Riley v. Commonwealth

72 S.W.2d 754, 255 Ky. 68, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 184
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 15, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 72 S.W.2d 754 (Riley 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
Riley v. Commonwealth, 72 S.W.2d 754, 255 Ky. 68, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 184 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

OPINION op the Court by

Judge Perry

-Affirming.

The appellant, Jerry Riley, and his brother, Robert Riley, were by the grand jury of Perry county jointly indicted for the willful murder of the deceased, George Elanery.

*69 Upon their trial at the February, 1934, term of the Perry circuit court the appellant, Jerry -Eiley, was found guilty of murder and his punishment fixed at confinement in the state penitentiary for life, and. his - brother and co-defendant, Eobert Eiley, was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter and his punishment fixed at ten years ’ imprisonment therein.

Motion and grounds for a new trial were filed, which were considered by the court and sustained as to Eobert Eiley but overruled as to Jerry Eiley, a new trial denied him, and judgment pronounced on the verdict. Hence this appeal.

This tragedy occurred at the home of the codefend-ant, Eobert Eiley, in the village of Lothair, Perry county, Ky., at about the dusk hour of an election day in August, 1933. The deceased, George Flanery, and the codefendant Eobert Eiley had been loafing and drinking together about the town during much of the day, when, about an hour of dusk, Eobert Eiley was, owing to his much intoxicated condition, helped in going-home by his brother, the appellant, Jerry Eiley and Corbett Flanery, a brother of the deceased. About an hour later George Flanery, the deceased, who was also, due to his like intoxicated condition, helped by bis friend, Bert Mobilini, started on his homeward way, which led by the home of Eobert Eiley, when it appears that his boisterous conduct and drunken and abusúe talk and shouting was such as attracted the attention of those whose homes he passed. The Eiley boys were on the porch of their home, which was about four feet from the street, and as Flanery passed, Jerry Eiley laughed and perhaps made certain gestures which incensed Flan-ery, as he thought Jerry was making fun of him. So feeling, he stopped after passing the gate a few feet and inquired of Jerry what he meant by his laughing at him. Eeceiving no reply, and becoming more incensed, he turned and went back, over the protest of his friend, Bert Mobilini, to the Eiley gate to right his fancied grievance.

The evidence as to what occurred and who was the aggressor in the quarrel and fight and fatal stabbing which followed is as to many of its material facts directly contradictory and conflicting. According to the proof for the commonwealth as detailed by Bert Mobilini and corroborated by other of its eyewitnesses *70 to the. difficulty, Bert and the deceased, George Flanery, were on their way to George’s house, when, as they passed nearby Rob Riley’s gate, Jerry Riley came out on the porch and laughed at George Flan-ery,' when “George stopped and asked what he was laughing at him fer and Jerry never give him no answer”; that as he got up to the gate, Rob Riley came Tunning off the porch at him and George commenced fighting; that he, the witness, asked them to go back to the house, but “they wouldn’t say nary a word but kept on fighting and George tore loose from me and throwed me back out in the road and when I got up George was over inside and George Flanery and Rob Riley was standing up in Rob’s yard afighting [near the porch] and Jerry Riley then took his left hand and got hold of a post and leaned out from the porch and cut George Flanery in the side and George, he sunk down, and Rob hit him while he was sunk down and I grabbed a board and started to hit Rob with it and old man Riley and George Friley took the board away from me and told me to not do that, that they would get George out of there without getting him hurt and I told them they wouldn’t have, he was already cut.” Further, he stated that when Rob Riley grabbed George Flanery at the gate, George went inside where they continued fighting one another with their fists and had moved over by the porch, when Jerry, while standing on the porch, reached out and cut George Flanery with a big “dirk knife” as stated.

Also, Mollie Minniard, an eyewitness, stated that when George turned and went back to the gate,, the defendant Rob Riley met him there and “spoke at George and hit him and Rob was pulling on him on the inside trying to pull him in and Bert Mobilini was pulling on-him on the outside trying to pull him out”; that Rob jerked him in; that they were fighting and wrestling around, when Jerry Riley, who was standing on the porch with his hand on the post, swung around and cut George; that she didn’t see the knife, but saw him “make the sign and then Rob beat on‘him again”; that he sunk down and “Rob Riley beat on him again, commenced beating him over the head and then Bert Mobi-lini picked up a plank and was fixing to hit Robert Riley and Butler Friley and George Friley took it away from him.”

*71 Corbett Flanery stated that as be helped Jerry Riley take his brother Robert home about an hour be-' fore the fight, Jerry had a “dirk knife” which Robert asked him to let him have, but he refused.

The uncontradicted evidence is to the effect that both the deceased Flanery and Robert Riley were each unarmed and having a drunken fist fight while the appellant, Jerry Riley, when he entered into their drunken fight, is shown to have been sober and armed with a large “dirk knife.” Also the undisputed evidence is that the appellant, Jérry Riley, is a small man some thirty-seven years of age, weighing, he testifies, about 118 pounds, as was also his brother, Robert Riley, a small man, while -the deceased, George Flanery, was a younger and much larger man, weighing some 170 pounds or more and having a bad reputation for being quarrelsome and violent when drinking.

On the other hand, the evidence for the defendants is, as detailed by Robert' Riley and which is substantially the same as the testimony given by the appellant, Jerry Riley, that they were upon this occasion both at Robert Riley’s home when they heard George Flanery coming up the street “hollering and cussing”; that he- and Bert Mobilini passed their home; that George was drunk; that after they had gotten several yards beyond their gate, Jerry Riley, who was on the porch with him, laughed, when the deceased, Flanery, turned and began cursing him, calling him, Robert, a “God damned son of a bitch”; that.he saw Bert Mobilini trying to prevent George from coming back to the house, but that George returned to the gate, when he met him there and tried to persuade him not to come inside, but that George broke loose from him and came on inside and struck him, Robert, in the temple and then in the stomach and knocked him out; also that the later fight between the deceased, Flanery, and Jerry Riley took place after be, George, was knocked out, and that he did not see any part of it.

Jerry Riley’s testimony is, as stated, practically the same; that he was not laughing at George or Bert; that George had entered the yard and knocked Robert Riley down and then said to him, “I aim to kill you next,” when he had told him he wanted no trouble but that, after knocking Robert out, the deceased advanced on him, striking at him, and that he struck back with a *72

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Related

Stafford v. Commonwealth
94 S.W.2d 1029 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1936)
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94 S.W.2d 42 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1936)
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92 S.W.2d 816 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
72 S.W.2d 754, 255 Ky. 68, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riley-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1934.