Ray v. Commonwealth

43 S.W.2d 694, 241 Ky. 286, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 56
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 27, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 43 S.W.2d 694 (Ray 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
Ray v. Commonwealth, 43 S.W.2d 694, 241 Ky. 286, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 56 (Ky. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Drury, Commissioner;

Reversing.

On Saturday morning August 30,1930, Melvin Bran-ham shot and killed his uncle Toy marriage, Sam Wright, and was himself shot and killed by Ms-first cousin Henry Branham. An indictment was returned charging Melvin Branham, then deceased, and 'Charley Ray with the murder of Sam Wright, the indictment charges Melvin Branham did the killing and was aided and abetted by Ray, and, when Ray was tried on June 9, 1931, he was found guilty of manslaughter, his punishment fixed at twelve years in the penitentiary, his motion for a new trial was overruled, and he has appealed.

He filed seven grounds in support of his motion for a' new trial, and he is urging six of these for reversal here. One of these is that he was entitled to a peremptory instruction to acquit him, and another is that the verdict is flagrantly against the evidence; so we will state that briefly.

To understand this evidence, one must know something of the members of this family and their relation to each other. Dick Branham and Elizabeth Branham, called “the old folks,” are husband and wife. They are *288 the parents of Mahala Wright; Sam. Wright, now deceased, was their son-in-law, and was Mahala’s hnshand. The old folks' are the grandparents of Melvin Branham, the man who slew Sam Wright; also are grandparents of Henry Branham, the man who slew Melvin Branham, and of Sarah Jane Ray, the wife of the defendant. Melvin Branham married a sister of the defendant, and the defendant married a sister of Melvin Branham, a first cousin of Plenry Branham and a niece of Mahala Wright.

There had been some trouble in this family, and it had been divided into two factions. The old folks had separated and taken sides in these factions. The old lady, the Wrights, and Henry Branham were members of one faction, while old man Branham, Charley Ray, Melvin Branham, and their wives were members of the other. The two factions lived in the same neighborhood.

On the morning of the homicide, Charley Ray’s wife went to the home of the Wrights in search of a pup that had strayed off. When .she found the pup, she started to whip it, and her aunt Mahala Wright interfered, and the two women had a fight. Old man Branham ran down there, and he and Sam Wright separated the two warring women. In the meantime Mrs. Ray had sent Orville Branham to tell her husband, Charley Ray; they were beating her up. The child delivered the message, and soon Charley Ray started for the battlefield; he was soon followed by Melvin Branham, while Bradley Branham, the wife of Melvin and sister of Charley Ray, brought up the rear.

Of course Ray asked his wife, when he got there, what the trouble was, whereupon Mahala Wright ran into the house, procured a double-barreled shotgun, loaded it, and started out. Her husband, Sam Wright, seized the shotgun, wrenched it out of her hands, and walked out towards the gate with it. At this point the evidence becomes irreconcilable. The commonwealth contends Ray was in a towering rage and was trying to come into the yard, but was kept out by Wright with the shotgun, when Melvin Branham came up, and, according to Mahala Wright and her son, Charley Ray said to Melvin Branham, “Shoot him, God damn him!” According to the old grandmother, Elizabeth Branham, he said, “Shoot him! God damn him! Shoot him.” The old grandfather merely says, “He said for him to shoot him.” Anyway Melvin Branham shot Wright, killing him instantly, and was himself shot and instantly killed *289 by Henry Branham, while the shotgun in the hands of Wright was discharged, the shot going wild. According to Ray, he wasi talking with Wright, trying to learn the nature of the fight between the women, was unarmed, and had put his hands onto the fence to show Wright, he was unarmed, when Melvin Branham, who had come up, without the knowledge of Ray, shot and killed Wright before Ray knew he was anywhere about. As soon as Wright fell, Ray said, “Lord have mercy! Sam has shot himself!” and, having opened the gate, rushed into the yard, and was endeavoring to help Wright to his feet, when he was attacked by Dick Branham with an open knife, and forced out of the gate again, and then for the first time Ray learned, so he says, that Melvin Branham was there and had been killed. The commonwealth has one witness who says he saw Charley Ray and Melvin Branham together going to the home of Wright.

This evidence was sufficient to take the case to the jury and to sustain the verdict; hence the court did not err in overruling Ray’s motion that the jury be peremptorily instructed to find him not guilty. The mere presence of Ray at the time Melvin Branham killed Sam Wright would not make Ray responsible for the homicide unless he and Melvin Branham had agreed to come down there and they had gone there for the purpose of killing or doing some great bodily harm to Wright or some member of his household. See Watkins v. Com., 227 Ky. 100, 12 S. W. (2d) 329.

But, if at a time when he did not believe he was in danger of death or some great bodily harm at the hands of Sam Wright or when he had no reasonable cause to •believe he was so, he advised or requested Melvin Bran-ham to shoot Wright, then he is responsible therefor. Of course the act of Ray in rushing to the aid of Wright when he fell looks like the conduct of an innocent man, but all these facts made his guilt or innocence a question for the jury under the instructions in which we find no fault.

This disposes of all the grounds urged for reversal but two, one of which is directed to the manner in which the jury arrived at their verdict, in which there is no merit. The showing on this score is that some jurors favored six years of punishment, others eighteen, and they compromised on twelve, to which they all agreed.

*290 The other ground for reversal is meritorious, and it is sustained: It is this: Before the attorney for the commonwealth stated the case to the jury, the defendant requested of the court that the witnesses be put under the rule and excluded from the courtroom. See section 601 of Code of Practice in civil cases.

In Boyd v. Com., 194 Ky. 73, 238 S. W. 182, we cited section 151 of the Code of Practice in criminal cases and section 601 of the Civil Code of Practice and intimated that it was within the discretion of the trial court in a criminal court to separate the witnesses upon timely application.

Ray’s motion for separation of the witnesses was overruled, he excepted, he made this a ground for a new trial, it was overruled, he has embodied it in the bill of exceptions, and he has urged that here as a ground for reversal.

By its terms, section 601 of the Code in civil cases, leaves this in the discretion of the trial court, and we have refused to reverse judgments where the rule had not been applied when requested and when in our opinion this discretion had not been abused, but we made it one of the grounds upon which the judgment was reversed in Salisbury v. Com., 79 Ky. 425, in Walker v. Com., 8 Bush (71 Ky.) 86, and in Johnson v. Clem, 82 Ky. 84, and we approved the action of the trial court in excluding the witnesses in Com. v. Phillips, 14 S. W. 378, 12 Ky. Law Rep. 410. The case of Roberts v. State, 100 Neb. 199, 158 N. W. 930, 932, Ann. Cas.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 S.W.2d 694, 241 Ky. 286, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ray-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1931.