said it was a coupe car that you and he would leave me, that we was going * * * that I didn’t know that you was going to take that one. That you and Jasper left me to get another ride home. In about twenty minutes later that you and Jasper came back to me with this car and Jasper said, ‘get in’ and I said ‘no,’ that I would get-another ride. But he made me get in. Pie said that he was afraid that I would tell on him, and Hodge showed Jasper the way and the route,- and somewhere on the road Jasper changed clothes with Hodge and bought some beer and gas. And next to Hazard he' stopped and told you to give him the gun. And he got out of the car and put the gun on Hodge and told me to tie him up, and I said ‘no,’ and he put the gun on me and said, ‘make it fast.’ So I had to tie him and I didn’t have anything to do with the rest. And I was the first one back to the car and you next, and Jasper last. But tell them Jasper did make you go in the water but you did not hit Hodge and you and he painted the car and the rest of your statement is like mine. And I will remember it. So, that’s all pal,, you don’t tell them that we sleep on the way. So, that’s all pal and the best of luck to you and write me often. So long.”
Second Letter
“Well, pal, it looks like that Jasper might get enough money to * * * you and me up. But he can’t me so bad, but you have not got a lawyer, and he can * * * you good.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
213 S.W.2d 447, 308 Ky. 29, 1948 Ky. LEXIS 860, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcpeak-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1948.