Sams v. Commonwealth

109 S.W.2d 571, 270 Ky. 187, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 47
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 15, 1937
StatusPublished

This text of 109 S.W.2d 571 (Sams 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
Sams v. Commonwealth, 109 S.W.2d 571, 270 Ky. 187, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 47 (Ky. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

This is an appeal from a judgment declaring the appellant, Homer Sams, guilty of murdering Forrest; Arnold, and sentencing him to life imprisonment.

The evidence heard against the appellant upon this-, trial was wholly circumstantial, and it is earnestly insisted, by brief of counsel, that it was of insufficient probative value to authorize the submission of the case to-the jury or to support its verdict finding him guilty.

The evidence introduced for the Commonwealth, shows that the deceased, Forrest Arnold, was found dead, in a room of the house in which he lived as a tenant on the farm of a Mr. Edwards in Hickman county, Ky., together with Arthur Hosier, about the 16th or 17th of' ■December, 1936. The evidence clearly established that-the dead bodies of both Arnold and Mosier were found, in the room of this house under such circumstances as, showed that they had been shot and killed with a shot-. *189 gun some days before found, while they were sitting at the dining table eating their meal (presumably supper).

The attending circumstances of their murder, shown both by the character and position of their fatal wounds and the positions in which the bodies were found, that of Arnold slumped upon the table, his head resting in his plate, while Mosier was upon the floor nearby the dining table, clearly established that their •deaths were caused, not by accident or a fight between them or suicidal act, but that some outside criminal agency was responsible for this double homicide.

Also, the evidence shows, or tends clearly to show, that the fact of Arnold’s and Hosier’s murder was not discovered until several days after this crime had been committed, when others upon the farm, after missing them for several days about the farm or cabin where they lived together, grew suspicious of harm having befallen them and began a search for them, first at their home, where their dead, frozen bodies were found and reported.

Upon investigations made, following the discovery of this double homicide, conducted by county officials and assistants about the Arnold home, in order to discover, if possible, any clews leading to the identification and apprehension of its perpetrator, clearly defined shoe tracks were found leading from the house of the deceased Arnold (whose murder was here alone involved and for which crime only the accused was convicted) back to the home of the accused, about a mile distant therefrom, and also like tracks leading away from the home of the accused towards that of Arnold, where he was shot and killed.

The sheriff, a witness for the Commonwealth, when asked if he had seen any tracks near or about the house where the bodies were found, stated that he had seen tracks, “just a little ways from the house # * * when we hit the cotton patch we found them leading northeast,” directly towards accused’s home, and which he and the detectives assisting him followed to the public road, about 25 yards west of the accused’s home. In this he is corroborated by the other officers. Further he testified that the man who made those tracks, as was shown by them, was running and jumping “from one cotton row to another”; that this inspection of the premises, and the finding of these tracks by him, was made with *190 in about a week after receiving information of Arnold’s death. Also, the sheriff and the other officers testified that, after finding these tracks, they were called by Mr. Kimble, a brother-in-law of the accused, who lived on the same farm with him, who there showed them like tracks, made in a pasture field near the accused’s home, which he told them were made by the accused either on the day of or the day previous to his arrest for this crime.

Both of these tracks, those leading from the home of the deceased to that of the accused and those made in the pasture field at the accused’s home, which were pointed out and identified by his brother-in-law, Kimble, as being tracks of the accused, were, when 'each was measured and carefully compared, found to correspond completely in every detail, and tended strongly to show that the tracks found by these witnesses, leading from the home of the deceased to that of the accused, were the foot tracks of the accused.

Of course, appellant denies that any.of these tracks were made by him, and states that while the tracks shown the officers in the pasture field at his house could have been made by his shoes, being the same in their size and shape as those made by his shoes, that nevertheless the tracks could not have been recently made by him, inasmuch as he had not worn his shoes for three or four months previously, during which time they had been kept and used by another.

Further, the evidence for the Commonwealth, introduced for showing the accused’s motive for killing Arnold, shows without contradiction that in the later part of November, next preceding the murder of the deceased (indicated by the evidence to have occurred about the 16th or 17th of December), the accused and deceased had a fight, in which the accused, it appears, was badly cut up and scarred and wounded by the deceased; that after this difficulty the accused, smarting under his mistreatment by the deecased, talked with two of the Commonwealth witnesses, who testified that they had met and conversed, shortly before the homicide occurred, with the accused, at certain named times and points in Columbus, when the accused, after showing them the knife wounds and scars inflicted upon him by the deceased in their recent fight, and as if his feelings were then still vindictive towards Arnold because of the humiliating punishment suffered at the hand of this one- *191 armed man, had threatened and declared to him, the witness Lewis Hosier, that “no one-armed son of a bitch is going to get away with it, he is not going to get away with it.” This threat, he states, was made by the accused to him about December 8th, or slightly more than a week before his charged murder of Arnold. Also, Mr. Dowdy, another Commonwealth witness, testified that he had heard of this recent cutting of the accused by the deceased and that shortly thereafter he had met the accused, when a conversation arose between them about it, in which the accused, after showing him his scars, inflicted on him by the knife of the deceased, wound up by making the threat, “I will get revenge some day”; that, when this statement was made, he was at the time talking about the deceased Forrest Arnold, but did not then expressly call his name. Also, witness states he asked the accused at that time if he was going to take this cutting affair into court, to which he answered, “No,” but that he said he would “get revenge some day.”

The accused, in testifying, denies also the making of these threats, introduced in evidence by the Commonwealth for showing motive on the part of the accused for his charged killing of Arnold.

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59 S.W.2d 544 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1933)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 S.W.2d 571, 270 Ky. 187, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sams-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1937.