Murphy v. Commonwealth

75 S.W.2d 341, 255 Ky. 676, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 313
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 12, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 75 S.W.2d 341 (Murphy 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
Murphy v. Commonwealth, 75 S.W.2d 341, 255 Ky. 676, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 313 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

OpiNioN op the Court by

Morris, Commissioner

Affirming.

The Boyd county grand jury, at the January term, 1934, of the Boyd circuit court, returned an indictment in which Vivian Nickolls, Marie Dunn, and appellant Ed Murphy were jointly charged with the crime of unlawfully, maliciously, and feloniously assaulting W. H. Mirandi with an offensive weapon, with the felonious intent to rob him of money and property of value, an offense denounced by section 1160, Kentucky Statutes.. On trial of the case, at the same term, the jury returned a verdict of guilty and fixed Ms punishment at five years’ confinement in the penitentiary, the minimum fixed by the statute. A motion for a new trial was overruled, judgment was pronounced, and appeal prayed and granted.

In the brief for appellant it was strenuously insisted that the court’s refusal to give peremptory instruction for defendant constituted reversible error. A supplementary brief for appellant, while not conceding that appellant is not entitled to a reversal on the ground above stated, emphasizes the contention that the court committed error in refusing to grant defendant a new *678 trial on the ground that the verdict is palpably against the evidence. A statement of the facts is therefore necessary.

The prosecuting witness, a man at the time of the robbery more than seventy-eight years of age, living with a son in G-reenup county, is first observed near G-reenup avenue and Nineteenth streets in Ashland, early in the evening of December 14, 1933. He had upon his person $157. Apparently walking aimlessly at the time, he approached a house before which a woman was standing; she invited Mirandi into the house, and he walked into the front room and was conducted into a rear room where he and the woman talked for a few minutes. The woman left the room saying that she had to go in the front room for a while. Mirandi sat in the rear room, and during the woman’s absence took his money and ran it down into his sock. In a short time the woman returned, hut again went back to the front room, saying that she had business in there. She then came hack after five minutes’ absence and said to Mir-andi, “Dad you’ll have to vacate, there are some young men coming over from Armco.” Mirandi remarked, “All right, no harm done,” and left the house. Mirandi testifies that he made up his mind to take a car to his son’s home, and with this purpose in mind walked toward Fourteenth street, but later changed his mind, concluding to get a room at “old lady Lynch’s,” over on Front street. As he started back he noted three automobiles; a couple of women standing near one of them. One of the women asked him where he was going, and he replied that he was going to get a room. She said, “You are drinking and you will be killed the first thing you know.” She then told him that she would be'glad to give him a room and a nice bed in South Ashland. Mirandi and the two women then got in the car, with a man sitting at the wheel. The car started off and the old man after a time remarked that it appeared to be a long way to where the woman lived, but was assured that they would soon be there. They soon got to a woodland at the top of a hill, where the car was stopped, and apparently becoming suspicious the old man said, “Why this don’t look like any residence to me.” The woman said, “Get out and rest your feet and legs.” He answered that he was not tired, but they said, “Get out anyhow,” and one woman reached in and took him by the hand and said, “You had better get out,” and he *679 got out. One of the women had the old man’s cane and the other had hold of his arm. They said, “Step right up here, there is a nice place to rest,” and led him to what Mirandi terms a “space” which was about 10 feet away from the street. The women insisted upon his sitting down; he remonstrated, and they said, “You give up that money, everything you have got on you,” and he testified, “I don’t know what all they did do to me, hut they took my money off me”; that they hit him over the head with his cane, nearly breaking his nose and his skull, and took from him the $157. As to the automobile and the driver, Mirandi had little to say. Perhaps the only testimony worthy of notice in regard to the car or driver was that when he got out of the car the doors were not closed, and the lights were turned off; that while up on the ‘£ space ’ ’ he heard a motor running, and as he came down he heard the noise of a car running, and he could not see any lights.

In some manner, not explained, Mirandi got back to an unidentified corner, where there were some boys who noted that he was bareheaded and his face “bleeding bad, ’ ’ and upon being asked what was the. matter he informed them that he had been robbed, and they offered to call the police. At this point it may be remarked that the old man did not at any time attempt to identify the defendant, nor for that matter the two women, except as to the latter he said that they were the same women who had confessed their guilt in open court, and these women were Vivian Nickolls and. Marie Dunn.

On the morning after the robbery of Mirandi, two' police officers, Hall and Hays, learned that the car which was used to transport the old man was a taxi numbered 900, and knowing the owner, but not the driver, went to the home of Ed Murphy, which was also the office of the owners of the taxi, located near the point where the old man was picked up. They questioned appellant about the driving of the car on the previous night. Appellant denied that he had driven the car and suggested that it might have been Red McKenzie, one of his taxi drivers. The officers left, and later went back to appellant’s home and office, and as° they approached appellant met them, and appellant was told that he was wanted up at the station. Appellant accompanied them, and as soon as he got in the officer’s car he said, “I told you boys a *680 damn lie.” He remarked that the “parties that done this ain’t here, they are gone.” He was taken to the station and after a short while accompanied the officers' to the scene of the crime. As they went up the hill appellant showed the officers where one of the women had thrown the “poke” or rag, which had held the old man’s money.' He took them to the exact spot where the robbery occurred, and with his assistance they found Mir-andi’s hat and cane. The officers fix the distance from the road to a point where there was evidence of a scuffle at 20 or 25 feet. It was also developed by testimony of the officers that later in the night appellant was called to and did drive the two women to Kenova.

Appellant’s testimony in part was supported by that of three witnesses, his brother, Floyd Murphy, sister-in-law, Edna Murphy, and a friend, Roy Dills, to such extent as to justify recital only of his testimony. The substance of this testimony was that on the night of the robbery a woman came to his place where he and the above-named parties were playing cards, at about 7:30 or 7:45, and asked for Red McKenzie; Red was not there; she then asked for Curt Murphy, and was told that Curt was running a business at another place. The woman left and came back in 15 or 20 minutes and called for a taxi, and appellant got in the taxi with the woman.

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Bluebook (online)
75 S.W.2d 341, 255 Ky. 676, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1934.