Owsley v. Commonwealth

458 S.W.2d 457, 1970 Ky. LEXIS 178
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 26, 1970
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 458 S.W.2d 457 (Owsley 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
Owsley v. Commonwealth, 458 S.W.2d 457, 1970 Ky. LEXIS 178 (Ky. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

WADDILL, Commissioner.

The grand jury of Boyd County returned an indictment against Dewey Estill Owsley charging him with the murder of Dale Moore. At his trial he was convicted of involuntary manslaughter and sentenced to serve five years in the state penitentiary.

Owsley appeals and urges several grounds for reversal, one of which is that the evidence fails to establish his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. However, the Attorney General takes a contrary view and contends that the evidence is amply sufficient to sustain the conviction. To resolve this issue we consider the evidence.

During the night of September 6, 1969, at approximately 11:00 p. m. Dale Moore, Lloyd Bishop and Donald Yates met at a bar in Ironton, Ohio, where they consumed some alcoholic beverages. At about 1:30 a. m. they left Ironton in an automobile to return to Ashland, Kentucky. Bishop was driving, Yates was sitting next to him on the front seat and Moore was occupying the back seat directly behind Yates.

While enroute to Ashland they purchased a case of beer and decided to continue their drinking on a certain hilltop on the outskirts of Ashland located off Donta Road. To reach this hilltop it was necessary for them to drive by appellant’s home. Earlier that night appellant and his wife and their niece, Mrs. Josephine Owsley, who had recently divorced Donald Yates, had arrived at appellant’s home on Donta Road and had retired for the night.

As Bishop drove past appellant’s home, with an open can of beer in his hand, he narrowly escaped having an accident with an approaching automobile which Bishop claimed was driving on his side of the road. In trying to avert the collision Bishop failed to turn off Donta Road to the hilltop where he and his companions had planned to have their beer-drinking party. When Bishop realized this he turned his automobile around and as he was driving by appellant’s home for the second time he saw a man standing in appellant’s front yard and Bishop thought he heard the man call for help. When Bishop drove back to where the man was standing, Bishop not only realized that the man did not desire help but that the man was loudly abusing him. Bishop accelerated his automobile and proceeded farther down the road where he again turned his automobile around with the intention of immediately returning to Ash-land.

When Bishop drove by appellant’s home on this occasion he saw no one in the road or in appellant’s yard. However, Bishop testified that, just as his automobile passed the place where he had previously seen the man standing in appellant’s yard, he heard three gun shots which he thought were fired from a place located to the rear of his automobile. Shortly thereafter Bishop discovered that a bullet had been fired through the back window of his automobile and that the bullet had struck Dale Moore in the back of his head. Moore was conveyed to a hospital where he died the next day as a result of the head wound. Bishop did not see the person who fired the shot and he was unable to identify appellant as the man he had seen in appellant’s yard on the night Moore was shot.

Donald Yates’ testimony was substantially the same as Bishop’s. Both Yates and Bishop testified that they did not know appellant or that he lived on Donta Road.

Appellant was interviewed by the police and he frankly acknowledged that he had become alarmed by Bishop’s antics on the night of September 7, and that he had fired three pistol shots into the air to scare Bishop away, but that he did not know that anyone had been injured by the gunfire. [460]*460Appellant surrendered his .38 calibre Undercover revolver to the police and disclosed his activities during the night of September 7 through a signed written statement, which was introduced into evidence and in pertinent part reads:

“* * *. At about 3:10 A.M. on Sunday September 7, 1969, I was awakened from my sleep as the result of a car horn being blown excessively. This noise also aroused my niece Josephine [Owsley] who actually awakened me. She was sleeping in a front bedroom. I got up and dressed. I went to the front yard of my residence taking my .38 calibre revolver of Charter manufacture known as an Undercover, with me. The vehicle that was causing this noise was a white over red Ford. I believed it to have had two occupants in the front seat. I observed this vehicle pass in a southerly direction toward Ironville, turn and come back past my house and on the fourth pass I fired my revolver three times into the air, near a large hickory tree. I was standing in in my front yard at the time. My yard is approximately six to ten feet above the roadway. Each time the vehicle passed the house, it gave me the impression that it was going to stop and turn into my driveway. On the occasions that the vehicle passed my house while I was standing in my yard, I called to the occupants, ‘what do you want here’ ? To which they gave no reply. This was done on three occasions. It was on the fourth pass that I fired the gun. I was fully aware of my doings in that I was not intoxicated. I had the opinion by reason of my employment as a bank courier for the American Courier Corp. of Louisville, Kentucky that the occupants may have believed me to have money or other valuables at my home and intended to rob me. I have not in the past had any attempts made to rob me, nor have I had any difficulty with any persons connected with my employment. I have worked for this company approximately 7 years.
“I had no idea at the time who the occupants of the vehicle were. After firing the three shots, to my knowledge, the vehicle did not return, and believing that no one had been shot, I removed the empty cartridge cases from the gun, throwing them on the ground in the yard, and went back into the house. Once inside the house, I reloaded the gun and placed it in a drawer in the dining room where it is usually kept.
“The next thing I knew of this, I received a phone call from Detective Edward J. Kirk of the State Police requesting my presence at the State Police Barracks concerning this incident. I willingly complied with this request. * * * »

A pathologist testified that Moore’s death was caused by the gunshot wound in his head. The bullet was removed from Moore’s head but it had been fragmented into two missiles that impaired its riflings which are essential in establishing that the bullet had been fired from appellant’s pistol. A ballistics expert opined that the missiles removed from Moore’s head had either been fired from appellant’s gun or a gun very similar to it.

When Mrs. Josephine Owsley was called to testify in behalf of the Commonwealth she refused to answer any of the questions propounded to her by the Commonwealth’s Attorney. She claimed that her testimony might incriminate her and she attempted to invoke her Fifth Amendment privilege to remain silent. The trial court did not compel her to answer the questions. Appellant did not testify.

In seeking to reverse his conviction appellant relies on the rule that if proof of guilt of the crime is dependent upon circumstantial evidence which is as reasonably consistent with innocence as with guilt, it is insufficient to support the conviction. Helton v. Commonwealth, 242 Ky. 386, 46 S.W.2d 487; Tarkaney v. Commonwealth, 240 Ky. 790, 43 S.W.2d 34. This rule, however, does not govern the instant [461]

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458 S.W.2d 457, 1970 Ky. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owsley-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1970.