Vanhorn v. Commonwealth

40 S.W.2d 372, 239 Ky. 833, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 867
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 19, 1931
StatusPublished

This text of 40 S.W.2d 372 (Vanhorn 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
Vanhorn v. Commonwealth, 40 S.W.2d 372, 239 Ky. 833, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 867 (Ky. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Hobson

Reversing.

Crien O. Vanhorn was indicted in the Floyd circuit court for the murder of his wife, Ina Vanhorn. On the trial of the case he was found guilty and his punishment fixed at life imprisonment. He appeals.

It is earnestly insisted for the appellant that the evidence of the commonwealth was insufficient to warrant a conviction, and that the verdict of the jury is unwarranted by the evidence. This requires a statement of facts shown by the proof. The parties were married December 2, 1929. He was forty-two years old and she was some years younger. He was a locomotive engineer in the employ of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company and located at Martin, Ky. After they were married they rénted a room from Mrs. Edan Key and did not keep house, but boarded. "While living there in Mrs. Key’s house, as shown by her, there Was considerable friction and trouble between them, the wife complaining-of her husband’s attention to other women. In May, 1930, they went together to the office of Mr. Ballard J ames, an attorney at Prestonsburg. The court declined to make Mr. James testify as to what passed, but soon after this they went to Mr. J. W. Caudill, another attorney at Prestonsburg, and, while Mr. Caudill did not testify, Oscar Bond, who was in the office, testified to these facts:

She said “He was trying to run her off and she still wanted to live with him, and he was trying to *834 get out of sustaining her, she went out and said she would see him and try to get some settlement with him, if he wouldn’t settle she would be back and file suit for alimony. She came back the same day and Mr. Vanhorn came in with her. They had a talk with Mr. Caudill and he appeared to be very angry and said, ‘I want you to tell her the whole law of the case’ and Mr. Caudill said, ‘I have already told her that’, he said, ‘If she stays away from me twelve months I can get a divorce.’ Mr. Caudill said, ‘No you can’t unless she voluntarily leaves’, and he said, ‘My lawyer told .me I could’ and Caudill asked him who his lawyer was and he said it was Ballard James. Mr. Caudill called Mr. James to verify that statement and he said he didn’t tell him that and Mr. Vanhorn become more angry, and he said they might pay him to keep her, but they couldn’t make him live with her. He accused her of quarreling and she accused him of running around with some woman and that she had only quarreled at him one time and said she wouldn’t quarrel any more if he would take her back and live with her and he refused; and Mr. Vanhorn become more angry and as he turned to walk out of the office he said, ‘By God I don’t have to live with her and if I can’t get rid of her one way I,can another.’ ”

Bebecca Ellis makes this statement as to what occurred at Caudill’s office:

“He brought her in there and told Mr. Caudill, ‘I have brought her down here and I want you to explain some things to her, she doesn’t understand’, she was crying and said he wanted her to rent a room, he would be willing to do that, and that he had set her things out on the steps and she didn’t want to get out and get a room and Mr. Caudill told them to go back and make things all right and come back again and as they started out he said, ‘I have offered to do everything that is fair and if I can’t get rid of her one way I will another.’ ”

On the evening of August 3, Vanhorn and his wife got in their car and went from Martin to Allen. After they got to Allen he got out; she declined to get out. He got a glass of Coca-Cola and asked her to have one, which she declined. While they were there he met Trent Sal *835 mons and three young ladies. He invited them to get in the car with him and his wife and go down to Martin with them and hear the radio. They accepted the invitations, Salmons riding on the back seat with two of the ladies and one of the ladies sitting in front with Mr. and Mrs. Vanhorn. When they reached Martin they went up to the rooms, then occupied by the Vanhorns, and remained there an hour or more listening to the radio and some of the parties dancing to the music. While they were there Vanhorn got some bottles of near beer and treated the party. One of the ladies then suggested that they had better go home. So they all got in the car about 10:30 and went up to Allen. Mrs. Vanhorn asked her husband to let her drive. He said no, that the car was loaded, that she could drive as they came back. When they got to Allen, their friends got out of the car and they turned around, and started back. A mile or two from Allen the road ran along by the side of a high cliff. Prom the road down to the bottom of the cliff was something over a hundred feet. The road had been cut out of the cliff, but no metal had been placed upon it, and it was not very wide. The next thing that was known about them was when the car was found at the bottom of this cliff; Mrs. Vanhorn was under it and in an insensible condition from which she never'recovered; and Vanhorn was standing near the top of the cliff signaling to a car that came by and asking for help. Three -witnesses, who lived about a quarter of a mile from where the car went over, testified for the commonwealth; one of them testified, in substance, as follows:

“I heard it start, I got up and went through the house and looked .out the lower window, come back out the front door, across the yard on some ties before it went the last time.
“Q. You mean when the car went over it stopped? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. . .. . The car made a noise and stopped, I got out of the bed, looked out the window and come back and went out the door across the yard on some ties before it made the last noise.
“Q. Before the car went over the bank or when you heard the noise, did you hear anything on the highway about the mouth of that branch? A. I heard some shooting and hollering.
“Q. You didn’t look to see what you could see? A. It was night, I got up and went out in the yard, *836 I didn’t hear anything, I don’t know what occurred.
“Q. Did you see anything? A. I saw a car come up to the place, saw it turn and go back down the road toward Allen.”
Another witness for the commonwealth testified to this:
“Q. Did you hear anything on the highway before the car went over? A. I heard some shooting, I took it to be a pistol.
“Q. Where was that shooting? A. Below where the car went over on the highway.
“Q. Did you hear anything else? A. Yes, sir, heard some one holler.
“Q. How? A. Just yelled out.
“Q. Man or woman? A. I wouldn’t say, couldn’t be positive.
“Q. What is your best judgment? A. It seemed like a fine voice.”

The third witness gave similar testimony.

On the other hand the defendant testified that, while they were living in the room at the house of Mrs.

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Related

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290 S.W. 693 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1927)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 S.W.2d 372, 239 Ky. 833, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 867, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vanhorn-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1931.