Miller v. Commonwealth

206 S.W. 630, 182 Ky. 438, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 382
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 10, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 206 S.W. 630 (Miller 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
Miller v. Commonwealth, 206 S.W. 630, 182 Ky. 438, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 382 (Ky. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Clarke

Affirming.

[439]*439The appellant, Wiley Miller, was indicted by the grand jury of Breathitt county, charged with having murdered John Spurlock in that county on the third day of January, 1917. Upon his motion for a change of venue, the cause was transferred to and tried in Powell county, resulting in his conviction, and his punishment being fixed at life imprisonment. Of this verdict and judgment he complains, first, because there was no evidence of his guilt, and his motion for a peremptory instruction should have been sustained; second, because the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict, and his motion for a new trial should have been granted; third, because of improper argument by counsel for the Commonwealth; and, fourth, because of the admission and rejection of evidence. As the first two grounds challenge the sufficiency of the evidence against the defendant and necessitate a rather lengthy statement of it, they will be considered together.

1. The defendant and the deceased resided upon opposite sides of the south fork of Quicksand creek, about a mile and a half above the town of Quicksand, in Breathitt county. The Commonwealth proved an unfriendly feeling and several quarrels between them; that about two months before the homicide defendant threatened the life of the deceased “if he fooled with him,” and that the deceased was a witness against the defendant on an indictment pending in the Breathitt circuit court; that both were in the town of Quicksand on the afternoon of January 3, 1917; that the deceased, between three and four o’clock, left town, driving a one-horse wagon on the county road leading to his home; that the defendant was on the bridge over which the county road passes as the deceased left town, and that he then started toward his home up the narrow-gauge railroad, which was in the same direction the deceased was traveling; that defendant was on foot and continued on the railroad track, on Ms own side of the creek, until he got near the home of Sarah Gayhart, where he left the railroad track and went in the direction of the creek across which was the county road leading to Spurlock’s home.

Branch Howard, who lived across the creek and nearly opposite the home of Mrs. Gayhart, testified that at about four o ’clock in the afternoon the defendant came along the county road in front of his house, going in the direction of where the murder was committed, and asked [440]*440him if John Spurlock’s wagon had gone up the road; that he told him it had not, and defendant went on up the road; that about ten minutes later Spurlock passed, and in a few minutes he heard nine or eleven shots fired, and in about five minutes thereafter he heard that Spurlock had been killed, and went to the place of the tragedy where he found Spurlock lying in the road with seven pistol wounds in his body; that upon the ground nearby he satw a number of empty shells from a 32-caliber automatic pistol. »

Mrs. Sylvania Campbell testified that she lived about 200 yards from where John Spurlock lived; that her residence is on the same side of the road; that she owned the land between the road where Spurlock was killed and the Quicksand creek; that there is a considerable bottom of land between the place of the killing and the creek at the mouth of Bose’s branch, up which the defendant lived; that she was down in this bottom shucking corn at the time of the shooting; that immediately thereafter she saw a man run from the place of the killing down into the bottom in the direction of the creek, but that she did not recognize him apd did not remember how he was dressed. Shade Combs and George Daniels testified that they had seen the defendant some months before the murder of Spurlock with a 32 automatic pistol.

Loss Noble testified that upon the afternoon of and shortly before the killing he saw defendant have in his hands the loaded magazine of a 32:caliber automatic pistol.

Clay Watkins testified that two pistol balls taken from the body of the deceased were 32-caliber, but that he did not know whether they were from an automatic pistol or not.

Will Barnett testified that the two pistol balls taken from the body of the deceased were, in his judgment, of 32-caliber, and steel jacketed, leaden balls.

Green Watkins, a constable, and Shade Combs, a deputy sheriff, testified that they went to the home of defendant at 7:30 and again at midnight on the night of the murder, and again about noon op the next day, and did not find him there upon any of these occasions, but. that they found him there and arrested him the next day, which was the second day after the murder; that the morning after the murder they saw tracks leading from the place of the murder across the bottom to the mouth of [441]*441Rose’s branch; that the tracks were 6 or 7 feet apart and made by a man’s shoe, No. 6, 6% or 7, in the bottom of which there were rows of tacks or sprigs.

Sam Cockrill, another deputy sheriff, said the shoes that defendant wore on the examining* trial were of the size and character that made the tracks, and that “they corresponded, looked like pretty near as anything could, I reckon;” that a great many people in that locality wore shoes with sprigs or tacks in the soles, but that there was a peculiarity in the way the sprigs were placed in the bottom of the shoe that made the tracks.

Tom McIntosh testified that at about 11 o’clock on the night of the killing, defendant and Delbert Prater came tó his house, and that-one of them was carrying a gun.

Lum Johnson testified that at about half-past two the next morning* a man he did not know, and who said his name was Combs, and whom he identified as the defendant, came to his house and got him to get up and go to his store near by, and sell him Vienna sausage, crackers, candy and pickles.

Mrs. Sarah Spurlock, widow of the murdered man,testified that at the time of the killing she was in a field below her house and near the road, looking after some turkeys ; that the killing* occurred where the road crosses a ravine which was obstructed from her v(iew, but immediately after she heard the shots fired, a man climbed over the fence and ran down through the bottom toward the mouth of Rose’s branch; that the man wore a cap, a blue shirt, and overalls; and that in her judgment it was the defendant; that she had known the defendant for about 16 years; that she was within 100 or 150 yards of the man she saw running across the bottom toward the mouth of Rose’s branch. - Several witnesses corroborated the testimony of Mrs. Spurlock as to how the defendant was dressed upon the afternoon of the killing*. Other witnesses testified for the Commonwealth to have seen the defendant either before or after the murder, and close enough to the place to have been there at the time the shots were fired.

While this evidence is all circumstantial, it is certainly such evidence as tends to- show the guilt of the defendant and required a submission of the case to the jury. Not only so, but this evidence was amply sufficient to sus[442]*442tain the verdict of the jury, and-there is no merit in the contention of counsel for appellant that because Gertrude Combs and Bertha Clemons testified for the defendant that at the time of the shooting Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 S.W. 630, 182 Ky. 438, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1918.