Samuels v. Commonwealth

159 S.W. 575, 154 Ky. 758, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 166
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedSeptember 23, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 159 S.W. 575 (Samuels v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Samuels v. Commonwealth, 159 S.W. 575, 154 Ky. 758, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 166 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Carroll

Reversing.

The appellant, a negra, under an indictment charging * bim with the murder of Ben Covington, also a negro, was convicted and his punishment fixed at death. On this appeal we are asked in his behalf to reverse the judgment of conviction because the trial court erred in refusing to grant a continuance and in overruling the motion for a new trial asked upon the ground of newly discovered evidence.

Samuels and Covington were farm hands employed by Mr. Coleman, a farmer living some miles from Elk-ton, the county seat of Todd County. Samuels had been working for him six years and Covington four. The homicide occurred on Tuesday morning, December 3rd, between six and seven o’clock, and except for some words that passed between the deceased and Samuels on the Monday preceding that indicated there was some unfriendly feeling existing between them, there is no intimation in the record that they were not on good terms. They had both lived with and worked for the same man four years without having any open quarrel or difficulty, and yet the facts developed on the trial leave the impres[759]*759sion that there must have been some bad feeling of a serious nature existing between these men.

The negro cook testifies that on Monday while the hands were eating dinner she passed by Samuels “and scratched him on the back of the head, and he says, ‘Go way, cook; don’t fool with me. I ain’t fitten to fool with.’ I says to him, ‘What’s the matter?’ I says, ‘Have I mistreated you?’ and I never said nothing else to him. Directly Ben Covington says, ‘Porter, have I mistreated you?’ Porter never said anything except ‘her name is Polly and your name is Ben Covington,’ and that was all that was said, and Porter pushed his chair back and went to the water bucket, and then he came back by the stove and made a cigarette and never said anything to him, and Ben never said anything more to him in the kitchen. ’ ’

This witness further testified that she- kept a shotgun she had borrowed from Mr. Coleman’s son, in the cabin occupied by her, which was a short distance from Mr. Coleman’s house, and that she had eight loaded shells. That late Monday afternoon she saw the gun in her room, but when she returned to her room after supper the gun and three of the shells were missing, but she did not know who took either the gun or the shells.

Mr. Coleman relates the circumstances of the homicide as follows: “On Tuesday morning about 6:30 I went out to breakfast and I heard a noise in my back yard and I went out to see what it was. When I got there ■Polly Wilson, my cook, and Ben Covington were in a fuss. * * * Polly said that Ben had taken her gun out of the cabin last night and he won’t tell me where it is, and Ben says, ‘I didn’t,’ and Polly called him a liar, and I saw they were gettin pretty mad, and I took hold ■of her and gave her a little shove and told him to go in the house and dry this up, and as I shoved her toward the house I looked into the kitchen door and I saw Porter Samuels standing in the door, and I turned around and Ben was coming toward the kitchen, and he says, ‘You called me a liar and I will whip you if it takes me a hundred years, ’ and I grabbed him by the arm and says, ‘Come here Ben,’ and I took him off to one side by the smokehouse and he says, ‘Mr. Coleman, they accuse me of taking that gun out of the cabin last night and I didn’t do it.’ I says, ‘Ben, there is something else behind all of this and I want you to tell me,’ and by the time I got that out Porter Samuels had walked around the smokehouse and he come up and says to Ben, ‘You know you [760]*760took that gun. out of that cabin. You took it out of there to kill me with,’ and Covington says, ‘I didn’t do- anything of the kind. What do I want to kill you for?’ Samuels says, ‘Didn’t we have some words yesterday,’ and Ben says, ‘Yes, but didn’t I ask your pardon for it,’ Samuels says, ‘Yes, but I saw you last night and I saw you with your gun'when you was tipping along by the well.’ He says, ‘No, I didn’t.’ He says, ‘I have not got nothing against you. We have been here a long time together and I don’t want any hard feelings.’ They began to talk along and I didn’t think either one was mad, and I stepped back a little, thinking it was all over, and heard a lick and then jumped in between them and shoved Porter Samuels back.”

He further testified that about that time he saw Ben going out of the yard gate and when he had walked a few steps he fell dead from the effects of a wound in his neck inflicted by Samuels with a butcher knife. Mr. Coleman further testified that the three missing cartridges were found in the pocket of Ben Covington and that after searching the premises for the gun they found it hidden in a cornshock a short distance from a road along which Porter Samuels would have passed on Tuesday in going to and from work, but there was no direct evidence that Covington took the gun from the cabin or hid it in the cornshock, although Porter Samuels in his own behalf testified that on Monday night he discovered the gun had been taken from the room of Polly Wilson and being apprehensive that Covington had taken it for the purpose of killing him, which he said Covington told him on Monday afternoon he intended to do, he was afraid to go to the cabin in which he slept, which was -some distance from the house, and stay there all night, and asked Polly Wilson to permit him to stay in her house with a couple of other men who lived there, and that while he was in her house he looked out and saw Covington with the gun in his hand going in the direction of the cabin which he, Samuels, occupied. He further said that the next morning he was in the kitchen and heard the quarrel on the outside between Polly Wilson and Covington, and thinking that Covington might be going to attack him, he got a butcher knife from the table and put it in his pocket and went out for the purpose of telling Mr. Coleman that Covington had a gun after him the night before. He said that when he went to the place where Ben and Mr. Coleman were standing he said, “Ben, you ought not [761]*761to tell Mr. Coleman you did not get that gun after me last night.” And he said he did not, and I said, “Yes, you did,” and he said, “It ain’t too late for me to hill you yet,” and he put his hand in or toward his pocket, and thinking.that he had a pistol in his pocket and was going to kill me, I struck him with the knife one time.

Immediately after Samuels killed Covington Mr. Coleman took him to the jail of Todd County, where he was confined, and on the following day, Dec. 4, Circuit Court being in session, he was indicted and his trial set for December 9. The record shows that Samuels was unable to employ counsel, and on the day the indictment was returned the court appointed the attorneys who appear for appellant on this appeal to represent him. On December 9, when the case was called for trial, Samuels, through his counsel, filed an affidavit for a continuance, in which he set out,

“That he is not ready for trial at the present term of this court because the offense with which he is charged occurred in less than one week ago, and that he was indicted at the present term of this court and has not had an opportunity to employ counsel and to procure the attendance of all of his witnesses at this term of the court, and to make the necessary preparation for his trial:

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Bluebook (online)
159 S.W. 575, 154 Ky. 758, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samuels-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1913.