Webb v. Commonwealth

78 S.W.2d 770, 257 Ky. 547, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 55
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 29, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 78 S.W.2d 770 (Webb 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
Webb v. Commonwealth, 78 S.W.2d 770, 257 Ky. 547, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 55 (Ky. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Oreal, Commissioner

Affirming.

On a change of venue from Clay county, Walter Wehb and Squire Reed have been tried in the Laurel circuit court on a joint indictment charging them with the murder of Estil Spurlock. The trial resulted in an acquittal of Reed, but in a verdict and judgment finding Webb guilty and fixing his punishment at imprisonment for life.

In seeking a reversal of the judgment, it is argued by his counsel (1) that the court erred in the admission and rejection of evidence (2) that the verdict is prejudicial and flagrantly against the weight of evidence; and (3) that the instructions given by the court were erroneous and prejudicial.

The homicide occurred at the voting place in South Fork precinct in Clay county on the day of the regular primary election held in August, 1933. The voting booths were in a building several feet from the highway with a wire fence along the front of the lot on which the building stood. There was a long porch in front of the building, the roof of which was supported by columns or posts. It appears from the evidence that at 4 o’clock in the afternoon a large number of persons who had not voted congregated on the porch, and there was considerable confusion and disorder. One Bowling, a justice of the peace, summoned Estil *549 Spurlock and three others to assist in quelling the disorder and clearing the congestion on the porch so prospective voters or others might get to the door of the room where the election was being conducted. At the time, appellant, Reed, and others were standing in the road, and some one suggested that under the law the polls might be kept open thirty minutes longer in order to permit voters who had assembled to cast their vote. Up to this point there is little dispute concerning the facts, but there is a sharp and irreconcilable conflict in proof offered by the respective parties as to subsequent events.

According to the evidence of witnesses for the commonwealth, Estil Spurlock, in response to the summons of the magistrate, walked up to the door of the voting room and requested those assembled there to stand back so voters could get to the voting booths, and, while so doing, Squire Reed came upon the porch, caught him by the shoulder, and, according to some of the witnesses, said, ‘‘God damn you, who are you?” Spurlock turned, pushed him away, saying, “Who are you?” About this time, appellant left the road and climbed over the fence onto the porch between Reed and Spurlock, .saying to Reed, “Do and say what you damn please, I am with you.” Some time during the affray Reed drew a pistol, and, when appellant came up on the porch, he also had a pistol in his hand. Practically all the large number of witnesses for the commonwealth who were present testified that deceased backed off the porch and down to a point near the fence followed by appellant; that deceased was unarmed and some of the witnesses stated that he had his hands up and others would say he had his hands “this way,” the record not indicating the position referred to by the witnesses; that appellant had a pistol drawn on deceased and immediately before the shots were fired deceased attempted to grab the pistol. Immediately following the shots, he fell, rolled under the fence to the ditch, and .was dead when others got to him.

The evidence of Reed, which was fully corroborated by a number of witnesses for the defense, was to the effect that Reed went to the door of the voting place to inform the election officers that they had a right to keep the polls open for thirty minutes to permit voters assembled there to cast their votes; that, when he went up and took hold of the screen door, deceased *550 said, “There is not a damn thing to you,” and began striking him in the face, and, when appellant appeared on the scene, deceased quit his assault on Reed and caught appellant; that they fought and struggled off the porch and down to the point where the shots were fired. Appellant, in explanation of how he happened to have his pistol in his hand, stated that, when he took hold of a post and pulled himself up onto the porch, the pistol fell out of his pocket, and he caught it with his right hand. He testified that deceased turned, grappled him, and they scuffled down the porch onto the ground, where he broke away with his pistol in his hand, and deceased followed, grabbing for the pistol and did finally make a lunge and grab it; that he was backed into the fence where he caught his foot in the wire; that Lige Spurlock, who was approaching with an open knife, picked up a rock and‘threw it at him, but that it struck Estil Spurlock. In - detailing what followed, the witness said:

“That made Estil much madder, I believe he thought it was me. He had me so I could not get away. Uncle Lige came up with the knife. I had to shoot Estil to keep Uncle Lige from killing me.”

Appellant was likewise corroborated in most of the material details of his evidence by a number of witnesses introduced by the defense.

On behalf of appellant it is shown that while at work at the Kroger Grocery Company he sustained a severe injury to his head, and that as a result thereof or from some other cause not disclosed became mentally deranged, and was confined for a time to a sanitarium or rest home in Ohio where mental or nervous diseases are treated, and was later taken to the Ohio State Hospital. As we understand the record, he left the hospital to come to Kentucky to stand trial. Frank Sharp, who took appellant to the- rest home, stated that he had known him all his life and that in the last year had noticed a change in his mental condition; that when taking him to the rest home he seemed abnormal in his talk and actions, had false ideas and hallucinations ; that he wanted to be president of Kroger Grocery Company and felt from the services he had rendered that he would attain this position. Dr. George T. Harding, one of the physicians in the rest home, which is now called the Harding Sanitarium, testified that *551 appellant was placed under his care and observation when brought there. He detailed at length statements made by the patient indicating illusions and imaginative self-importance. He also testified as to blood tests and other tests made. He stated that, because of the abnormal behavior and conduct of appellant which was constantly present at all hours of the day and night during the entire period of observation, he diagnosed his trouble as schizophrenia or dementia prsecox of the paranoid type, which he explained in common language meant a type of mental sickness in which there is a breaking down of the personality and an imbalance of reason, a mental enfeeblement and deterioration always accompanied by organic or structural breaking-down of the brain; that it is a degenerative disease almost always continuously progressive, and the rate of recovery is very low; that it is considered a practically hopeless condition; that in his opinion the patient would be insane on any date since that time; that the patient’s condition was such that he could not control his impulses; that insanity of his type was a dangerous kind with homicidal tendencies. Dr. Fred H. Weber, a specialist in the treatment of mental disease and who had been connected with the rest home, testified that he had heard the statements of Dr. Harding with respect to the mental and.

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320 P.2d 384 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1958)
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97 S.W.2d 29 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1936)
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90 S.W.2d 726 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 S.W.2d 770, 257 Ky. 547, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webb-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1935.