Strong v. Commonwealth

287 S.W. 235, 216 Ky. 98, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 843
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 15, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 287 S.W. 235 (Strong 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
Strong v. Commonwealth, 287 S.W. 235, 216 Ky. 98, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 843 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion of the -Court by

Chief Justice Thomas—

Reversing.

The appellant, Brown Strong, at bis trial in the Breathitt circuit court under an indictment charging' him with murdering George Watts, was convicted of voluntary manslaughter and punished by confinement in the penitentiary for a period of seven years. ITis motion for a new trial was overruled, and from the judgment rendered on the verdict he prosecutes this appeal, relying upon a number of alleged errors as grounds for a reversal, but the only two which we deem of sufficient merit to require our consideration are: (1), The admission of-incompetent testimony offered by the Commonwealth, and (2), newly discovered material evidence for defend *100 ant which, the court 'held insufficient to authorize a new trial.

Before taking up the discussion of either of those grounds a brief statement of the substance of the testimony is deemed necessary. The killing occurred late in the afternoon of May 26, 1925, on a public road paralleling and running near to one fork of the Kentucky river at a point where John Little’s creek empties into it and not far from the post office of Whick, a railroad station. In the early part of the afternoon the deceased, his brother, Kelly Watts, and Bob Noble were fishing in the' river near the mouth of the creek and having no success they concluded-to go upstream to a point beyond the residence of Dan Fugate, and in doing so they passed by the residence of defendant, who was in a nearby field and carrying with him a shot gun. He was spoken to by the three and invited by some of them to take a drink of liquor with which they appear to have been plentifully supplied. He’ accepted the tendered hospitality and besides taking a drink he filled from the container, in the possession of the three, a half-pint bottle and returned to his house “for a few minutes.” The fishing party went on •and became engaged in conversation with Dan Fugate at his residence and concluded to engage in no more fishing and started down the road on the return trip when they met defendant going from his house toward Fugate’s on his horse. He soon returned and overtook the fishing party near the front of his residence and invited them to go in and have supper, which they declined, he in the meantime having eaten his supper. The deceased and his brother, Kelly Watts, were on one horse, the latter riding behind, and he said, whife on the witness stand, that when defendant overtook them on his return from Fugate’s he said: “I have got more nerve than any man in Breathitt county. Look what I have done; been shot here, had my whole jaw took out and that didn’t put me to sleep.” The witness thus recites the-occurrences immediately preceding and at the time of the homicide: “We went down about a quarter of a mile below his house. I was riding behind and had my hand on my thigh this way. He pulled his horse’s reins back and says, ‘Kelly, yo.u have had your hand on your pistol -all evening,’ I says, ‘Brown, you are mistaken, I have no pistol.’ He says, ‘You are a Grod damned liar, you have. ’ And throwed his leg over the saddle and hit the ground and he caught me -by the *101 coat and jerked me off. I caught by my left hand on his shoulder and went on the ground with this hand, got hold of a rock and I raised; he was jobbing me with his pistol; I knocked the pistol off and he struck me in the head; I struck at him with the rook and hit him in the head or .somewhere, I don’t know where I hit him, but I struck at him three or four licks, and my brother says, ‘Kelly, quit racketing and let’s go on home.’ I says, ‘All right.’ My brother got off his horse and come walking down the road with his 'hands by the 'side of him and Brown went off below in a little bushes and I heard a gun fire and turned and my brother throwed his head back that way. I run to him. i don’t know how many shots was fired. I says, ‘Are you killed?’ He says, ‘Tes, I am killed.’ He was coming with his pistol, had his pistol in his hind pants pocket and bringing her kindly up that way and fired one shot, and when he done that I grabbed the pistol and says, ‘ Give me that quick,’ and he jerked it over this way and says, ‘I am not going to do it.’ I grabbed at her again and he says, ‘Brown Strong has killed me; let him go; don’t hurt him.’ ” The admitted dying declaration of the deceased (the competency of which was objected to, thus raising a question to be hereinafter determined) corroborated the testimony of Kelly Watts in some of the material‘features as to what occurred immediately at the scene of the killing.

The defendant stated that he had been at work on his farm that afternoon and later went squirrel hunting near his residence and was returning when he first saw the Watts boys and their companion, Bob Noble. He admits going to the road, where they were and taking a drink, but denied filling a bottle for himself, and stated that it was clone by him for one of the party and at the latter’s request, since he was too drunk to pour the liquor from the container into the bottle. According to his testimony he returned to his house and from thence went to Dan Fugate’s to engage the latter to drop corn the next day, when he met the party returning near Fugate’s house; that he did not get off his horse but made the engagement with Fugate to ivork for him the next day and started back towards his home, overtaking the fishing party about the time they arrived in front of his house and invited them to eat supper; that they declined, and he ■went into his house to get a sack with which he intended to procure some seed corn from a neighbor down the road *102 by tile name of Short; that after doing so he started down the road and overtook the three, Noble riding alone on his horse some distance behind the Watts brothers, who, as before stated, were riding one horse; that he rode a short distance by the side of Noble, who dropped behind, and he then rode his horse by the side of the one ridden by the. Watts brothers. lie then said: “I rode down and Kelly took me by the back of the neck and pulled me off my horse backward; never was a word said no way; when he pulled me off the horse backwards he struck me in the face.” Q. “With what?” A. “Knife, and the next lick he struck me in the back of the head, and about the time he struck at me, I am not sure, four or five licks, I dodged one or two I knocked off, and I shot at him.” He then stated that he was cut in 'two places on the head before he fired the shot at Kelly Watts, and that he did so in what he in good faith believed was his necessary self-defense. It was then practically dark, and he went to the house of a Mr. Deaton, and he proved by its inmates that he was cut, bruised and bleeding at the time, and he exhibited the scars to the jury at the trial. Noble rather corroborated defendant in some of the material points of the latter’s testimpny; while some other materiál facts to which Kelly Watts testified as occurring at that time were not observed by Noble. All parties agree that there had been no disturbance or friction of any kind up to the time immediately preceding the killing, and defendant claims not to have seen George Watts at the time he fired his pistol at Kelly; nor did he know that the former had gotten off the horse upon which he was riding. But it seems that he had, and that he in some manner had also gotten behind Kelly and within range of defendant’s pistol when he fired it, as he said, at Kelly.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
287 S.W. 235, 216 Ky. 98, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 843, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strong-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1926.