Neal v. Commonwealth

302 S.W.2d 573
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 16, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 302 S.W.2d 573 (Neal 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
Neal v. Commonwealth, 302 S.W.2d 573 (Ky. 1956).

Opinion

CULLEN, Commissioner.

Jesse Neal was jointly indicted with his teen-age son, William, for the murder of one Kie Grubbs. The circuit court held that William could not be tried under the indictment because he was a juvenile and the statutory procedure governing juvenile offenders had not been followed. Upon the separate trial of Jesse, he was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter and sentenced to five years in the penitentiary.

Appealing, Jesse asserts as his principal ground of error that the evidence gave rise only to suspicion or conjecture as to *575 his guilt, and therefore was insufficient to sustain the conviction.

The crime was alleged to have been committed on the night of August 7, 1953, in Frankfort. On August 13, 1953, a badly decomposed body, sufficiently identified as being that of Kie Grubbs, was found lying in an abandoned stone quarry a short distance from the home in which Jesse Neal lived with his son and the latter’s wife. Upon examination of the body by a pathologist, it was determined that Grubbs had been killed by being shot in the back with a shotgun. The Neals were arrested and charged with murder.

The evidence of Jesse Neal’s guilt was entirely circumstantial. Without attempting to state the evidence in detail, we will enumerate the facts that connect Jesse with the crime.

Grubbs was killed with a shotgun. A shotgun was found concealed under the Neal house. Holes in the inside wall of the Neal kitchen, near the back door, were identified as having been made by shotgun pellets.

Grubbs was a deserter from the Army. For several days prior to his death he had been staying at the Neal home at night, while hiding out in the hills during the daytime.

A neighbor who lived about 50 yards from the Neal home testified that on the night of August 7, 1953, around 9:30 p. m., he heard what he identified as a pistol shot in the general direction of the Neal home, and he heard “a boy jumping up and down in the floor hollering ‘daddy, daddy, you should not have bothered that pistol — look, he is dead now.’ ” The neighbor’s wife heard the shot, and someone crying, but did not distinguish any spoken words.

William Neal’s wife testified that on a night during the first two weeks of August 1953 she heard a shotgun go off in the house. She was in the bedroom. Her husband and Jesse were somewhere in the house, but she did not know where. She thought the shot came from the kitchen. She did not hear any voices after the shot was fired, nor did she see Grubbs at any time that night. She was unable to recall anything that occurred that night after the shot was fired. (In a pre-trial statement, which was read for the purpose of impeachment, she had said that she and her husband were lying in wait for Grubbs, because he had stolen Jesse’s pocketbook, and when Grubbs came into the darkened kitchen William shot him, intending only to scare him.)

Jesse’s driver’s license was found in a cardboard box near Grubbs’ body, along with personal effects and papers of Grubbs’.

At the examining trial in police court, when informed that he was charged with having helped to dispose of or hide Grubbs’ body, Jesse said: “We didn’t hide it, Judge — we just took it and laid it out there where everybody could see it.”

Summarizing the evidence, we find adequate proof that Jesse was in his house the night a shot was fired in the kitchen, and, according to the voice heard by the neighbor, someone was “dead now” in that vicinity. A person who had been staying at the Neal home proved to be dead. Jesse had helped carry the body of that person from some point to the abandoned quarry. The time of death of that person, as estimated by the pathologist, coincided approximately with the night the shot was fired. The death was associated with the fact that “daddy” had “bothered the pistol.”

We think this evidence pointed to Jesse Neal’s guilt in a sufficiently unerring way to sustain the conviction. The evidence was not as consistent with his innocence as with his guilt. The circumstances were not explainable, naturally and reasonably, consistent with his innocence. The only hypothesis consistent with Jesse’s *576 innocence is that he was in a separate room of the house when William, with no preconceived plan of action with his father, shot Grubbs. This hypothesis is not a reasonable one, because of the testimony of the neighbor that immediately after the shot was heard someone hollered, “daddy, daddy, you should not have bothered that pistol — look, he is dead now.” Since only one shot was heard in the vicinity that night, and since William’s wife testified that the shot seemed to come from the kitchen of the Neal house, the only reasonable conclusion is that the boy who was heard hollering to his daddy was in the Neal house and was referring to the shot which had been just fired. Since William’s wife testified that there was no one in the house that night other than William and Jesse, it was established quite conclusively that Jesse was the “daddy” referred to, and that he was being criticized not because he was at the moment bothering the pistol, but because he had bothered the pistol, as a result of which the man was “dead now.” This evidence is not consistent with the theory that Jesse was alone in another room when the shooting took place.

It is contended that this case is governed by Tarkaney v. Commonwealth, 240 Ky. 790, 43 S.W.2d 34. However, in that case there was no proof that the death was the result of a criminal agency; the identification of the body was most unsatisfactory; the place of death was not established; the defendant was not placed with the deceased at or near the time of death; and there was nothing to tie the defendant up with the disposition of the body other than the statement of a witness that a pair of trousers on the body looked like some the defendant was in the habit of wearing.

A second contention of the appellant is that the court erred in asking appellant’s counsel, in the presence of the jury, whether he had any objection to the jury separating during a recess. It is not clear from the record that this took place. However, if it did take place, it was not prejudicial error, because the appellant was not convicted of murder, but only of manslaughter. See Joseph v. Commonwealth, 303 Ky. 712, 199 S.W.2d 135.

Appellant’s third contention is that the attorney for the 'Commonwealth committed reversible error by commenting upon the failure of the appellant and his codefendant to testify. During the course of his closing argument the Commonwealth’s attorney said, “And the reason it (the evidence) was circumstantial, gentlemen, is because the secret of what went on in the night of August 6, 1953 is locked within the four walls of that building; known only to the three people who were in that building, Carolyn Neal, William Neal and Jesse Neal. And since we speak of omissions from the witness stand, where was the witness William Neal?” (Here an objection, interposed on the ground that William Neal could not be compelled to testify, was overruled.) Later, the Commonwealth’s attorney said, “but for once the silence of Jesse Neal was broken * * * ” (referring to the statement made in police court).

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Bluebook (online)
302 S.W.2d 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neal-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1956.