Omer v. Commonwealth

25 S.W. 594, 95 Ky. 353, 1894 Ky. LEXIS 29
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 8, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 25 S.W. 594 (Omer v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Omer v. Commonwealth, 25 S.W. 594, 95 Ky. 353, 1894 Ky. LEXIS 29 (Ky. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

JUDGE HAZELRIGG

delivered the opinion op the court.

In tlie village of Sturgis, in Union County, at about ten o’clock at night, on the 4th day of April, 1893, Taylor Oliver and his wife, each well armed, entered the place of 'business of Henry Delaney, and demanded that he go at once with them and marry their daughter, Abide, whose ruin, they charged, he had accomplished. lie denied the charge, but upon being threatened with instant death he gave up his pistol and proceeded with the Olivers to a surrey a short distance away, in which the daughter was waiting. During this time some three or four shots were tired by the Olivers. The parties at once drove to Morganfiold, some twelve miles away, where the county clerk was aroused and a marriage license procured. The county judge, found some two miles distant, was awakened and asked to marry the couple, hut upon Delaney detailing the circumstances of his capture and his unwillingness to marry the girl, the officer refused to perform the ceremony. Quite a scene ensued, and the prisoner was told that he would be given one more chance, but that if he made any objection to the next officer approached, they would instantly kill him. A minister was then found, who performed the rites while the parties remained in the carriage. They then starred back, and upon reaching the Tur hill, some two miles from Morganfield, at about two o’clock in the morning of the 5th, they were met by a party of Delaney’s friends, when a sudden firing began, in which Abbie Oliver was killed and her father severely shot in the arm and face.

[356]*356At the July term of tlieUnion Circuit Court the appellant and some eight others were jointly indicted for the murder of the girl, and, upon the trial of the accused at the November term, he was found guilty, and his punishment fixed at confinement in the penitentiary for life. Upon this appeal he insists that certain instructions given the jury were misleading and otherwise prejudicial to him; that much testimony for the State which was incompetent was admitted, and some excluded which was competent.

For the purposes now at hand, it will be necessary only to review briefly the appellant’s connection with this tragedy. He appears to have been entirely friendly with the Olivers, and was a friend of young Henry "Delaney, and prior to the night of the latter’s capturo ivas seen with him and other friends at various times. On that night he was engaged in doctoring a sick horse, and went to the drug store at which Delaney was employed for medicine. He there learned of the kidnaping, and after a consultation with other friends it was decided not to apprise the relatives of young Delaney of the occurrence, but upon reflection, and after leaving the excited crowd, the accused and Tate agreed that they ought to let Holt,' the brother-in-law of Delaney, know of his peril. They walked over to Holt’s, about a mile out of town, and told him of the trouble. It was then agreed that George Delaney, Henry’s brother, should know the facts. In a short while some eight or ten of the neighbors and friends of Henry Delaney, including' the accused, the relatives named and others, gathered at the village, and it was .agreed that they would go over to Morganfield to find [357]*357out what. liad become of the parties. At this point the accused thus testifies:

“They were my neighbors, and I thought I would go with them to Morganfield, get breakfast, see what they had done with Henry Delaney, and get back by dinner. We started to Morganfield; I didn’t see Holt and Thomason until I got to Elijah Hughes’. We didn’t think that they could go to Morganfield and be married that night, as it was twelve miles to that place and late at night when they left Sturgis. Tate and I rode together and were behind all the parties, until Thomason got out of the buggy at the Young-hill, when we rode past them. I did not expect to meet, the Olivers on the road. Frank Holt and Louis Land were in front, and George Delaney and Carter next. Tate and I were some distance behind. Just as Tate and I got to the top of the Tur hill I saw the' surrey coming, meeting us at the foot of the hill. George Delaney, Land, Frank Holt and Carter were some distance in front of us, and as they met the surrey I heard a pistol-shot. Don’t know who fired it. The second shot was over the horses, came from right to left across the surrey, and was a pistol-shot. I was some forty or forty-five yards behind, and couldn’t tell who fired it, but think it was fired from the surrey; some seven or eight other shots were then fired. I had a thirty-two caliber pistol, but never fired it that night,” etc.

Taylor Oliver, as to the occurrences at the hill, testified as follows: “ When about, one-half way up Tur hill, two miles from Morganfield, four men rode up on horseback, and .Frank Holt said, ‘Hold up,’ or ‘Hold on, there,’ and immediately began firing. Some fourteen or sixteen shots in all were fired. Frank Holt and another went on [358]*358the right, and George ITenry and George Delaney on the left side of the surrey. I was shot first in the arm with a shotgun by Erauk Holt. As I turned my head to look behind me I was shot in the right jaw by a thirty-two caliber pistol. I don’t know who shot me in the face,” etc.

Mrs. Oliver testified thus as to the meeting: “ At the Tur hill, about half-way up, I was driving, when four men abreast met us, two going on each side. I was on the left side and Abbie immediately behind me. George Henry and George Delaney were the men on my side. Some one said, Hold up, there,’ and immediately the firing began. George Henry shot at me with a pistol and George Delaney rode behind and shot Abbie. He was right at the surrey. He rode a gray horse. Positive that both George Delaney and George Henry were there. Knew them both well,” etc.

This was the whole of the testimony introduced on the trial as to the details of the killing. The accused, however, offered to prove by Tate and George Delaney that he was some forty or fifty yards from the surrey when the shooting occurred, and that he did not shoot or incite or encourage any one else to do so, and that Carter, Land, George Delaney and Holt were all in front of Tate and the accused when the firing commenced. This proof the court rejected upon the ground that a conspiracy had been made out against the accused and the witnesses offering to testify.

It can not be contended from the proof that the accused either killed the deceased or wounded her father, or, indeed, took any part in the shooting. His crime, if he committed any, must consist in his being on the ground, [359]*359and by Ms presence aiding, encouraging or inciting others to kill the Olivers or do them bodily harm. And this is only possible if he wore there in pursuance of an agreement to commit some unlawful act. The testimony is clear enough, indeed, is uncontradicted, that lie said nothing and did nothing at the time of the immediate killing.' Nevertheless, if by his presence ho gave aid or encouragement to the others engaged in the, fight, he is guilty of murder, if they were so guilty, provided he was there in pursuance of a mutual understanding to carry out some unlawful purpose. Ilis presence alone, without such an understanding, does not make him responsible for the acts •of the others. Therefore, the case against him rests on the intent with which he was present, to be gathered from the proof and all the circumstances shown in the case.

In this connection we notice the instruction most seri■ously complained of, as it bears directly on this vital issue.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 S.W. 594, 95 Ky. 353, 1894 Ky. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/omer-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1894.