Rowlett v. Commonwealth

2 S.W.2d 378, 222 Ky. 695, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 232
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 24, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2 S.W.2d 378 (Rowlett 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
Rowlett v. Commonwealth, 2 S.W.2d 378, 222 Ky. 695, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 232 (Ky. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge McCandless

Affirming.

Baylor Rowlett was tried for murder, convicted of manslaughter, and sentenced to the penitentiary for 10 years. On this appeal the instructions are not criticised, and the only grounds urged for reversal are the introduction of incompetent evidence for commonwealth and misconduct of the commonwealth’s attorney in the in *697 troduction of evidence and in his closing argument. A consideration of these questions requires a statement of the facts.

It appears that the Lee Tailoring Company, the Poe Restaurant, and Floyd Ball’s Pool Room adjoin.; the restaurant being in the center and all facing Cumberland avenue in the city of Middlesboro. The deceased, Bud Yoakum, ran the pool room. The defendant, Baylor Rowlett, worked for the tailoring company and took his meals at the Poe Restaurant, which was arranged with a cigar stand and lunch counter to 'the left of one facing the rear from the front entrance. The counter extended back to a partition between the dining room and kitchen; the rest of the room being filled with tables, except an aisle between the counter and tables, there being a 10x12 foot mirror on the partition wall in the rear which enabled one facing in that direction t.o see all that transpired in the room. Yoakum had been incensed at Rowlett for some months over a report which he claimed Rowlett had repeated to a Mrs. Haslet of whom Yoakum was enamoured, and which had caused an estrangement between them. Following this, Yoakum had ordered Rowlett to quit working for the tailoring company and to leave town, had cursed him repeatedly, and had constantly referred to him in the most contemptuous and vilest language, had repeatedly threatened his life in his absence, and had done this on several occasions to his face, at one time presenting a pistol. Rowlett was timid and afraid of Yoakum and in desperation purchased a pistol, stating to different witnesses that he feared Yoakum would kill him or that he would have to kill Yoakum, that and when the time came he would be ready for the contest, though it appears that Yoakum was physically inuch smaller than Rowlett ánd that he was crippled in his right arm.

The tragedy occurred about 7 p. m. on a Saturday in July, 1925. Rowlett started to supper from the tailoring shop, but, seeing Yoakum in front of the poolroom, went back through the tailoring shop to avoid meeting him and entered the restaurant through the kitchen at the rear end, and took his seat at the second table from the partition and facing it; there being four tables to his back. He ordered his supper from Mrs. Poe, and later Mrs. Poe’s sister, Mrs. Stringer, brought him a glass of water and sat down opposite him and the two engaged in conversation. About ten minutes later Yoakum entered *698 the front door. He was in his shirt sleeves, had 15 cents in his hand, and was not visibly carrying any weapon. He stopped at the cigar stand and ordered a ham sandwich. Mrs. Poe went for this, and Yoakum went down the aisle to where Rowlett sat. There is some conflict as to what he then did, but Rowlett fired three shots from a pistol, one of which struck the counter and another passed through Yoakum’s wrist, flattened and struck him on the hip without entering his body. The third entered his body three inches to the right of the spine, and ranged upward and forward through his body some three inches to the left of the median line in front. Yoakum walked back through the kitchen and into the pool room through the rear door, went forward to a desk in which two pistols were kept, opened the drawer, and Floyd Ball took his hand. He then lay down on the floor and expired within five minutes. Ball testifies that he neither removed nor placed anything in the desk, and that he only had 15 cents in his hand. A number of witnesses testify that he was unarmed.

Returning to the scene of the tragedy, it appears that, aside from the participants, only four witnesses were present. Mr. Poe states that he followed Yoakum into the restaurant and took a seat near the front end of the counter. Ed Logan was with Yoakum, who was laughing and joking. He did not see Yoakum as he walked back, but heard the first shot and upon looking saw Rowlett standing and shooting at Yoakum, who walked on. Logan corroborates Poe, and states that he took a toy pistol from off the counter and jokingly said to Yoakum that he would hold him up, and that Yoakum walked down the counter in the direction Mrs. Poe had gone. As he reached Rowlett, the latter arose and began to shoot. He did not see Yoakum do anything. Mrs. Poe was in the kitchen at the time of the shooting. However, she denies hearing Yoakum laughing and joking with Poe and Logan, and denies the cap pistol transaction, and did not see Logan at the time, whose presence is also denied by other witnesses. The defendant testifies that he was not aware of Yoakum’s presence until the latter struck him in the face, knocking off his glasses, and telling him that he was going to shoot him, and dropping his hand toward his pocket. He was confused and fired three times in self-protection. Bernice Poe, the 11 year old daughter of the proprietor, was near the center of the rear of the building. She heard her aunt scream, *699 and saw Yoaknm strike Rowlett on the chin and drop his hand toward his pocket. Rowlett began to arise and fired three times. Yoakum passed by, and he continued to fire; the last shot being fired as Yoakum reached the ldtchen door.

Under this evidence, the jury might have reached the conclusion that Yoakum knew Rowlett was afraid of him and undertook to bully him in the presence of the ladies, that perhaps he was armed, or, at any rate, that he placed Rowlett in real or apparent danger of great bodily harm, and that Rowlett was justified in shooting in self-defense. On the other hand, it may have concluded that Rowlett was a coward, and, when armed with a deadly weapon, became dangerous to the man' he feared, and actuated by fear, fired the fatal shot at a time when he was not in real or apparent danger; hence it cannot be said that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence.

The incompetent evidence referred to relates to the contradiction of Mrs. Poe, both as to questions asked her and as to those asked Mrs. Yoakum in contradiction. Several of the questions alluded to were competent, but some were incompetent, as follows:

“Q. 19. ‘Didn’t you say to Mrs. Yoakum on that occasion at her home, . . . that Baylor Rowlett had some power or hold on your sister some way?’
“Q. 20. Didn’t you say this in talking about this case about your sister and Baylor, didn’t you say ‘Rowlett, the old drunken dog, had some power or hold on my sister in some way?’ ”
“Q. 30. Did you say to Mrs. Poe, I mean Mrs. Yoakum, ‘Mrs. Yoakum, Baylor Rowlett had been on a two weeks ’ drunk and had run off nearly all of our customers, and that you knew after Bud passed Baylor Rowlett he just began shooting Bud in an act of bravado?”

Objections were overruled to each of these questions and exceptions taken. The questions were answered in the negative. Mrs. Yoakum was later introduced as a witness and asked as to these’ questions, and, over the objection and exception of defendant, answered in the affirmative.

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256 S.W.2d 509 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1953)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 S.W.2d 378, 222 Ky. 695, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rowlett-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1928.