Nerren v. Commonwealth

105 S.W.2d 838, 268 Ky. 715, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 520
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 21, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 105 S.W.2d 838 (Nerren 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
Nerren v. Commonwealth, 105 S.W.2d 838, 268 Ky. 715, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 520 (Ky. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Chief Justice Ratliff

Affirming.

The appellant has appealed from a judgment of the Pulton circuit court convicting him of the crime of detaining a woman against her will and sentencing him to two years in the penitentiary.

The sole ground insisted on for reversal of the judgment is that the evidence is insufficient to sustain a eonviciton.

The prosecuting witness, Miss Dorothy McCormick, but later married and now Dorothy McCormick Abernathy, testified that on the night of July 20, 1935, she slept on a pallet in the living room which was the front room of her father’s home in Hickman, Ky., as it was her custom to do occasionally in hot weather, and at about daylight on the morning of the 21st of July, she was awakened by some one striking her on the head and face. She said-she first received a blow on the side of her head which partly awakened her, which was immediately followed by another blow on the nose. She raised up and screamed calling to her brother, father, and mother, and at about that time she saw a slim man in her room, dressed in dark trousers and a light shirt, and he immediately went out through the front door, but she did not recognize him. She said that the blow on the side of her head raised a lump or knot and the blow on the nose produced a severe laceration, and it bled profusely. She claimed that her nose was broken, but the doctor who treated her wound did not say whether or not her nose was broken, but it appears from his evidence that she was severely injured. This is about the substance 'of her testimony in so far as it is pertinent to the issue.

Mr. and Mrs. McCormick, father and mother of the prosecuting witness, testified that they were awakened by the screams of their daughter and hastened into her room. Mrs. McCormick said that just immediately *717 following the screams of her daughter and before she entered her daughter’s room, she heard the screen door slam, but Mr. McCormick said that he was attracted by the screams of his daughter and excited and he did not recall hearing the slam of the door. Mrs. McCormick further testified that she had cleaned out the stove and had put the soot in a “stewer” or kettle and set it outside the back door, and before the doctor and officers arrived, whom they called immediately after the attack, she noticed that the vessel containing the soot had been knocked over and a part of the soot was still in the vessel and a part of it on the ground. This was between the McCormick home and the home of Mrs. Jonakin, to whose evidence we will later refer. She said she saw flat tracks nn her porch and on the walk. Mr. McCormick’s testimony relating to the soot was about the same as that of Mrs. McCormick, except he did not notice it until Charles Moore, a deputy sheriff who had been called to the premises, called his attention to it.

Mrs. Jonakin, who lived in an adjoining house, possibly about 50 feet from the McCormick home, testified that she heard the screams of Miss McCormick and she immediately ran out of the house and saw a. man running from the front of the McCormick home and pass between her home and the McCormick home; that he had on a light shirt, but because of certain obstructions she could not see the lower part of his body and did not know the color of his trousers.

Charles Moore, a deputy sheriff, testified that he was called to the McCormick home and found tracks, made by house slippers on the sidewalk leading to the McCormick home and onto the porch. He said the tracks were “headed” toward the porch, and then he (the witness) went around to the screened windows,, and the corner of the screen had been pulled loose and pushed inside toward the room about six or eight-inches.

A barn had burned in town that morning and appellant was at the fire dressed in dark trousers and a light knitted undershirt only and wearing house slippers with straight or flat bottoms without heels. It appears that the description of the intruder and the flat tracks aroused the suspicions of the officers, and *718 they, suspecting that appellant might have been the intruder, set out to find him.

Mr. Moore further testified as .follows:

“A. * * * I went to Mr. Nerren’s (meaning appellant’s father’s) place of business and called him out and told him what had happened and I told him I wanted him to go to his house with me, and as we were going in there was a bedroom slipper on the step and one on the porch, and after we went in I told his wife what had happened up at McCormick’s and asked her what time Jimmie came home.
“Q. What did you do then? A. I asked if Jimmie was there and she said, yes, in his room and I got Mr. Wahl and we went in Jimmie’s room and he was on the bed with his undershirt on and in his stocking feet and was lying there with his right hand across his breast and on this part of his hand there was soot, he was sooty all over, and on this hand there looked like a print of a screen and he turned his hand over and these knuckles were bruised.”

He further said that appellant’s undershirt was of light color and his trousers were dark. He never examined the slippers very carefully but did observe that they made a flat track, similar to the tracks found at the McCormick home.

Joe Wahl, another deputy sheriff, testified that he went to the Nerren home with the witness, Charles Moore, and his testimony relating to the house slippers and the description of appellant with reference to soot being on his hands and body was in substance the same as the testimony of Moore.

Appellant, testifying in his own behalf, said that he was very drunk on the night of July 20th, and when asked if he remembered that night he said he remembered only a part of it. ' He testified that he went to the fire and was dressed in an undershirt, dark trousers, and house slippers; that he tried to help fight the fire but was too drunk. He helped to handle the fire hose, which was “muddy and sooty.” After the fire was over he went to a doctor’s office with a boy named Glazer, a member of the fire department, who had stuck a nail in his foot. He said he stayed in the doctor’s office *719 about 15 minutes, then went hack to the place of the fire. He then started home and fell down and lay there for a while, but he did not know how long. He said he remembered getting up and going- home to get another drink of whisky and that he was sick and drunk and when he “came to” he was in jail. He said he did not go to the McCormick home on the morning in question and did not know that the prosecuting witness was there, and that he had not been at her home in three years and had not as much as had a conversation with her for several weeks or months, and never on any occasion talked to her more than' just to speak to her.

On cross-examination appellant testified that he heard the fire whistle and went to the fire, but he was so drunk he could not tell just when the fire started but it was some time after midnight. He admitted that he was not too drunk to hear the fire whistle, or go to the fire, or to put on his house slippers and trousers, and not too drunk to go to the doctor’s office with the G-lazer boy. He said he did not know whether or not he had soot on him when he took his clothes off.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 S.W.2d 838, 268 Ky. 715, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nerren-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1937.