Minniard v. Commonwealth

164 S.W. 804, 158 Ky. 210, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 593
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 24, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 164 S.W. 804 (Minniard 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
Minniard v. Commonwealth, 164 S.W. 804, 158 Ky. 210, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 593 (Ky. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

William: Rogers Clay, Commissioner

-Affirming.

Defendant, Chester Minniard, was convicted of murder and given a life sentence in the penitentiary. He appeals.

Briefly stated, the facts are as follows: During the fall of 1912 the Lexington & Eastern Ry. Co. was engaged in construction work in Letcher and Perry coun[211]*211ties. On its line a few miles below Hazard is a tunnel known as the Hoskins Tunnel. This tunnel is about 125 yards in length. It lies near and curves with the river. Near the middle of the tunnel there is a place which is not reached by the light from either end. It is, therefore, quite dark. On Sunday, November 3, 1912, Joe Combs, whose boy was missing from home, got word that the body of a man had been discovered in the Hoskins tunnel. On getting to the tunnel he found two laborers from one of the construction camps nearby standing guard at the north end. Combs entered the tunnel with a light. Near the center Combs found the body of a man.on the right-hand side of the track going down, and on the' inside of the curve. The body was lying face downward; the lower limbs were stretched out straight; the feet close together, the arms near the body, and the face turned towards the track. A large rock, weighing about twelve pounds was found on the man’s back, between his shoulders. On the end of a crosstie near the man’s head were two gloves, lying side"by side. On the opposite side of the tunnel, near the man’s body, Combs found a sour-wood stick that looked like it had been used for a hand-spike. A few feet from the man’s head he found a short piece of iron pipe, one end of which was sticking up between the crossties. As he examined this piece of pipe by the light of his lantern Combs thought that he saw four or five small hairs on the end of it. A man’s hat was found* a few feet above the body, and below the body there was an empty bottle lying on the track. The rock which Combs found on the man’s 'back appeared to be fresh and clean on one side only.

The same evening a large number of people came to the tunnel on a special train; the body was removed. On examination it was found that there was a wound jus.t above and a little behind the right ear. There was also a wound on the top of the head. The base of the man’s skull was crushed. In no place was the skin broken. Between the time that Combs found the body and the appearance of the crowd in the evening, the piece of pipe and the hand-spike disappeared. When the body was first examined no one knew who the deceased was; it was afterwards definitely ascertained that the deceased] was Albert Bowman.

At the March (1913) term of the Perry Circuit Court defendant was indicted for the murder of Albert Bow[212]*212man. According to the evidence for the Commonwealth the defendant and Albert Bowman had been engaged in construction work for the railroad. They had been working side by side. Prior to that time they had had some quarrels and one or two fights. Defendant had remarked in the presence of others that he had been imposed upon by Bowman long enough and that he would kill him if it took him ten years. October 31 came on Thursday. Early in the afternoon both the defendant and Bowman were discharged. Each was given a check for his wages. Defendant’s check called for $4.65. After being discharged they remained in that vicinity for a short while. Garrett Feltner says that he saw Bowman exhibit in defendant’s presence a sum of money consisting of two tens, two fives and four ones. After leaving the bridge where they were at work they stopped at Marion Campbell’s store, near the upper end of the bridge. They remained there • perhaps half an hour. While there defendant asked for some peanuts and offered his check in payment. Campbell declined to cash his cheek and defendant did not take the peanuts. Bowman offered to. cash the check provided defendant would shave it, but defendant refused. While there and when they left they were in a friendly humor. They started towards the Hos-kins tunnel. John Campbell, who was working on the top of a house on the railroad and a short distance above Marion Campbell’s store says he saw Bowman and the defendant cross the river going in the direction of the tunnel. On cross examination he was not certain whether it was Thursday or Friday or some other day when he saw the boys. He also admits that he talked with another witness for the purpose of fixing the day. E. C. Combs says that on the Thursday in'question a number of men were engaged in construction work both above and below the tunnel; just below the north portal of the tunnel about fifteen men were putting in a spur line; some • of them were putting down the track while others were engaged in hauling steel rails on a push car from a point just above the tunnel. Combs saw defendant and another fellow whom he did not recognize on the left-hand side of the tunnel. The two men then went into the tunnel. Afterwards Combs saw defendant standing inside of the tunnel near the center. He then saw defendant leave the tunnel. Defendant was in the tunnel about half an hour. In going through the tunnel they saw nothing’ [213]*213of the body of the man lying by the track. Wilson Fields says that while standing on the' ground beside his horse near the house of Wiley Gooch, below the tunnel and on the opposite side of the river, he saw two men approach the north portal of the tunnel and disappear in the cut at the end of the tunnel. He also says that one of the two men was walking in front of the other and that the one behind was the smaller of the two. The one behind carried in his hand some kind of a crooked instrument which looked like a ‘ ‘ sled standard. ’ ’ He was acquainted with the two boys and knew them at sight, but would not say that they were Minniard and Bowman. James Combs saw defendant come through the tunnel about two o’clock. Nobody was with him and he was walking fast. S. F. Stacy says that he saw defendant go through the tunnel between two and three o’clock on Thursday and that defendant kept looking back: Lydia Eversole says that defendant came to her store and bought a box of cartridges on Thursday afternoon; he gave her a check but she could not cash it; Ire then gave her a dollar bill and she réturned the change. He seemed excited. Elizabeth Feltner testified that Bowman boarded with her. She took him his dinner on Thursday and that was the last time she saw him. That afternoon she had gone up to the store at the mouth of Big Creek. She saw defendant cross the river at Eversole’s house. In a few minutes defendant overtook her. She asked defendant why they were not at work. He replied that Bowman, by, fooling around and not working had got him fired. She then asked if Bowman would come back and pay his board. Defendant replied: “No, by God, he won’t.” Defendant said he didn’t know where Albert was; that Albert had also been fired. Defendant came to her house about dusk; she asked him to supper, but he would not stay. When defendant overtook her she was carrying a load and asked him to help. Defendant said he was in a hurry and had to go. This witness and Mose Feltner both tell of threats they had heard defendant make against Bowman. Leon Berkowitz, who runs a clothing store in Hazard, .says that he sold defendant a suit of clothes about six o’clock Thursday afternoon. The price was $6.50 or $7.00, and defendant paid for them in cash. Defendant had $25.00 or $30.00 more. It was in five and two dollar bills. Never noticed any larger bill than a, five. Lea D. Farler, the aunt of Bowman, who lives in [214]*214Hazard, says that the defendant spent the night at her house.

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Bluebook (online)
164 S.W. 804, 158 Ky. 210, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minniard-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1914.