O'Connor v. Commonwealth

48 S.W.2d 819, 243 Ky. 401, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 96
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 25, 1932
StatusPublished

This text of 48 S.W.2d 819 (O'Connor 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
O'Connor v. Commonwealth, 48 S.W.2d 819, 243 Ky. 401, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 96 (Ky. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Drury, Commissioner—

Affirming.

Thomas P. 0’Connor has been sentenced to eight years in the penitentiary for robbery. On October 4, 1924, the Axton Fisher Tobacco Company sent its traffic *402 manager, August C. Wolf, to the Eighteenth and Broadway branch of the Louisville National Bank to get money for its pay rolls. He got this money and had started to the company’s office, and was on O oigan street, near Eighteenth street, when three men in a Buick touring car drove up beside him and forced him to drive over to the curb and to stop his machine. They then robbed him of the factory pay roll, amounting to $2,514.76, took his keys, and 1'eft.

Wolf took the license number of the machine used by the robbers. It was Missouri 83-791. Efforts to trace this Buick car by this license were fruitless, further than to disclose this license was issued to a Mr. Gould for a Marmon car, motor No. 10182, which was stolen from Mr. Gould on April 24,1924, and later recovered by the St. Louis police department without the license. Nothing was done for nearly three years, but on May 6, 1927', the grand jury returned an indictment charging Louis Mulconroy, Thomas P. Connor (¡same as Thomas P. O’Connor), and Gus Winkler with this robbery. O’Con-nor was put on trial June 2, 1930, and convicted. His motion for a new trial having been overruled, he has appealed, and relies on the following grounds for reversal.

(a) “Because the Court erred in permitting the Commonwealth’s Attorney to ask questions of the defendant regarding certain arrests of him by police officers in the city of St Louis.”

To understand the ruling of the court in this regard, we must state some of the evidence. Lawrence Dougherty, an inmate of the penitentiary, was introduced as a witness by the commonwealth, and he testified that a few weeks before this robbery he, with a man named Farina and another named Gus Winkler, cam'e from St. Louis to Louisville for the purpose of watching the habits of Mr. Wolf in getting this pay roll, to learn the time he would get it, the route over which he would return, etc.; that they then returned to the Hoffman house in St. Louis, and his exact language is:

“We had several conversations among ourselves, O’Connor and Winkler and Farina and a fellow named Mulconroy and several other fellows that hung around there.”
*403 “Winkler and I and Farina had expected to come and at the last moment something else intervened to keep ns from coming.”

Dougherty then related that, when the time came, Winkler, Mulconroy, and O’Connor came to Louisville and later reported they had done the job and offered him his part, which he explains in these words:

“It is customary for people of that type to put out a ten per cent end to anybody that gives them a tip of a robbery.”

O’Connor testifying in his own behalf denied participating in any of these conversations, oy in doing or planning this or any other robbery, or that he was acquainted with Dougherty, Winkler, Mulconroy, or Farina further than that he had seen them about the Hoffman house. He testified he did not associate with them. His defense was an alibi, and he claimed he suffered a fracture of the patella in an automobile wreck on September 26, 1924, and was treated therefor until October 30, thus making it impossible, so he argues, for him to have been in Louisville on October 4, 1924, when this robbery was done.

If the testimony of Dougherty is true, then there was at this Hoffman house a den of thieves, whose conversations were evil, whose business was crime, and O’Connor was one of that gang.

Ordinarily it is not permissible to ask a defendant about crimes or arrests therefor, other than the one for which he is on trial, but in this case, after the defendant had testified in chief that he did not associate with Dougherty, Winkler, etc., and did not know them other than by sight, as one might know President Hoover, Henry Ford, or General Pershing, though he had never met them personally, then it became permissible for the commonwealth to show O’Connor’s testimony was false, by asking him and other witnesses about his associations with Dougherty, Winkler, etc., and to show by the defendant and by others that he did associate with them, and to prove the happening, when he was with them, of occurrences calculated to make an impression on his mind, for example, to show he was arrested in company with members of this gang. If, in its efforts to show O’Connor did associate with these men, the common *404 •wealth had shown they had gone to chnrch together, gone hunting together, taken lunch together, or attended a hall game together, no one would suggest such was error. If the commonwealth can show O’Connor’s statement, that he did not know these men, was untrue, by showing such associations as above, then why cannot it show such acquaintance by showing they were arrested together?

In like manner, when O’Connor testified he had never been in Louisville previous to his indictment for this robbery, it was permissible for the commonwealth to attack the truth of that statement, by asking him and the officer arresting him, if he and Winkler were not arrested in St. Louis in June, 1926, and if they did not then have in their car some extra hats and caps bearing the name of a Louisville haberdasher and did not then say they had been there to the Derby.

Also after O’Connor testified he got his kneecap fractured on September 4, 1924, and was then living at 3840 Laclede avenue, it was permissible to ask him how soon he recovered, to ask him if he had recovered on November 11, 1924, and, when he said he could not say, it was then permissible for the commonwealth to endeavor to show by him or any other witness that he was arrested for a breach of the peace on November 11, 1924, and had then given his address as 3218 North Taylor Street, because of the light it might throw upon the truth of bis claim that after September 26, 1924, he was in bed for a long time and had to walk on a crutch and cane after he got up. Men so crippled do not usually figure in breaches of the peace.

(b) “Because the Court erred in not allowing the defendant to introduce the Official Police Bulletin of the Police Department of the City of Louisville of October 4th, 1924, which contained a description of the men alleged to have participated in the holdup of the witness Wolf.”

Wolf testified that O’Connor was one of the men who robbed him, and he was the man who held the gun on him and took his money, and, on cross-examination, said that on the day of the robbery, he described him as about 30 years of age, 5 feet 7 inches tall, dark hair, and eyes, heavy eyebrows and lashes, wearing a cap and dark suit of clothing.

*405 O’Connor had the idea that there existed an official police bulletin of the city of Louisville in which the man who took this money from Wolf was described thus:

“Six feet, 200 pounds, extra heavy moustache, curled at both ends, four day growth of beard, brown felt hat, flat brim dark glasses.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 S.W.2d 819, 243 Ky. 401, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oconnor-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1932.