Reed v. Commonwealth

158 S.W.2d 380, 289 Ky. 173, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 516
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 20, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 158 S.W.2d 380 (Reed 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
Reed v. Commonwealth, 158 S.W.2d 380, 289 Ky. 173, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 516 (Ky. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Chief Justice

Affirming.

At the May, 1941, term of the Estill circuit court, the grand jury jointly indicted Wayne Eeed, Leonard Eeed (his brother) and G-arnie Walters, accusing them of the crime of dynamiting fish in Estill county, committed by willfully and feloniously placing or causing to be placed dynamite in the Kentucky river and by exploding or causing it to explode, thereby killing fish in the stream.

Wayne Eeed was tried separately on the charge, convicted and his punishment fixed at one year’s confinement in the state reformatory.

At a later day of the same May term of court, the case was again called for trial, when the indictees, Leonard Eeed and Garnie Walters, were jointly tried on the charge, convicted and their punishment also fixed at one year’s imprisonment in the state reformatory.

The defendant, Leonard Eeed, contending that the jury’s verdict returned against him, finding him guilty, was not supported by the evidence, duly filed his motion and grounds for a new trial, which the court overruled.

Complaining of this ruling, denying him a new trial, as erroneous, Leonard Eeed has prosecuted this appeal, seeking a reversal of the judgment entered upon that verdict upon two of the grounds set out in his motion for a new trial, which are as follows: (1) That the court erred in refusing to direct a verdict of not guilty at the conclusion of the commonwealth’s evidence and at the conclusion of all the evidence and (2) because of the court’s failure to properly instruct the jury upon the whole law of the case.

We will now turn our attention to the discussion and disposition of these two objections in the order presented.

*175 In onr consideration of the first of these, wherein appellant contends that the court erred in failing to peremptorily instruct the jury to find him not guilty, it may be here stated that the merit of such contention must depend upon and be determined by what is found to be the character and quality of the evidence introduced by the commonwealth, in respect to whether same constituted but a scintilla of proof or was evidence of probative and substantial character.

Such being the criterion by which appellant’s claimed right to a peremptory instruction is to be measured, we will here undertake to briefly state the evidence given by the commonwealth’s witnesses (which is here by the record brought before us only in narrative form), to determine whether same was of such substance and probative quality as required to support the jury’s verdict based thereon, finding defendant guilty.

The testimony of Huram Canter, the first of the commonwealth’s witnesses, is to the effect that on the day the offense here charged is said to have been committed, he was going to the home of a neighbor, who lived on the opposite side of the bridge across the mouth of Cow creek from his home, and that upon reaching the vicinity of the bridge, he saw Garnie Walters, Wayne Reed and Leonard Reed near the mouth of the creek and under the bridge across Cow creek and went down under the bridge near where.they were; that at about the time he got under the bridge and within a few feet of the defendant and his named associates, he saw Wayne Reed with something in his hand, which he lighted and threw into the creek, when an explosion followed and several minnows floated to the top of the stream, apparently dead or stunned. Further he testified that immediately after the explosion, Leonard Reed, with Wayne Reed and Garnie Walters, got into a row boat, when Leonard rowed the boat into and up the river and that later he heard another explosion, which seemed to be up the river from Cow creek.

Mrs. Arbrose Ashcraft and John W. Jones also testified for the commonwealth to similar facts, the latter further testifying that after Leonard Reed, Wayne Reed and Garnie Walters had gotten in the boat and been rowed up the river several hundred yards by the appellant, Leonard Reed, he heard another explosion occur *176 ring np the river, but he did not know who of them threw the dynamite, and that he then saw them go to the shore, when two of them got out of the boat; and that Leonard Reed rowed the boat back to the mouth of the creek, from where he had taken it.

Eva Ashcraft, another witness for the commonwealth, testifies that a few minutes before she heard the explosion, as she was crossing the bridge over Cow creek in going to her home, she saw Garnie Walters on the bridge; that after reaching her home and on hearing an explosion, she went to where she could see the creek; that she there saw Leonard Reed, Garnie Walters and Wayne Reed, under the bridge, and that they all three got into a row boat and went into and up the river.

Such was the evidence for the commonwealth when defendant moved for a peremptory instruction, which was overruled.

Thereupon, without standing on his motion, he proceeded to testify in his own behalf and also introduced the evidence of Garnie Walters in his behalf.

Appellant does not in his testimony deny that he was present at the bridge with Garnie Walters and his brother, Wayne Reed, when his brother (as is admitted by him) lighted and threw dynamite into the river, which exploded therein and killed fish. He testifies that .following the explosion of this dynamite by his brother, Wayne Reed, he asked Wayne Reed and Garnie Walters to get into a row boat, which was tied at the mouth of Cow creek and belonged to a friend of his; that they got into the row boat and he rowed them up the river about 300 yards, when there was another explosion near the boat, but that he did not know what caused it, as at that time he was sitting in the boat with his back towards Wayne Reed; that at this point he got afraid to go further with Wayne Reed and rowed the boat to the shore, where he had his brother and Walters get out and that they went up the hill to the road, where they got into a car, while he took the boat to the mouth of Cow creek, where he had gotten it, after which he went home.

He further states that on the occasion of this dynamiting of fish by his brother, he was in Ravenna with his friend, Garnie Walters, at the home of Walters, when they drove to a garage where Wayne Reed had been and asked the operator of the garage about him and were in *177 formed that he had gone towards Cow creek bridge and that he was drunk; that appellant then asked his friend, Walters, who owned and was driving the car, to go with him to find Wayne Reed and that when they got to Cow creek bridge, they found him down near the creek, under the bridge, and that when they went down near him, he saw that he had “a dynamite” or what he thought was dynamite and that he was lighting it and that, over his protest, he threw it into the creek, where it exploded and some dead minnows rose to the top of the water; that he knew nothing of Wayne Reed’s having any dynamite and that neither he, nor anyone else, had anything to do with his throwing it into the creek.

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Related

Murphy v. Commonwealth
279 S.W.2d 767 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1955)
Hatfield v. Commonwealth
192 S.W.2d 385 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 S.W.2d 380, 289 Ky. 173, 1942 Ky. LEXIS 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1942.