Newcomb v. Commonwealth

124 S.W.2d 486, 276 Ky. 362, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 532
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 17, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 124 S.W.2d 486 (Newcomb 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
Newcomb v. Commonwealth, 124 S.W.2d 486, 276 Ky. 362, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 532 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner

Affirming.

Corbett Newcomb has been convicted of voluntary manslaughter and sentenced to seven years’ imprisonment on the charge that he was driving an automobile which struck and killed Joe Darnell, a pedestrian. As appellant, he seeks a reversal of the judgment upon the grounds that the evidence does not sustain the verdict. He submits that if it be deemed sufficient to identify him as the driver of the car, it is not sufficient to establish his guilt of operating it in such a manner as the law demands for a conviction of the crime.

Darnell, an eighty year old man, was walking on the right-hand side of the highway going from Pikeville, carrying a sack of groceries he had obtained at a relief agency station, shortly after dark one Saturday night in May 1937. Occupants of an automobile going in the opposite direction saw a car coming up behind and close upon him. When they had passed about twenty feet beyond him, one of them looked back and saw that car strike the man and go on without stopping. The automobile seemed to them to be an old one-seated Ford. Both lights were burning. A woman drove up almost immediately thereafter and then turned and pursued the car. She overtook it a mile and a half or so away and obtained the license number. It was an old Ford with a rumble seat. The right-hand light was not then burning. The witness was positive this was the car that had struck the man, for having come in the opposite direction she knew that no other had passed going that way. An officer, to whom the license number was given, could not find the car that night but stopped it in Pike-ville the next morning. It was owned by the defendant. His brother, Charlie Newcomb, and Robert Ratliff were' *364 in it. Pieces of glass which had come from the right headlight, found on the running hoard, matched perfectly pieces picked np at the scene of the tragedy. The right lens was then of plain, smooth glass, not corrugated as was the left one and as commonly used in automobile headlights. The car was a 1929 model, badly battered, rattle-trap Ford, with a rumble seat.

About half past ten on the night Darnell was killed, the defendant and Robert Ratliff got the wife of a garage or service station keeper out of bed to sell them a headlight bulb for an old Ford. They told her their light had just blown out. Dora Roberts testified that she had got in the defendant’s automobile about four o’clock that Saturday afternoon, and with another girl and four boys, including the defendant, had been riding around until two o’clock Sunday morning when she went to a hotel. They had passed along the road where the man was struck about that time, but so far as she knew the automobile had not hit the man or any other object.

The defendant admitted being with his party along the highway about the time, but he positively denied having struck anything. His right-hand light bulb had blown out and he had stopped to obtain another from the service station keeper’s wife. He did not say when he had put the smooth, plain glass in the right headlight. None of the parties but the defendant and Dora Roberts testified. He was arrested in West Virginia. We think the evidence ample to identify the defendant and his car as the one that caused the man’s death. Glasgow Ice Cream Company v. Fults’ Adm’r, 268 Ky. 447, 105 S. W. (2d) 135.

We consider the proposition that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain the verdict that the defendant, though he may have been driving the automobile which caused the death of the man, was guilty of the crime of voluntary manslaughter.

It is well to look to the legal criterion by which the facts are to be judged in cases of this character. As applied to fire arms and other deadly weapons it is sometimes said that their use must have been “grossly careless or grossly negligent” in order to constitute the crime of voluntary manslaughter. But as applied to an automobile or other instrumentality, which is dan- *365 gerons to life only when improperly bandied, the grade or degree of carelessness or negligence is higher than those terms are ordinarily understood to mean. So it has been generally declared to be necessary to establish “reckless and wanton carelessness.” Jones v. Commonwealth, 213 Ky. 356, 281 S. W. 164, 165. In that case the court prepared a set of instructions to be given upon another trial and predicated the authority of the jury to convict the defendant upon the belief of proof beyond a reasonable doubt of that degree of carelessness. One of those instructions defined the term to mean: “Utterly careless, having no regard for consequences or for the safety.of others, yet without malice.” That instruction was given in this case. The conditions may be such that one knows or should know that his conduct is reasonably calculated to injure or kill another using and: having the right to use the highway, and if under those conditions one operates an automobile with such a high degree of carelessness he is chargeable in a criminal prosecution with the natural and reasonable consequences of his conduct. Held v. Commonwealth, 183 Ky. 209, 208 S. W. 772; Haupe v. Commonwealth, 234 Ky. 27, 27 S. W. (2d) 394; King v. Commonwealth, 253 Ky. 775, 70 S. W. (2d) 667; Dublin v. Commonwealth, 260 Ky. 412, 86 S. W. (2d) 136, 137. Although the driver of the machine under such circumstances can seldom be said to have had a preconceived or deliberate purpose to kill another, his recklessness itself imports the essential criminal intent. Davis v. Commonwealth, 193 Ky. 597, 237 S. W. 24, 23 A. L. R. 1551; Dublin v. Commonwealth, supra; Roberts v. Commonwealth, 264 Ky. 545, 95 S. W. (2d) 23.

The argument in behalf of the appellant is that there was no evidence of any wanton or reckless negligence on his part. It is true the evidence shows a straight road and a speed of perhaps thirty miles an hour, on the right-hand side of the road, which operation could not be regarded as even ordinary negligence. And as experienced motorists know, there is a blind spot when cars with headlights burning are passing in which it is difficult, if not momentarily impossible, to see a pedestrian. But this man was visible to the driver of the approaching cars for at least the distance the headlights shone, which, under the statutes, should have been two hundred feet, and the other car had been passed when he was hit. Its occupants had seen him. He would nee- *366 ■essarily Rave seen Mm Rad Re Reen performing Ris statutory dnty of maintaining a lookont. TRe culpability of tRe defendant is not to be found alone in these conditions. It is to be found in tRe condition of tRe driver himself, coupled with tRe failure to see and avoid tRe man, or at least warn Rim.

In each of the following cases tRe evidence tended to show that the driver was intoxicated and to prove expressly that Re Rad operated Ris car in a negligent manner. King v. Commonwealth, supra; Dublin v. Commonwealth, supra; Elkins v. Commonwealth, 244 Ky. 583, 51 S. W. (2d) 916; Colvin v. Commonwealth, 247 Ky. 480, 57 S. W. (2d) 487; Morris v. Commonwealth, 255 Ky. 276, 73 S. W. (2d) 1; Largent v. Commonwealth, 265 Ky. 598, 97 S. W. (2d) 538, 539; Sloan v. Commonwealth, 268 Ky. 241, 104 S. W. (2d) 988; Jones v. Commonwealth, 273 Ky. 444, 116 S. W. (2d) 984.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 S.W.2d 486, 276 Ky. 362, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newcomb-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1939.