Simpson v. Commonwealth

53 S.W.2d 364, 245 Ky. 202, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 570
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 7, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 53 S.W.2d 364 (Simpson 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
Simpson v. Commonwealth, 53 S.W.2d 364, 245 Ky. 202, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 570 (Ky. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion oe the Court by

Judge Perry —

Affirming.

The appellant, Fred Simpson, was indicted on August 19, 1931, by the grand jury of Harlan county for the murder of Guy Blanton, and at the March term, 1932, of the Harlan circuit court, he was tried and convicted of manslaughter, and judgment entered thereon sentencing him to confinement in the state reformatory for a period of 21 years.

*203 His motion and grounds for a new trial being overruled, he has appealed, and relies upon the following grounds for a reversal of the judgment: (1) Errors committed in the admission of alleged incompetent _evidence; and (2) for error alleged in instructing the jury and failing to give the whole law of the case.

A brief statement of the facts is needful for the clearer discussion and disposition of these grounds of error assigned.

On Saturday night of June 27, 1931, the appellant, Fred Simpson, entered the Holiness Church at Dixie-town, Harlan county, Ky., armed with an automatic pistol and, according to some of the evidence, intoxicated.

Upon entering and seeing his brother, Omar Simpson, and Bill Stanley, standing and talking in the rear of the churchhouse, he approached them and accosted Stanley. There is a conflict of evidence as to who insulted or cursed the other at this meeting. At any rate, it is admitted that immediately there followed a quarrel and scuffle between them and their friends there in the church; also that thereupon Hobart Taylor and Guy Blanton, the deceased, they being at the time of the congregation, rushed back to where the wordy quarrel and “racket” was going on between the appellant and Stanley and ordered the appellant to leave the churchhouse.

It appears that The appellant was further angered by this command given him to leave, and that a further difficulty arose also between him, Taylor, and the deceased, Blanton.

The evidence is very conflicting' as to just what was said and done by defendant and these others at this time of the scuffle had in the churchhouse, but it appears that Guy Blanton, the deceased, and Hobart Taylor each took an active part therein, which the commonwealth claims was only their joint effort to put the then disorderly appellant out of the church, but appellant claims that he was then cursed, choked, and knocked about by both Taylor and Blanton.

The commonwealth, over the objection of appellant, further introduced evidence showing there had been a difficulty between the appellant and Bill Stanley and Hobart Taylor the night before.

*204 After some words and rough scuffling between these parties in the rear of the church, the appellant started backing out of the church, followed by the decedent, Blanton, and also by Stanley and Taylor, though this is denied by them, who testify that they remained in the church as appellant backed out therefrom and participated no further in this church brawl, which resulted a few minutes later in the shooting and killing by appellant of Guy Blanton.

The evidence is further conflicting as to who was the aggressor and what was the action and speech of the appellant and deceased, Guy Blanton, after the former had backed out of the church with drawn pistol, followed, it is admitted, by Guy Blanton a few steps from the church door, where the fatal shooting of Blanton occurred.

According to the commonwealth’s evidence, Blanton even when in the church had only accosted the appellant by way of requesting him not to continue his disturbance of worship there, and later followed him out of the church for the purpose of disarming’ him. However, defendant’s witnesses state that Guy Blanton pursued him out of the church, cursing him, and stating that he was going to kill him, and, when they advanced a few steps from the church steps, struck him a hard blow on the head, knocked him to the ground, and was beating him with one hand and choking him with the other at the time appellant fired and killed him.

It further appears by the evidence that the appellant is a small, frail man, some 5 feet 5 inches high and 110 pounds in weight, while Bill Stanley, Hobart Taylor, and the deceased, Guy Blanton, were each and all large, strong men, weighing 175 pounds or more.

We will now consider the objection urged and argued by counsel for appellant that the latter was prejudicially injured in his trial rights through the admission by the court of the alleged incompetent evidence showing a difficulty to have occurred between appellant and Stanley and Taylor on the evening before and further erred in admitting evidence as to what was the stage of the church services, to the effect that the worshipers were beginning to sing or pray or that the minister was preaching or giving the “altar call” at *205 the time of appellant’s disorderly entry into the church-house.

The appellant cites no authority in support of this latter contention and none in point as excluding^ evidence of a previous difficulty, and we are of the opinion that the objections made upon these grounds are without merit, as this evidence complained of, we are of the opinion, was proper as part of the res gestae, showing the place, time, and under what conditions the crime charged was committed, and that as such it was competent to show, not only where the difficulty began, but the circumstances under which it arose, together with what those persons then present were doing at the time this fatal difficulty began. If the appellant chose the church as the place, and the hour of worship therein as the time, at which to begin this difficulty, consummated in the killing of Blanton, the responsibility therefor is his, and it is his choice of such an inappropriate place and such an inopportune occasion that is in itself prejudicial to him.

It is therefore our conclusion that the appellant suffered no prejudice from the introduction of this evidence as to his difficulty had with Stanley and Taylor on the previous evening. Only the fact of such occurrence was permitted to be given in evidence, without any of the details or circumstances thereof. We conceive it was rightly admitted as tending to show the animus and intent with which the appellant armed himself and came to the church the next night, where their quarrel was at once renewed and participated in by the decedent, Guy Blanton, together with Stanley and Taylor, at the cost of his life. The evidence of this difficulty on the night before tended to furnish or show appellant’s motive and intent in seeking the very next evening an armed meeting with Stanley and Taylor and his feeling towards them and the decedent, Blanton, who at such time acted with them. It is further in evidence that but a few minutes before this second meeting at the church by the appellant of Stanley and Taylor and Blanton that the appellant stated to some of the witnesses that hp was armed and was going to the church to kill these three men. We are of the opinion that the previous difficulty was thus so connected in time and circumstance with the second as to render competent evidence as to the fact of its occurrence.

*206 Passing now to' the further complaint of appellant that the self-defense instruction No.

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Related

Thomas v. Commonwealth
145 S.W.2d 67 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1940)
Etherton v. Commonwealth
55 S.W.2d 343 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
53 S.W.2d 364, 245 Ky. 202, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simpson-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1932.