Terrill v. Commonwealth

125 S.W.2d 1015, 277 Ky. 155, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 621
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 24, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 125 S.W.2d 1015 (Terrill 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
Terrill v. Commonwealth, 125 S.W.2d 1015, 277 Ky. 155, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 621 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Morris, Commissioner

Reversing.

Appellant and Richmond Graham were charged with murdering Arthur Tester on August 27, 1938. The indictment was returned on September 13, and trial was had on September 19, following. Motion for severance was sustained and the Commonwealth elected to try appellant. The trial resulted in a verdict of guilty and fixing penalty at twenty-one years confinement, the maximum for voluntary manslaughter. Judgment was entered upon the verdict; motion for new trial overruled, and appeal is prosecuted.

While the motion for a new trial was supported by seven or more grounds, we are asked to reverse the judgment because the verdict is flagrantly against the evidence, and because the court erred in:

(a) Admitting incompetent and prejudicial evidence against accused.

(b) Overruling appellant’s motion to allow the jury to visit and view the scene of the homicide;

(c) Overruling appellant’s motion to discharge the panel from which the jury was selected, because of irregularities in drawing the panel.

*157 At the outset we may say that ground (a) is of such merit as to require a reversal. This will obviate the necessity of discussing at length other grounds, save the one charging that the verdict is flagrantly against the evidence.

Appellant admitted that he fired the shots which resulted in Tester’s death, and claimed he did so to protect his life. Since he and his co-defendant were the only eyewitnesses, the facts may be better stated by first giving their version.

Appellant lived on Holly branch in "Wolfe County: Deceased lived on Cave branch, a tributary of Holly branch, and Graham lived on Holly branch on the Moloney farm, all in the same general neighborhood, but some distance from each other. The homicide occurred about six-thirty in the afternoon. Earlier in the day appellant had started to the Moloney farm to see some live stock which Graham had said he was to take to the Winchester market, and which Terrill had indicated he might buy. We omit their movements until after appellant had gone home to advise his wife that he would be absent for a time and returned to the Moloney place and with Graham started to look at the live stock. Their proposed journey took them up Pence branch, and when appellant and Graham reached a point near the mouth of the branch, they met up with Tester and his wife, riding one horse, and on their way home. It appears (otherwise than from appellant’s testimony) that Tester asked appellant for some liquor, and appellant displayed an empty bottle, declaring he had none, but that he and Graham were going up the branch to get a half-gallon, and Tester could then have “all he wanted.”

It appears that Tester was willing to accompany them, but the wife seemed to demur. Appellant mildly insisted, though Graham advised him to let Tester “go home with his wife”. Finally the wife got down from the horse, started toward her home; appellant, Graham and Tester, all riding, started in the opposite direction.

Resuming appellant’s testimony, to some extent being corroborated by Graham, it was said that as they were riding along, Graham a few paces in front, appellant and deceased riding side by side, argument between the latter two arose. As they got near to the school house, Tester said to appellant: “This is the place you *158 gave Taylor Graham a pistol to kill me with.” Appellant replied: “I did not,” whereupon Tester said: “You are a G. D. liar.” Graham interposed and tried to stop the argument, but Tester said: “By God I am not satisfied about this,” and appellant replied: “Tester, I haven’t got anything against you.” Tester, according to the accused, had his right hand in his front pocket, and continuing the argument finally said, “G. D. your heart, you ain’t a friend to nobody”; drew his pistol and attempted to level it. Appellant knocked it down, drew his pistol and fired six shots, five of which took effect.

The two accused then rode away; they say that they went up Pence branch to the home of a neighbor to tell him what had happened, and to get aid for Tester. Not finding him at home they rode on to the home of Green Banks, and at the suggestion of appellant they went back to the point where Tester’s body lay and found him dead, “in the road, his hands crossed, and his toes together”. They were there about five minutes and left. Apparently they went back and located appellant, who later surrendered to officers.

It was claimed by appellant that Tester, on two not very remote occasions, had drawn his pistol and threatened to shoot appellant, which he said made him mad “just for a minute.”

Graham, the other eyewitness, corroborates appellant in the main. He says after the shooting they went on up the road and met Bradley Haddix; appellant told him he had shot Tester, and asked Bradley to take Tester’s horse home, which he did, and in doing so passed the point where the body of deceased lay in the road.

The testimony for the commonwealth was circumstantial, Tester’s wife being the only witness testifying to facts just prior to the homicide. She and deceased, some time during the day, had gone up to Bethany school to take anti-typhoid shots, which the nurse administered about 5:30 p. m. They were homeward bound when they met up with Graham and Terrill, and she details what then happened, not differing materially from the testimony of the two accused. She says that when Terrill told Tester that they were going to get liquor, Tester said he couldn’t go, as he had to go home and help with the milking; Terrill insisted on his *159 going, and offered deceased his pistol, saying: “Here you take my gun; you are the best friend I have got, and the only man I would let have my gun.” Tester refused the proffer and told Terrill to put his gun up. Later Terrill said to his wife: “If you are afraid for him to go, you can go with him.”

However, about' this time the wife alighted from the horse and started homeward. She says he had been gone about seven minutes when she heard the shooting, but she walked on home, later learning that Terrill had shot her husband. She then got on a horse and went to a point near the home of Bradley Haddix and found her husband dead. She does not describe the position of the body. When she arrived several other persons were around the body. She says that Terrill seemed to be under the influence of liquor, and her husband sober, when they met.

On cross-examination she said that when they left to go to Bethany, her husband took with him his .38 caliber pistol, but when she went back to the scene she did not look for the pistol. It developed that her brother had gotten the pistol, returned it to her, and she had given it to some one else the next day.

Bradley Haddix lived near to the place where the homicide occurred. He and his eleven year old girl had been up to the milk-gap, finished milking and were returning home. They met Terrill and Graham riding away; Terrill told Haddix he had shot Tester, and asked him to take his horse home. About 200 yards from where he had met accused, he saw Tester’s body lying in the road; “his feet were on the upper edge, and his head down the road, lying on his right side, his hands under him”.

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Bluebook (online)
125 S.W.2d 1015, 277 Ky. 155, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/terrill-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1939.