Warnell v. Commonwealth

246 S.W.2d 144, 1952 Ky. LEXIS 621
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 8, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 246 S.W.2d 144 (Warnell 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
Warnell v. Commonwealth, 246 S.W.2d 144, 1952 Ky. LEXIS 621 (Ky. 1952).

Opinion

MOREMEN, Justice.

Appellant, Glenn Warnell, was convicted of the murder of Mrs. Virgie Stone and given a sentence of life imprisonment. He assigns the following grounds for reversal: (1) insufficient proof of corpus delicti ; (2) insufficient proof to support a conviction; (3) prejudicial, erroneous instructions; (4) failure to instruct on the whole law of the case; and (5) misconduct of the Commonwealth’s attorney during the final argument. Since the vital question concerns whether appellant was convicted by the uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice, particularly in the establishment by the Commonwealth of the corpus delicti, we will outline the testimony without reference to the facts imposed by the accomplice,, then piece into the jig-saw puzzle of evidence the portion given by him.

*145 On a bitterly cold day in November, 1950, the frozen, swollen body of Virgie Stone was found on a private road that led to an uninhabited tenant house on the farm of Beckham Martin, Jr. She was lying in the center of the road on her stomach. She was clothed and her clothing had been disarranged by the wind. She wore a short scarf around her neck, and Martin, who found the body, stated that the scarf was worn in a normal position.

Two days before, on November 24, at about noon, appellant met his friend Roxy Bledsoe in Bowling 'Green. Bledsoe purchased a half pint-of whiskey and they went to Wilson’s Cafe and took a place at. the bar. Soon Mrs. Stone entered the cafe, apparently under the influence of intoxicants, and sat at a table. They went to the table and joined her where all had drinks. In about 30 minutes, the men left, were gone some time and later returned to the saloon. Warnell went to the bar and Bled-soe sat at the table and drank with Mrs. Stone, who, in a short time, became very drunk. The proprietor told Bledsoe to remove her from the premises, and he did by practically dragging her to the outside where he placed her in a cab. The cab driver refused transportation and Bledsoe thereupon shoved her into the car belonging to Warnell. Warnell at first refused'to drive her away, but later, at the suggestion of Wilson, agreed to do so in order that she wouldn’t be arrested. The three got into the front seat of the car. They drove out of town on Highway 31 W where Bledsoe purchased another half pint of whiskey and when he returned, Bledsoe and Mrs. Stone got into the rear seat of the car. When they reached the Plum Springs Pike, Bledsoe requested that they turn off, which they did, because, as Warnell testified, Bledsoe wanted to have intercourse with her, but he did not stop the car. It was still daylight but the lights on his car were not.good and Warnell wanted to get back to town before dark. They went out the road a piece and turned off, when Bledsoe said, “Just take us on up to the house then.” They were then on the Flat Rock - Road. When they reached the Beckham Martin place, he let them out and, while he was pulling away, a car passed. The man driving the car was ’Charles King, and he-testified: “Well, we were starting down to Smiths Grove and as we passed by this lane there was a car facing us that we had to pass and as we were coming over a hill Warnell who was in the car pulled out directly in front of me and I passed him. Of course, we slowed down and I saw these two people, a man and a woman, at the road there inside the gate. At the time I didn’t recognize Bledsoe. His back was facing us and she was facing us and his back was to us. He had her under- her arm with his right hand and he was trying to hold her up.”

He also testified that he could see her face at the time, that her head was erect, her eyes were open and she was not resting her head on his shoulder. In response to a question as to whether .or not she was dead or alive at the time, he answered, he did not know, and then stated, “Well, at the time, I thought she was drunk, a person that appeared to me to be passed out drunk.” Beckham Martin, Jr., found the frozen body about 200 to 300 yards from this gate with the head pointed towards the vacant house. The scarf (the importance of this item will develop) was on the back of her head, knotted like one would normally wear it, and was not tied around her neck like a rope. Martin summoned .the sheriff, Mr. Hodges, who brought the assistant to the coroner, Mr. Bradley, to the scene.

The sheriff stated that Mrs. Stone was a woman about 52 or 53 years old, whom he identified from a record in her pocketbook. He testified that her face and hands were black and that the assistant coroner pointed out to him that the scarf was pretty tight around her neck. He stated, that he later recovered a watch which belonged to Mrs. Stone from Bledsoe’s mother.

Henry W. Bradley, the assistant coroner,, testified that he was a professional funeral director and embalmer and a graduate of an accredited school of embalming. He stated that: The body was frozen and the scarf “was around her neck very tight” as far as. he could see at that time; the body was-returned to the funeral home where they *146 waited several 'hours for it to thaw, when he made an examination of it. He then stated, “I discovered that this scarf was tightly knotted around her neck,” and gave the opinion that from the appearance of the body and from marks that he found on the throat, death resulted from strangulation. He stated that her face was puffed and red and discolored, as were her hands.

A. J. Crow, a licensed emhalmer, testified that he received the body of Mrs. Stone for preparation for burial. He made a thorough examination for signs of violence •and found none. Her face, hands, and arms were swollen and badly discolored. He did not detect any bruises that might have been caused by something being tightly drawn around her neck and he partially removed the discoloration from her face, but there were no marks on her neck.

Dr. Louis Dickenson, a licensed physician since 1942, testified, “I found, of course, the body was thawed out, still cold but thawed out. The entire body appeared somewhat swollen under the skin. The face was dark purple splotched, not evenly purple but splotched. The margins of the ears were very dark purple, almost black. The hands .particularly were dark purple in the entirety, the lower arms, and swollen. The toes somewhat the same way but not near as markedly purple and swollen. The nails on the fingers were black, riot purple -but they were obviously black. That’s about all I could say. There were no external marks of violence other than a few scratch marks on her knees and lower extremities.”

He stated that he thought her death was due to freezing and exposure to cold and, although he had seen the body after it had been embalmed, he found that it was still swollen and stated that swelling is not changed by embalming. He stated that there is a difference in the appearance of a body frozen while alive than where the body is frozen shortly after a person has been killed. He said, “The main difference is the change is made while the blood is still ‘ circulating and there are definite changes. If you freeze a steak in your frozen foodlocker, it doesn’t change it, but if blood is circulating through that place, there are certain changes take place. It is different if circulation is not in existence.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
246 S.W.2d 144, 1952 Ky. LEXIS 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warnell-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1952.