Whitehead v. Commonwealth

255 S.W. 93, 200 Ky. 440, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 120
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 12, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 255 S.W. 93 (Whitehead v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitehead v. Commonwealth, 255 S.W. 93, 200 Ky. 440, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 120 (Ky. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Turner, Commissioner

Affirming.

Appellant was charged with the murder of W. H. Day. On his trial he was found guilty and sentenced to confinement in the penitentiary for life, and from that judgment appeals.

Day’s son had previously shot and killed the son of defendant, and the latter had caused a vigorous prosecution of young Day which resulted in his conviction. Thenceforward there was bitter animosity between the appellant and W. H. Day, and there were threats by Day against appellant, some of which appear to have been communicated to him.

¡On the 27th of September, 1922, appellant and his wife, on foot, accompanied by Bob Hall, on horseback, met decedent Day and Miss Zilphia Roberts, each riding horseback, on the highway. . .

So far as the evidence discloses no word passed between appellant and decedent, but they each seem to have vigilantly watched the other from the time they saw they were about to meet. Each was armed, and just as they passed each other, or just after appellant had gotten slightly beyond Day, as indicated by the shot, Day on horseback and appellant on. foot, appellant shot him about four inches to the right of the backbone, the bullet lodging in his spine and resulting in his death twelve days thereafter.

Day fired no shot, but had a pistol in his right hand coat pocket, and there is evidence indicating that he had his hand in that pocket when the parties met, and made one or two efforts to withdraw it therefrom. While the evidence shows appellant fired four or five shots at decedent, there is nothing to show that more than one of [443]*443them struck him, and that to the rear of the right side, as above indicated.

The first ground for reversal is that there is shown no sufficient basis for the introduction of certain statements as a dying declaration made by decedent as to the occurrences at the time. The evidence is that decedent was taken to his home on Wednesday, the day he was shot, and remained there until the following Monday, when he was taken on a stretcher across the country to a railroad station and thence to a hospital at Hazard, where he died a week later.

It is in evidence by decedent’s wife that during the five days he remained at home he said to her several times, “he would never get well, and believed he would have to die;” and that before they started with him to the hospital he told her to have him brought home and buried on the hill across the branch from his house. With this as a basis, the witness was permitted to state what her husband had told her as to the occurrences at the time of the shooting, which was in substance that he turned his horse to the side of the road and gave them (Whitehead and Hall) room to pass by, and that he did not think about Whitehead doing anything to him until it was done. The witness stated she never saw her husband after he started to the hospital.

Shepherd, son-in-law of deceased, went with him to the hospital at Hazard and remained there with him from Monday until Friday. He testified that before he left deceased on Friday, the latter told him “he would never get well and he believed he would have to die,” and in fact three days thereafter he did die. With this as a basis, the witness was permitted to testify that decedent then told him that as he and Miss Roberts were passing by Whitehead drew his pistol and shot him in the back, when he was not doing anything to him at all.

This is the only witness who testifies to having seen or talked to the decedent at any time after he reached the hospital, although Hr. Baker was called to the decedent’s home and saw him two or three times there before his removal to the hospital, and he says that he advised Day to go to the hospital and have an X-ray made so as to locate the ball, and that Day agreed to this, but said to him he was going to tell the doctors at the hospital that he had not come there to be cut on unless it was necessary, and [444]*444that deceased said nothing to him about dying, and witness never told him he was going to die, but merely advised him to go to -the hospital and have the X-rays made and the.bullet located and removed. Another witness stated, that he helped carry deceased, on-a stretcher when he started to .the hospital,, and deceased said to him along the road!-that he would get well.”

The two last named witnesses, however, only made these statements in their testimony for the defense, after the trial court, had already passed upon the admissibility of the evidence upon a preliminary examination of .the other witnesses.

That the statement of a wounded person is competent .as a dying'declaration is universally held where the proper preliminary foundation for its introduction has been laid. It is admitted upon the theory that the consciousness of impending death creates in the mind of the declarant such a solemn conviction. that he is about to meet his Maker, that all incentive upon his part to state an untruth, or fail to state the whole truth, is removed, and that this situation dispenses with the ordinary necessity for an oath and the customary right of cross-examination.

It is not essential, however, to the competency of such evidence as a dying declaration that the declarant should state in terms either that he was bound to die shortly, or that he had given up-all hope of this life. On the contrary, what he does say may be aided by, and interpreted in the light of the facts and circumstances-surrounding him at the time. In other words, his belief that death is impending may be gathered from what he says, taken in connection with the seriousness of his wound, what has been told him by others as to his probable chances, and many other facts and circumstances that might bring about in him that state of mind. In addition to this, in determining the competency of such evidence the fact that declarant did die within a comparatively short time after the expression of his belief, will be, while not conclusive, considered. Cavanaugh v. Commonwealth, 172 Ky. 799; Peoples v. Commonwealth, 87 Ky. 487; Eversole v. Commonwealth, 157 Ky. 478; McHargis v. Commonwealth, 15 R. 323; Pennington v. Commonwealth, 24 R. 321; Jones v. Commonwealth, 20 R. 355; Terrill v. Commonwealth, 13 Bush 246; 1 Greenleaf, section 158.

[445]*445In the light of this rule and of these authorities, the court is of opinion that the twice reiterated statement of the declarant in this case that ‘ ‘he would never get well and believed he would have to die,” when considered in the light of the fact that he had directed his' wife, before leaving home, to have his body brought back and buried at a certain spot, and the fact that he, died within three days after expressing that belief to-Shepherd, brings this case within the rule stated above.

After this evidence was admitted for .the Commonwealth it was proper for the court to admit evidence for the defendant shov/ing that deceased did not in fact expect to die, and this evidence was admissible 'to enable the jury to determine what weight, if any, should be given to the evidence of the dying declarations,

It is in the discretion of a trial court to hear' the preliminary evidence on the question of the admissibility of a dying statement, either in,the presence of or separate and apart from the jury.

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9 S.W.2d 53 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1928)
Noble and Noble v. Commonwealth
279 S.W. 1073 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1925)
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255 S.W. 544 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1923)
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255 S.W. 516 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
255 S.W. 93, 200 Ky. 440, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitehead-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1923.