Privitt v. Commonwealth

113 S.W.2d 49, 271 Ky. 665, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 47
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 28, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 113 S.W.2d 49 (Privitt 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
Privitt v. Commonwealth, 113 S.W.2d 49, 271 Ky. 665, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 47 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion op the .Court by

Judge Thomas

— Reversing.

In the early part of tlie afternoon of November 15, 1936, the appellant, Irvin Privitt, shot, and killed Bill Alsip with a pistol. It happened in Laurel county, Ky., and, as we gather from the record, was at some point on the farm of the deceased where he and three or four of the Phelps family and some others were engaged in procuring firewood for the Alsip and Phelps families. At the following February, 1937, term of the Laurel circuit court, appellant was indicted, charged with murder. At his later trial he was convicted of voluntary manslaughter and punished by confinement in the penitentiary for eight years. His motion for a new trial was overruled, and from the verdict and the judgment pronounced thereon he prosecutes this appeal.

*667 The motion contained eleven distinct grounds as alleged errors sufficiently prejudicial to authorize the setting aside of the verdict and a reversal of the judgment; but counsel for appellant in their brief filed on behalf of their client on this appeal refer to and discuss only four of them, which are: (1) Error of the court in not sustaining the motion for a peremptory instruction of acquittal made at the close of the commonwealth’s testimony and at the close of all of the testimony; (2) if mistaken as to argued ground 1, then the verdict was flagrantly against the evidence; (3) incompetent evidence introduced by the commonwealth over the objections and exceptions of defendant; and (4) alleged erroneous remarks by the court to the jury concerning the importance of reaching a verdict made after it had deliberated on the case some five or six hours and had not reached an agreement. "We will as briefly as possible discuss and determine the four grounds argued in brief, since the others contained in the motion for a new trial and not argued in brief will be treated as abandoned, although we have not overlooked them in our effort to discover any unfairness in the trial, and from which we concluded that none of such abandoned grounds possess merit.

1 and 21 Argued grounds 1 and 2 rest entirely upon the insufficiency of the testimony heard at the trial, and for that reason they will be considered and determined together. Defendant, at the time of the killing, was about 28 years of age, while deceased was much older. Up to about four years prior to the difficulty they had lived in the same general neighborhood in the southern part of Laurel county, but on regular election day in 1932 at their voting precincts there was some sort of difficulty between.them, the details of which, but meagerly appear in the record, although enough is told to show in a general way that on that occasion the deceased accosted appellant and accused him of circulating falsehoods against him. The accusation was followed by angry words, perhaps spoken by both parties, but Alsip appears to have been the exclusive instigator of that disturbance and to have inflicted onQdefendant more or less physical punishment by kicking and striking him. At any rate, after that difficulty, and perhaps on the same day, some witnesses testified that appellant *668 stated, in substance, that if Alsip ever attacked him again in such fashion he would use his gun on him, or something to that effect. Perhaps some of them said that “he would kill him with his pistol.” The language employed in the threats so testified to as occurring at that time indicated only that another such attack by Alsip on defendant would be more vigorously defended by him. Similar alleged threats were proven as being made at occasional periods between that day down to a short while before the fatal difficulty wherein Alsip was killed. Defendant denied making any such threats, and some of the witnesses who testified to them were thoroughly impeached for truth and veracity. Likewise, the same impeached witnesses, or others who so testified to such threats, were connected in some degree of relationship to deceased.

At any rate, defendant shortly after the difficulty at the election referred to moved out of Laurel county over into McCreary county across Cumberland river, which separates the two counties, and he procured some sort of employment at Whitley City in the latter county. However, he would occasionally thereafter go back to his old neighborhood visiting friends, and perhaps relatives, and he states that he occasionally met the deceased and he was apparently friendly. However, the testimony shows without contradiction that deceased was a dangerous man and very overbearing when he was drinking, and that he was drinking on the fatal occasion here involved. The day was Sunday, and it is shown that Pleas Phelps, who lived in appellant’s old neighborhood — and about five or six miles from his residence in McCreary county — was in the habit and had long been engaged in the practice of a sort of neighborhood amateur barber and shingled hair for his friends who applied to him for such service. On the day of the-killing appellant left his home, riding a mule, to go to the home of Phelps for the purpose of having the latter shingle his hair. When he got there he learned that Phelps was absent from his home, engaged in procuring-firewood for himself and others, including Alsip, and appellant -went to the place, but learned on arriving-there that Pleas Phelps, whom he was seeking, had left with a load of wood, for his brother, or possibly for himself, and he then went to that place, where he foundG *669 Phelps together with the latter’s brother and also with others similarly engaged, one of whom was an 18 year old son of the deceased. Appellant was there informed by Phelps that he conld not accommodate him by shingling his hair until after he hauled another load of wood. The parties got ready to start to haul that load (which the testimony indicates was the last one), and the son of deceased asked appellant to go along. He questioned the propriety of his going, but finally agreed to do so, and stated, in substance, that if Bill (meaning deceased) attacked him he would run out of his way.

The parties then got into the truck with which the wood was being hauled and went to the spot where it was being obtained. Deceased, and one or two others, were sitting in his automobiile parked upon the grounds. Appellant, with the others who came with him, attempted to roll out a log to be worked up into firewood and which they accomplished, appellant assisting in doing so. Just as it was accomplished deceased got out of his automobile and went to appellant and said to him: “Irvin Privitt you have heretofore told some lies on me and I don’t need any of your help. You get on away from here.” Upon which he put his hands on appellant and commenced pushing him, when appellant denied the accusation, and charged deceased with circulating false reports concerning him. In the meantime deceased was continuing to push appellant — either up or down the road1 — away from the place where the difficulty started and finally began to kick him, appellant continuing to back away from him so as to avoid the assaulting kicks. He finally took a rail from an adjoining fence and struck deceased with it across the back, when deceased grabbed it with his hands and continued to press forward towards appellant, who jumped over the fence into an adjoining field. In the meantime deceased had on his overcoat with an open knife in his right trouser pocket.

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Bluebook (online)
113 S.W.2d 49, 271 Ky. 665, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/privitt-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1938.