Tarrence v. Commonwealth

265 S.W.2d 40, 1953 Ky. LEXIS 1267
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 18, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 265 S.W.2d 40 (Tarrence 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
Tarrence v. Commonwealth, 265 S.W.2d 40, 1953 Ky. LEXIS 1267 (Ky. 1953).

Opinion

STANLEY, Commissioner.

The .appellant, Roy Tarrence, and his son, Leonard Tarrence, upon separate trials were convicted of the murder of Francis J. McCormick and sentenced to deaths We first consider .the, appeal of. the father. There .is no,question of guilt but there, are many questions as to. the fairness and legality of the trial. Our summary disposition pf some of them.is in the interest of reasonable brevity and should not be regarded as indicating summary consideration for every question has been given full consideration.

To avoid prosecution for seduction, Leonard Tarrence had married the girl involved and she had’obtained'an order‘of court requiring: him !to pay her $7.50 a week for the Support o'f their child., ! Tarrence ha'd then joined’-¿he army;’but in a ’ short While had become ábSeiit without leave.' Leonard's wife brought him before the coii'rt for failure to maintain his child and it seemed that he was about to be returned to the army. Francis J. McCormick, an attorney, represented1 the girl’ in all these proceedings. The' Commonwealth" ' presented evidence that the father and' the son "had become angered at'the lawyer, and upon two occa *45 sions the father, Roy Tarrence, had’ expressed his' ’animosity in terms,, which proved to be prophetic. He had said that before he would let the lawyer and the girl send his son overseas to get killed, “I’ll take a club and beat his [the lawyer’s] brains out.” Later at the home of a friend on Harrods Creek he said, , “that someone should knock him in the head and throw him in the creek.” He denied any ill-will and the threats.

In the late afternoon .-of February 28, 1952, while McCormick was walking home through an alley between Fourth Street and Garvin Place near Oak Street carrying groceries, which was according to-his custom, the Tarrences pulled up’ beside him in the father’s automobile. Both men got out and apparently without warning or immediate provocation began beating McCormick. They forced him into the car and drove away. This is the evidence for .the Commonwealth adduced by several eyewitnesses. One .of them noted the license number of the car and this soon led the-officers to the Tarrence home.

The Commonwealth deduces from certain evidence that the assault and abduction, if not the murder, .had been previpusly’.deliber-ately planned.

The defendant and bis son testified they had been working on their automobile at their home near Jeffersontown, southeast of Louisville,’ during the day and that afternoon wept to a junk yard in the city west of' the point of assault to obtain á certain article. , This .was corroborated by the dealer. ' They testified that on' their way home they happened to’ see Mr.' McCormick at the grocery. ' Leonard walked with him, into the alley, a short distance to ’talk with him amicably about getting his ’trouble settled, when, according to Leonard, McCormick replied that he was going to send him to the penitentiary or back to the army; then Leonard hit him with his fist and in the re-sistánce picked up a stick and struck him. Both the father and son‘testified that the father" did not get out , of the car until the .affray had started and then he Undertook to •separate the men. McCormick became unconscious. The Tarrences became frantic .and"'put him in thé car and drove around the city for awhile until they could determine what to do. Their testimony is that McCormick died in the car. But when Leonard surrendered to Judge Mix,’ one of the judges of the criminal branch of the court, a few days later, he told him that he and his father had both assaulted McCormick and that he wás killed at the creek while conscious. Their formal confession will be stated in the opinion in Leonard Tarrence’s case.

We pass for the moment the intervening developments.

. The men took McCormick 12 of 13' miles away to a father remote place on Harrods Creek;' weighted his body and dropped.it in a-deep hole in the creek.

Demurrer, to the'indictment. The appellant’s attorney-recognizes that a'demurrer reaches' only a defect appearing on the face of an indictment. The indictment was returned March 12, 1952. The appellant points out that under the law the grand jury had been convened on the first Monday in’ that month, which was March 3, hence, he argues, it must follow that the grand jury had been' in session nine days without an order of court extending the period beyond six days as stipulated in-the statute. KRS 29.240; see Harrod v. Commonwealth, Ky., 253 S.W.2d 574. The argumentáis that considering the dáte of-the indictment with 'judicial knowledge' of the calendar, the defect appears on the face of the indictment and the demurrer to it should háve been sustained. If we should accept the premise of the argument, the conclusion o‘f invalidity would not’follow. Unlike the records in the Harrod habeas corpus proceeding', this' recprd does riot show that the grand jury had been in session continuously every day duririg the first week after being impaneled nor'that there was no Order extending the period. Regularity in the proceeding is to be presumed. Sizemore v. Commonwealth, Ky., 262 S.W.2d 817 is directly in point. We find no merit’'in hh’is contention.

*46 Change of venue. Before a severance of trial was ordered, the defendants, jointly petitioned for a change of venue. There had been a great deal oi newspaper and radio publicity concerning the abduction and honj-icide and the events of the following two or three weeks. A number of affidavits stated that public opinion was hostile to the defendants and a number filed by .the Commonwealth controverted this and expressed the view that the accused men could obtain a fair and impartial trial in Jefferson County. ' Several of the affiants who had served on juries in the past related their observations and experiences, among which were that many jurors do not read the newspaper accounts or have any knowledge of sensa-v tional crimes', several of which were mentioned. An extended oral hearing was had 'Ori the motion and- many representative witnesses testified in support of the respective contentions. It was shown that the Louisville newspapers and radio newscasts have wide circulation in the adjoining counties and far beyond. The- trial court filed an opinion' justifying his order overruling the motion for a change of venue and in it stated that .if upon examination of the 150 veniremen summoned for. the trial it should appear that the defendants could.not receive a fair trial he would give further 'consideration to the motion. In the examination of these veniremen no prejudice or antagonism was developed nor was any unfair influence traceable to the publicity. Many were excused because of conscientious scruples against the death penalty. The defendants did not renew their motion during. the course of selecting the jury.

. We have carefully considered the voluminous evidence on the motion. It is not shown there was denunciation of the accused or any expressions in the newspapers or on the radio of a prejudicial or inflama-tory nature that might tend to turn the readers or listeners from an impartial attitude if they should be- chosen for the grave responsibility of jury service. The publicity was of facts and circumstances later presented in the evidence except that of the defendants, .which had not been previously revealed.

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Bluebook (online)
265 S.W.2d 40, 1953 Ky. LEXIS 1267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tarrence-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1953.