Thomas v. Commonwealth

78 S.W.2d 777, 257 Ky. 605, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 567
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 14, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 78 S.W.2d 777 (Thomas 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
Thomas v. Commonwealth, 78 S.W.2d 777, 257 Ky. 605, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 567 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Drury, Commissioner

Affirming.

Mrs. Nannie R. Thomas (indicted as Mrs. Sam Thomas) appeals from a judgment imposing upon her life imprisonment for murder.

The Evidence.

About 9 p. m., Saturday, April 7, 1934, some one shot G-arnett Craycraft, from which shooting he died about three hours later.

Mrs. Craycraft, the widow of the man slain, testified that some time in December before this shooting she was at the home of her mother, the defendant, on Linden avenue in Winchester. They got into an argument, and the defendant said she would end G-arnett Craycraft’s life before long. The morning after the shooting she saw her mother at the jail, and asked to buy from her room for three graves in her lot in the cemetery, and Mrs. Thomas said she did not want Cray-craft’s dead body taken to her house and did not want it on her lot in the cemetery.

William P. Osborne, a clerk in a hardware store, testified that on Saturday morning, March 31st or April 7th, he was unable to say which, he sold to Mrs. Thomas three Peters shells for a 12-gauge shotgun. On the evening of this tragedy, Mrs. Thomas, Carlos Anderson, and Bruce Tackett met at Mrs. Ragland’s where Mrs. Thomas boarded. Mrs. Ragland was out, and Mrs. Thomas fixed supper, and the three ate together. Later we find these three in Mrs. Thomas’ Oldsmobile coupe. Anderson was at the wheel, Tackett was on the right, and Mrs: Thomas was between them. In this automobile somewhere there was a 12-gauge sawed-off shotgun with a Peters shell in it, a .25-caliber Mauser automatic pistol with at least six steel-jacketed loads in it, a .32-caliber pistol with loads in it, and two or three extra shells for the shotgun.

The automobile halted for a traffic light at the in *607 terseetion of North Main street and Washington street. Francis Wiley, a son of Mrs. Thomas, and Garnett Craycraft, her son-in-law, were talking on the street corner. Craycraft ran aronnd behind the automobile, and up to the left door, which he opened, and began to pull Anderson out from under the wheel. Three shots were fired to the east by some one or ones in the automobile, and Craycraft retreated to the sidwalk, suffering from a mortal wound. The automobile crossed Washington street to the south side, pursued by Francis Wiley, who leaped upon the right running board at that point, and two shots were fired from the right door of the machine towards the west and at him. Tackett went over the laps of his companions and out of the left, door of the coupe, but was soon captured. Wiley stopped the ear, policemen came running up, and the arrests of Mrs. Thomas and Anderson followed immediately. Mrs. Thomas, when taken to the police station, asked for a -restroom, there was none there, and she was taken to the women’s department on the third floor of the jail, where she was told she would find the facilities she wanted. While there, she secreted a .32-caliber pistol, which was soon discovered.. It then had one load in it and five empty shells. In • the automobile there was found the .25-caliber Mauser with six loads in it and the sawed-off shotgun with one load in it and two or three shells to fit it.

Mrs. Thomas testifies she did no shooting, that Tackett shot Craycraft, and that she .picked this .32-caliber pistol up from the floor of the automobile after the shooting. Craycraft was taken to the hospital there in Winchester. When he was undressed, he struggled a bit and blood came out of his mouth; he said to Nelson Gatson, “Turn me over, Nelson, I am going to die,” or “Let me turn over, I am going to die.” He said, “Mrs. Thomas, Bruce Tackett, and Carlos Anderson were in the car, Mrs. Thomas was in the center and Mrs. Thomas is the one who shot me.”

John Ballard had helped take Craycraft to the hospital, and he testified that Craycraft spoke to him and said, “Hello, Ballard,” “I am going to die, turn me over. ’ ’ They turned him over on his back, and he said, “Old lady Thomas shot me.” Dr. Scobee, who operated on Craycraft in an effort to save his life, and who was in and about there arranging for this operation, did not hear this statement. Four or five other *608 people who.'were present were not introduced. A .32-caliber lead ball was cut out of Craycraft’s body after he died.

Neither Tackett of Anderson was offered as a witness by either the commonwealth or the defendant.

The defendant urges eleven! grounds for reversal, and these various alleged errors we. shall group and discuss under six headings.

The Motion for Continuance.

Mrs. Thomas tiled a motion for a continuance based upon, the alleged existence of an aroused public sentiment and the allegation that she had not had an opportunity to talk with her codefendant Tackett and had not had sufficient time to prepare her defense. Her motion was overruled, and this was made one of her grounds for a new trial, but, as it is just barely referred to in brief, we shall treat it as waived.

Alleged Errors in the Evidence.

The first attack is made upon the evidence concerning what Craycraft said at the hospital. We have alread}^ set out what that was. Mrs. Thomas urges that by the admission of this there was allowed to go to the jury self-serving declarations of Craycraft made out of the presence of the defendant. This is not a legal controversy between Mrs. Thomas and Craycraft, but one between her and an offended commonwealth, whose law ¡she is alleged to have broken by slaying one of its citizens. The commonwealth is the plaintiff, and, if Crayeraft were alive, he would be permitted to give this same evidneee from the stand, so this is not a self-serving declaration. Dying statements are admitted every day when it is shown they were made by parties who realized they were presently going to die. Mrs. Thomas cites the case of Daughters v. Com., 255 Ky. 172, 73 S. W. (2d) 10, as holding that in quoting an alleged dying statement ail statements of the decedent must be shown. The evidence does not disclose that ■Craycraft made any statement other than that given. The two witnesses who testified to this statement of Craycraft were rigidly cross-examined, but they were not asked if he made any other statement, and the four or five other parties who were present were not called. There is no showing the defendant could not have procured their testimony if she wanted it. There is no *609 ground for saying that Craycraft made any other statement. The reason the dying statement was excluded in the Daughters Case is that the dying man said that he was not telling all that occurred there. That is not true in this case. Defendant’s motion to exclude all the evidence relative to this dying declaration was properly overruled.

’ Tackett was arrested by Officer Lisle, and, when the latter was testifying out of the presence of the jury, he stated that on the way to jail Tackett said repeatedly, “I am the one that done the shooting and if I had not run out of loads I would have got another God damned son of a bitch.” The court correctly refused to allow this evidence to go to the jury, as it was hearsay. See Minniard v. Com., 158 Ky. 210, 164 S. W. 804, headnote 3; Watkins v. Com., 227 Ky. 100, 12 S. W. (2d) 329, headnote 8; Mullins v. Com., 172 Ky. 92, 188 S. W. 1079;. Selby v. Com., 80 S. W. 221, 25 Ky. Law Rep.

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Bluebook (online)
78 S.W.2d 777, 257 Ky. 605, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1934.