Postell v. Commonwealth

192 S.W. 39, 174 Ky. 272, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 180
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 27, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 192 S.W. 39 (Postell 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
Postell v. Commonwealth, 192 S.W. 39, 174 Ky. 272, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 180 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

The appellant, Frank Postell, prosecutes this appeal from a judgment of the Christian Circuit Court, sentencing him to death for the murder of J. J. Robertson, by striking, beating and wounding the deceased with a stick, stone or other blunt, deadly instrument, from which he died within a few days thereafter. The crime was committed some time in the afternoon of February 11, 1916, a short- distance out of the city of Hopkins-ville, and on .or near the track of Illinois Central Railroad.

Several errors are complained of on this appeal, but only two are really urged by counsel for appellant, and, as we conceive it, are the only ones demanding a consideration at our hands. They are: (1) that the court erred in admitting as evidence before the jury the alleged dying statement of the deceased, Robertson; and, (2) error of the court in giving to the jury, upon its own motion, at the close of the testimony of the witness who told of the dying declaration, this admonition or instruction: “The court will say to the jury that you will consider the evidence of Mr. Duncan as to what the deceased, J. J. Robertson, said as to the identification, and the statements made by him as to how it happened, how the trouble happened; you will fake that as the evi[274]*274dence of the deceased, Robertson, as though he were present and testifying.”

To understand the. points raised it is necessary that we give a brief statement of the facts as shown upon the trial by the Commonwealth. The appellant had been staying in and around Hopkinsville since about the first of January, 1916.. Up to that time it appears that he was a stranger in that community, and it is not shown what business, if any, he followed. He was reared in the southern part of Christian county or just across the line in Tennessee, where his mother lives, and as far as we can gather, during his stay in Hopkins-ville he frequented saloons and no doubt indulged i-n considerable drinking. At any rate, on the morning of February 11, or a day or two prior thereto, the deceased, Robertson, appeared in the city and made it known that he either wanted to rent a farm or to purchase one, and was making inquiry of different ones in regard'to these matters. He lived in Tennessee, but it 'does not appear that the appellant ever met him before or knew him. Some time about eight o’clock, on the morning of the day upon which the crime was committed, the deceased went into a saloon at Hopkinsville and the appellant either, went into it with him or was immediately thereafter in the saloon when deceased was buying drinks for both himself and appellant, and there appeared to be a degree of familiarity existing between them. This, at stated interyals, continued until up to and perhaps past ten o’clock. In the meantime the deceased had purchased a half pint or a pint of whiskey. Some time, while they were in the saloon, the appellant, who is colored, spoke to another colored ,man or boy in the saloon and said to him that the old man (deceased) had a roll of money on him and that he (appellant) was going to get it or take it away from him, or something to that effect, and he wanted the other colored man or boy to assist him in getting possession of the money, .but he declined to join in the undertaking. After the deceased and appellant had left the saloon, ostensibly for the purpose of going but in the country and looking at some land which appellant professed to know about, the two were seen together in another ipart of the city by the same .colored person who was approached by appellant for the purpose of enlisting assistance in procuring the money of deceased. At the time appellant [275]*275and deceased were seen on the streets after leaving the saloon the appellant was pointing his finger in the direction of different roads or pikes leading into the city, but the witness who testified about this occurrence was not near enough to hear what was being said. This is the last seen or heard of either the deceased or appellant until some time between two and three o’clock that afternoon, when a farmer was coming to town, walking upon the track of the Illinois Central Railroad, and a mile and a half or more from town near a trestle he saw the deceased and appellant sitting upon the ties of the track on opposite sides. Some few words were passed, but they are not material, and the witness came on to town, seeing no more of the parties. About three thirty of the same afternoon, another farmer and his son who were at work nearby, burning a plant bed, saw the deceased wandering around, apparently lost, and also apparently insane or partially demented, and upon going to him they found that instead of having a bandana handkerchief over his head, as they thought, it was bloody, and he was wet all over, as though he had been submerged in a pool of water. He was very much chilled, and the witnesses carried him to the house of a neighbor,- where, after being warmed and attended to for a while, he was carried to the city of Hopkinsville •and delivered to the police of that city. The city physician treated him for three or four days, and he was then carried to the Jennie Stewart hospital, located in the city, and which is in charge of Dr. J. G. Gaither. Shortly after being carried to the hospital, the skull of the deceased having been fractured and crushed just above the left temple by the blow which he received from his assailant, he was subjected to a' trephining operation by Dr. Gaither. There were other bruises upon his head, but not necessarily fatal ones.

The deceased, who - was a white man, lived two or three days after the operation, but was unconscious from the time he was found wandering around in the field until some ten hours or more after the operation. There was removed from the brain by the operation a considerable amount of pus, or yellow matter, and the physicians say that his death was produced by the blow he received, and that it was almost necessarily fatal, Ihe operation having more for its purpose the restoration of the deceased to his normal ihental condition than to [276]*276effect a final cure. Something like a day and a half after the mental condition of the deceased was restored, he continued in that condition, hut again relapsed into a state of unconsciousness from which he never recovered. It was during the lucid interval just mentioned that he made the statement which was admitted as a dying declaration, and of which complaint is made.

There are other circumstances found in the record tending to establish the guilt of appellant but not bearing upon the questions in hand, and with which we will not encumber this opinion.

"When the deceased was taken to the hospital he was put in the same room with the witness, Duncan, who testified to the alleged dying declaration. lie remained in the room with Mr. Duncan all the time, except when he was operated on, and was returned to that room after the operation. Por the sake of brevity we will not insert the testimony of the witness, Duncan, hearing upon the condition of the deceased, and showing his sense of impending death and upon which his declaration was admitted, but will say that it shows substantially these facts:

That after the operation the two remained in the room some two or three days, and during that time, after the deceased regained consciousness, the parties engaged in several conversations. The witness says that the deceased was apparently sane and rational, as did Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
192 S.W. 39, 174 Ky. 272, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/postell-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1917.