Shoemaker v. Commonwealth

292 S.W. 307, 218 Ky. 721, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 233
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 8, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 292 S.W. 307 (Shoemaker 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
Shoemaker v. Commonwealth, 292 S.W. 307, 218 Ky. 721, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 233 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Commissioner Sandidge

Reversing.

Tried under an indictment which charged them with murder, appellants, Jake- Shoemaker, Porter Shoemaker and Fred Yost, were found guilty of manslaughter and. prosecute this appeal from the- judgment of the Lee circuit court so convicting them and fixing their punishment at confinement in the state penitentiary for a term of six years.

Consideration of appellants’ assignments of error makes it necessary to summarize the facts. A number of witnesses who testified heard the fusillade of shots, by some of which Frank Baker was killed, and the number •of shots are variously estimated to have been from twenty-five to thirty-five. No eye-witness to the tragedy testified for the commonwealth. A number of witnesses who went to the scene of the shooting some time after it had occurred described the position of the dead and wounded. Deceased, Frank Baker, was found lying dead within four or five feet of the track of the L. & N. rail *723 road, which runs near his home, and on that side of it next to his residence. His brother, Elihu Baker, mortally wounded, was found lying just at the edge of a small field of corn growing along the railway and in, fifteen or twenty feet of and on the same side of the railroad as Frank Baker. The latter’s pistol wa,s: found lying on the ground near him, with some loaded and some exploded cartridges in the cylinder. Elihu Baker had in his hands a single barrel shot gun and there were several loaded and several exploded shells on the ground near him. Frank Baker’s home stood on a hill overlooking the railroad right of way and about one hundred yards from the place where he and his brother were found. The tragedy occurred on August 8, 1926. The land between Baker’s home and the railroad track was covered with growing corn which then had virtually reached maturity. A path led from his home to the railroad right of way through this field of corn, and Frank Baker was found just about the point where that path ran from the cornfield into the railroad right of way. Two mortal wounds appear to have been inflicted on Frank Baker, one in the body and the other in the head; and the evidence tends to establish that the bullet which struck him in the head was fired after he had fallen to the ground, as it appears to have passed out the top of his head and entered the ground above him. Elihu Baker was wounded in the head and subsequently died, apparently without having made a statement, as no dying declaration from him was introduced in evidence. Immediately across the railroad track from where Frank Baker lay, appellant, Jake Shoemaker, was found so badly wounded from a shot which struck him in the groin that he was unable to stand. His son, appellant, Porter Shoemaker, was found on the same side of the railroad track also so badly wounded from a shot that struck him, in the abdomen and ranged downward into his thigh that he was unable to stand. Appellant, Fred Yost, was found at the scene of the shooting unwounded; and the witnesses who testified for the commonwealth stated that when they approached he had in his possession a "Winchester rifle and permitted them to- approach only after he had ascertained who they were, but would not permit them to disturb the dead and wounded until the sheriff and the coroner arrived. The shooting occurred about ten o ’clock at night of August 8, 1926. The magistrate for that district of Lee county *724 testified that about eight o’clock that night appellant, Jake Shoemaker, came to his home, made affidavit and procured a warrant of arrest for deceased, Frank Baker, charging him with having drawn a pistol on him, the affidavit alleging that to have occurred the afternoon of August 8th near Fincastle, Kentucky. The wife of one of Jake Shoemaker’s brothers testified that about nine o’clock that night he came to the home of her husband and borrowed his pistol. Some four or five witnesses testified to having seen all three of the appellants at the railroad station, Fincastle, at the time a passenger train stopped there at 9:17 that night, and that the two Shoemakers had pistols in their hands at the time. Two or three witnesses testified that, between the time church services at a church near the Fincastle railroad station ended and the time the train ran, Jake Shoemaker inquired to know whether the junior lodge' had broken; and two witnesses testified that he was informed by someone that they supposed the lodge had broken as they had seen Frank Baker and Byrden Shoemaker going down the railroad toward Baker’s home. They further testified that shortly after obtaining that information the three appellants started down the railroad in the same direction that Bilker had gone, one of them having a lantern. Byrden Shoemaker testified that he and Frank Baker attended the junior lodge that night and that afterwards and shortly before the 9:17 train ran they saw the three appellants approaching and avoided meeting them by hiding; and that after they had passed Baker started in the direction of his home. The commonwealth introduced the surviving widow of deceased, Frank B'aker, and, over the objection of appellants, she was permitted to testify as follows:

“I saw him something near! ten o’clock, I don’t know just exactly what time it was, I never looked; he came to the door and called me ‘to let him in right quick, they was after him;’ I got'up and opened the door and he came, in the house, and I asked him ‘Who?’ and he told me ‘Jake Shoemaker, Porter Shoemaker, Fred Yost and Alice Shoemaker and Nellie Shoemaker,’ and I asked him what was they after him for, and he said ‘He reckon to kill him because he had made the threat at Fincastle.’ ”

*725 The defendants for themselves testified in effect that after Porter Shoemaker procured the warrant of arrest for deceased, Frank Baker, they went to Fincastle, hoping to find a deputy sheriff to whom the warrant could be delivered, and remained there until after the 9:17 train ran, and were at the depot when it came, hoping that a deputy sheriff, whose sister lived at Fincastle, might get off the train there that night. Jake Shoemaker’s home was in the same direction from Fincastle that deceased, Frank Baker’s, was, and in going to their home their shortest and most practical route was along the railroad right of way, which ran in about one hundred yards of Baker’s home. However, they stated that they left Fin-castle with the intention of walking to Beattyville that night, Jake Shoemaker’s purpose being to deliver the warrant of arrest to a peace officer for execution, Porter Shoemaker intending to go on an excursion to Natural Bridge the following morning, and Yost, who had been at the Shoemaker home for several days, going along merely for company. The route to Beattyville was along the railroad by Baker’s, home. Jake Shoemaker admitted borrowing the pistol from his brother, but explained that by saying that his own pistol had not been used for so long that he did not know whether it was reliable and that the cartridges he had were so old that he did not know whether they could be depended upon, and that he was afraid to make this trip at night without the protection of a dependable firearm. They stated that they left Fincastle after the train had run without any idea that they would encounter the Bakers; that Porter Shoemaker and Fred Yost were ahead, the former carrying the lantern, and that Jake Shoemaker was some fifteen or twenty feet behind them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
292 S.W. 307, 218 Ky. 721, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shoemaker-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1927.