Salyers v. Commonwealth

16 S.W.2d 509, 229 Ky. 153, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 684
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedApril 19, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 16 S.W.2d 509 (Salyers 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
Salyers v. Commonwealth, 16 S.W.2d 509, 229 Ky. 153, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 684 (Ky. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

At liis trial under an indictment in the Breathitt circuit court charging him with murdering Jessie Begley, the appellant, Tom Salyers, Jr., was convicted of voluntary manslaughter, and punished by confinement in the penitentiary for a period of nine years. On this appeal by him therefrom his counsel argue that the judgment is erroneous, and should be reversed, upon the grounds that: (1) The verdict is flagrantly against the evidence; (2) incompetent evidence introduced by the commonwealth over defendant’s objections and exceptions; (3) improper instructions; and (4) misconduct of the jury during its deliberations of the case, each of which will be disposed of in the order named.

*154 The killing' occurred in the yard surrounding the ■residence of Carlo Salyers, an uncle of defendant, in Breathitt county, at about 11:30 p. m. on July 5, 1927. Defendant lived with his father a distance of some twelve miles from the residence of his uncle where the homicide occurred, and on that evening he left his father’s home to visit, as he said, his sick sister, a Mrs. Howard, who lived about a half mile beyond Carlo Salyers. When arriving at the latter’s residence, defendant claims that he was informed that his uncle was sick, and that his informant, who was some member of the family, insisted that he stop and see his sick uncle, and that he was finally ■persuaded to do so, although he was in a hurry to reach the residence of his sick sister and to return to his home before the then shining moon went down at about 11 o’clock, because after then it would be difficult to travel the mountain road. He arrived at'his uncle’s at about ’8:30 p. m., and remained for about three hours, when the homicide occurred, and he then left without going to the home of his sick sister, but went to that of a neighbor, Greorge Haddix, whom he informed of the killing, and he later returned to the scene where deceased was still lying in the yard upon the spot where he had fallen when shot. Upon that arrival by him he was met at the gate by Mrs. Carlo Salyers, who requested him to deliver to her his pistol, which he did, and he then went to, and took a seat upon, the porch of the residence; whereupon Mrs. Carlo Salyers said to him; “Co up and speak to him (deceased, who was still alive), and help give Mm water, I am not stout enough.” While giving the deceased the water, ■defendant testified that the latter asked him if he was the man who shot him, to which defendant answered in the affirmative, and also said: “I am sorry this happened, but I do not think you are hurt bad, hope you are not,” to which, according to defendant, deceased replied: ■‘‘I think I am killed,’’ and defendant then said: “I hope ■not.” Defendant then testified that “he (deceased) laid there and talked with us all,” but he stated that he did not remember anything else that deceased said, although ■some of defendant’s witnesses testified that upon that occasion defendant asked deceased: “Didn’t you make me do this,” to which the latter replied, “Yes, I acknowledge I did.”

The evidence shows without contradiction that deceased arrived at the residence of Carlo Salyers about 16:30 id. m., on that day, and had been there as much as *155 two hours when defendant arrived, and that deceased had a supply of liquor that testimony shows he purchased from Carlo Salyers,’ and that he had made the trip there for that purpose. The parties talked and sang songs until nearly 11:30, when defendant, after the moon had gone down and ceased to shine, concluded to continue his journey to see his sick sister, and both he and deceased left the house and went into the yard at the same time. But one other person was out of the house in the yard, or on the porch, at that time, and what then occurred is testified to by defendant and his witnesses and by deceased in his dying declaration.

Defendant stated in his testimony that deceased was intoxicated at the time he arrived at the home of his uncle, and indulged in some talk typical of that of an intoxicated person, but he stated no fact indicative of anger towards him, or any other person, on the part of deceased, and that, when he got out of the house into the yard, preparatory to leaving, deceased asked him to take him to the residence of Arch Smith, who lived near by,, but which defendant declined to do; that “one word brought on another,” when deceased said, “I guess I will take you tonight,” and then said “I will just take the horse,” to which defendant objected, and that defendant at that time had his hands in his pockets and said, “Yes, G--d-you, I will,” and, “As he went to jump back he drew his hand and grabbed at me and tore my shirt, and I ducked down, he hit at me with his knife and I ran about 14 or 15 steps telling him to stop,” whereupon defendant fired the fatal shot which penetrated decedent’s body under his left arm and came out just below the right shoulder blade. The pistol was what is known as a Colt’s manufacture and .45 caliber. The witness, who-was either in the yard or on the porch, corroborated defendant’s account of the difficulty in part, but he did not see the shooting, because he turned to go into the house-before the pistol was fired. Mrs. Carlo Salyers and one of her daughters likewise corroborated defendant’s testimony as to what occurred to about the same extent as. did the other witness, but neither one of them saw the shooting.

When defendant returned to the residence of his. uncle after leaving at the time of the shooting, he called to the members of the household to bring a light and search for a knife, and which request on his part was the first thing he said upon his return, and it appears to have- *156 been the first notification to any member of the household that he had returned. The search revealed a knife lying near to deceased, but whether he had it at the time he was shot, or that he had a knife at all on that occasion, is not disclosed by any other testimony, nor was there any proof that the knife so found was owned or possessed by deceased. One of defendant’s witnesses who claims to have seen deceased just before he was shot said that he was moving towards defendant “a little grain, just slipping a little grain,” and which we interpret as a slow and deliberate movement on his part, and none of defendant’s witnesses except himself testified to deceased having a knife in his hands. On the contrary they all said that they saw nothing in his hands.

The dying declaration was testified to by Justus Begley, a brother of deceased, who was with the latter from about 6 o’clock the next morning after he was shot until he died some five days later. The declaration to which he testified was repeated on several occasions during that time, and it was last repeated by deceased about 30 minutes before he died, and at a time when he knew that dissolution was almost immediate. The substance ■of it was that he had gone to the house of Carlo Salyers about 6:30 p. m. on that day and had gotten some whisky, which was consumed by himself and all, or practically all, of the others present, including defendant (and defendant admitted that he took at least one drink), and that at about 11:30 both he and defendant left the house, and, when they got in the yard, deceased said: “I came here by myself and you came by yourself.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 S.W.2d 509, 229 Ky. 153, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salyers-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1929.