Overton v. Commonwealth

258 S.W. 941, 202 Ky. 35, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 662
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 12, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 258 S.W. 941 (Overton 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
Overton v. Commonwealth, 258 S.W. 941, 202 Ky. 35, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 662 (Ky. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

The appellant, Sillns Overton, was tried and convicted in the court below of the offense, duly charged by indictment, of “unlawfully, wilfully and maliciously” shooting at Sarah Partin “with intent to kill her, but without wounding her.” His punishment was fixed by the verdict of the jury and judgment of the court entered thereon at confinement of two years in the penitentiary. He was refused a new trial and has appealed.

Sarah Partin is the wife of Lenard Partin and she and her husband reside near the appellant. The evidence furnished by the Commonwealth’s two witnesses, Partin and wife, was to the effect that the appellant went to their home about four o’clock in the afternoon of [37]*37April 28th, 1923, and, without giving a reason for the visit, remained until eight or nine o’clock that night, but declined an invitation from Lenard Partin to take supper with the family, which they ate while he was there. He appeared to be under the influence of an intoxicant, as during the meal he sat with his head resting on the back of a chair as if asleep. Before leaving the Partin home and while the husband was out cutting some wood to replenish the fire in the family room, the appellant began to abuse Mrs. Partin by applying to her vile epithets, cursing and threatening to shoot her and drawing upon her a pistol. During this misconduct of the appellant toward the wife the husband re-entered the room carrying firewood and the axe used in cutting it. He then heard some of the appellant’s abuse of and threats against his wife and saw the pistol in his hand, and immediately interfered for her protection by.getting between her and the appellant with the axe in his hand and ordering the latter from the house, which command he with apparent unwillingness obeyed; but upon getting in the yard twenty or thirty steps from the house and seeing Mrs. Partin standing on the porch and the husband in the door watching him, he pointed the pistol toward her and fired two shots at her and then took his departure. The bullets thus fired from the pistol struck and entered the comer of the porch, one of them within eight inches of her feet.

According to the further testimony of the Partins the appellant, after apparently leaving the premises following the two pistol shots at Mrs. Partin, in a few minutes returned to their home and, without announcing his presence, opened the door with pistol in hand, and entered the room where they were sitting, saying “he generally conquered where he went,” and again began and continued while present his abuse of Mrs. Partin, which the husband, being unarmed, was powerless to prevent.

The appellant in testifying in his own behalf, admitted that he visited the home of the Partins at the time indicated by them, the quarrel he there had with Mrs. Partin and the drawing' of his pistol on her, but claimed that the altercation had its origin in her abuse of his aunt, Mrs. Amanda Henderson, which he resented; and that he did not draw his pistol upon or threaten to shoot Mrs. Partin until she drew upon him a butcher knife and backed him into a corner. That her husband then came [38]*38into the room with some wood and an axe and he (appellant) told Mrs. P'artin if she would let him out he would go off; and that he then went out of the house and was followed by Partin and wife to the porch. He also admitted that after leaving the house and when about thirty or forty feet therefrom, he fired two shots from his pistol, but denied that the shots were fired at the Partins, or either of them, and claimed that they were fired in the ground in front of him; that the bullets used with his pistol and with which it was then loaded were made of hard metal, whereas those the Partins testified were found in their porch, were made of lead, which were not, and could not have been, fired from his pistol. The appellant likewise'admitted his quick return the same night to the home of the Partins. Pie denied, however, that he entered the house with his pistol in his hand, or then said he “generally conquered where he went,” or that he renewed the quarrel with Mrs. Partin; and stated that he found at the Partins.one or more visitors who had in the meantime arrived, with whom he pleasantly talked for awhile and then went to his home.

After the introduction for the appellant of one Riddo Bostich, whose testimony offered to impeach the general reputation of Sarah Partin proved to be incompetent and for that reason was excluded, Sarah Partin was recalled as a witness by the appellant to lay the foundation for contradicting her, for which purpose she was asked if she did not at a time indicated, state to Millard and Albert Overton, brothers of the appellant, she was going to bring the appellant, or the latter and his wife, “to dry bread,” in answer to which she denied making such statement. Thereupon she was asked by the Commonwealth’s attorney in rebuttal of the appellant’s testimony and to contradict him, whether she drew a butcher knife on the appellant in the quarrel between them at her home, as testified by him. And also whether, as he had testified, she had been hired by Jim Hamlin and Bill Henderson “to .make this case against him.” To each of which questions her answer was a denial; and in giving her answer to the first of them she added the statement that she had never owned a butcher knife.

Upon being introduced as witnesses by the appellant, his brothers Millard and Albert Overton, both testified that Sarah Partin did say to them after the difficulty with 'appellant at her home she was going to bring the latter to “dry bread.” Jim Hamlin and Bill Hen[39]*39derson were then introduced hy the Commonwealth in rebuttal, each of whom testified that he had not instigated or had anything to do with the prosecution of the appellant by Sarah Partin in this case, and Henderson added to that statement the further one that he had advised her not to do so. The only remaining witness introduced was Bidda Bostick, recalled by the appellant, who testified as to certain statements claimed to have been made to her by Henderson about the Overtons, which the trial court excluded as incompetent, to which ruling the appellant failed to take an exception.

Tt is manifest that much of the testimony of the Partins was, as we have seen from appellant’s testimony, admitted by him and other parts thereof not denied. That is he failed to deny their statements that he was intoxicated on the occasion in question, that his difficulty in the house with Mrs. Partin on the first visit was stopped by the interference of her husband armed with the axe and his command to him to leave the house, or that his return to and re-entry into the house was, unannounced by him before walking into the room. In view of the foregoing facts and accompanying circumstances disclosed by the evidence, the conclusion cannot be escaped that as a whole it conduced to establish the appellant’s guilt of the offense charged.

Only two of the grounds urged for a new trial in the court below are relied on by the appellant for the reversal by this court of the judgment! of conviction, viz.: (1) Surprise resulting to him on the trial of the case. (2) The discovery by him, since the trial, of new and material evidence . The surprise alleged is indefinitely set forth by the appellant’s affidavit on the motion for a new trial, but we infer from its statements that it was claimed to have been caused partly on account of his being subjected to trial at all, and partly by reason of certain unexpected testimony in behalf of the Commonwealth.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
258 S.W. 941, 202 Ky. 35, 1924 Ky. LEXIS 662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/overton-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1924.