Spicer v. Commonwealth

272 S.W. 909, 209 Ky. 395, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 511
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 5, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 272 S.W. 909 (Spicer 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
Spicer v. Commonwealth, 272 S.W. 909, 209 Ky. 395, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 511 (Ky. 1925).

Opinion

*396 Opinion op the Court by

Judge- Thomas

Affirming.

Appellant, Seldon Spicer, resided on Tharp’s branch about 400 or 500 yards from where it empties into Cane creek. Late in the afternoon of December 5, 1922, he shot and killed Harve Potter about two-thirds of the way between his residence and Cane creek along which runs a public road, but the hollow running up to his house is winding and one located at the mouth of the branch cannot see it. The same is true at other places between Cane creek and his house. He was indicted by the grand' jury of Breathitt county and charged with murdering Potter and upon his first trial he was convicted and sentenced to the penitentiary for life. He appealed from that judgment and it was reversed in the case of Spicer v. Commonwealth, 199 Ky. 658, solely upon the ground of the failure of the court to properly instruct the jury. Following that, he had two mistrials and on his fourth one he was again convicted and given, the same punishment that he received on his first one. The court declined to set aside the verdict of the jury, and rendered judgment thereon from which this appeal is prosecuted.

Three grounds are urged for a reversal: (1), erroneous rulings of the court in excluding testimony -offered by defendant; (2), error of the court in overruling defendant’s motion to instruct the jury to find him not guilty; but if mistaken in that, then, (3), that the verdict is flagrantly against the evidence; each of which we will discuss and determine in the order mentioned.

The 'Complaint under this ground grows out of an effort on the part of defendant to contradict some of the witnesses for the Commonwealth by showing that they had testified differently upon former trials. The witnesses so attempted to be contradicted were Henry Potter, the brother of the deceased, and Polly Turner, his sister. On two points upon which the witness, Potter, was attempted to’ be contradicted the court permitted the attorney to pursue his own course- and to read from the stenographic notes of his testimony on a former trial showing different statements from what he testified at this trial and about which he had previously been asked. On another point the court, for -some reason unexplained, would not permit the custodian of the former testimony to read the contradictory testimony, but the court him *397 self read to the jury all of the contradictory statements of the witness and admonished it at the timé that it was for the purpose of contradicting the witness, Potter, and not as substantive testimony. We are unable to see wherein the error, if it be one, in any wise prejudiced the substantial rights of defendant. The material and essential thing was to get before the jury the fact that the witness had testified differently on the point involved at a former trial, and whether that information was conveyed by means of a witness on the 'stand or from the court reading the former testimony to the jury from the official transcript containing it, and which it was agreed was a true transcript,- could have no material bearing upon defendant’s rights and the argument to the contrary is a mere quibble.

Mrs. Turner was' contradicted in the proper way upon all the points desired by defendant’s counsel, except one, and the court refused to permit her testimony on a former trial in -supposed contradiction of her testimony at this trial upon that one, but the record does not disclose the reason therefor. However, a sufficient one is that there was no substantial difference between her former testimony and what she gave upon this trial on that point, which was the condition of the tail of- the coat deceased was wearing, when the witness found him lying in the path where defendant shot him, it being claimed by defendant that the witness testified on the former trial that the back of his coat was pulled up so as to reach or cover his shoulders, when the witness testified on this trial to substantially the same facts, but was not positive as to the height on the body of deceased that the folded coat reached. Even if we should hold that the court should have permitted the contradictory statements it would not then follow that a reversal should be ordered therefor, since the point was but remotely material, if at all, and the court’s ruling could not possibly affect the defendant’s rights. We, therefore, conclude that there is¡ no merit in this ground.

Practically all of the testimony of defendant was set out in our former opinion and some of the testimony of the Commonwealth also referred to in that opinion. Two of the Commonwealth’s witnesses referred to therein (Lovejoy and White) did not testify upon the trial now under review, but the admission by defendant that he shot and killed Potter was proven by another witness. Notwithstanding the insertion of defendant’s *398 testimony in the former opinion, we deem it necessary under the contentions now being made to briefly restate that testimony and to likewise insert the material facts proven by the Commonwealth.

Defendant testified that he left his home that morning on his mule and went to Jackson, the -county seat, a distance of about seven miles; that shortly after he left his home he passed on the road the deceased and that he left Jackson to return home not later than 1:30- p. m. and that it would take him something like one and a half or two hours to reach his home-; that at the mouth of the branch upon which he lived he saw Polly Turner picking up coal and asked her and her small child, who was with her, to go up to his house, which she declined; that when be got within thirty or forty yards of his house he discovered his wife engaged in getting some stove wood out of a drift on the branch on which he resided; that he told her to go down the branch to a potato patch some three hundred yards from his residence and get some potatoes for supper; that he rode on to his house, dismounted and took the saddle off of his mule and put it in the stable and fed it; that he afterwards procured some corn and fed his fattening hogs, which were in a pen nearby his residence, and while "he was watching them eat the com be heard his wife -cry out from the direction of the potato patch and call him “To run-here, run here;” that instead of going directly to her he went back to his house to procure his pistol, but not finding it he got his shotgun, which was loaded with buckshot, and started down toward the place in the bottom where his- wife was supposed to be, but circled around a different route and that when he got within about thirty or forty feet of his wife he discovered her lying upon the ground with the deceased over her and holding her with both hands and that his wife’s dress- was lifted up and-he demanded of the deceased to let her go, when he released one of his bands and raised up, whereupon defendant shot him in the back of his head, penetrating his skull with at least three buckshots and causing his brains to spill in the path where’ he was subsequently found. He 'testified that he had not seen the deceased since that morning bn his way to Jackson, and that there was bad feeling between the two, but he claimed that it existed only on the part of deceased and not on his part, and grew out of defendant testifying against deceased at some trial involving a violation of the prohibition act.

*399

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Related

Drake v. Commonwealth
91 S.W.2d 1009 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1936)
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276 S.W. 545 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
272 S.W. 909, 209 Ky. 395, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spicer-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1925.