178 Ky. 492 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1917
Reversing.
The appellant, Harry Brashear, was tried and suffered a conviction, in the Warren circuit court, for the crime of wilful murder, and his punishment was fixed at imprisonment for life, by a judgment of the court, in accordance with the verdict of the jury. His motion for a new trial having been overruled, he seeks a reversal of the judgment, by appeal to this court. The two grounds, urged by his counsel, for reversal of the judgment are.: (1) The admission, over his objection, of incompetent evidence, which was prejudicial to his substantial rights; (2) important evidence discovered by him after the trial, of which he did not know, at the time of the trial, and of which he, with reasonable diligence, could not have learned and produced at the trial, in his behalf.
The victim of the homicide, of which he was convicted, was Maggie Cherry, a young woman about twenty-seven or twenty-eight years of age, and a resident of the city of Bowling Green. The murder was, peculiarly, an atrocious one. Maggie Cherry had been married, but, a year or more before her death, she and her husband had separated and he was residing in a distant city, at the time of her murder. The appellant was a young man, twenty-eight years of age, and a native of New Albany, Indiana; a marble cutter by occupation, and very much given to the use of alcoholic beverages. Some time, in the fall of 1916, he came to Bowling Green to work in the marble works of one Clarence Runner, and, while, he was thereafter absent for certain periods of time from the city, he continued chiefly in the employment of Runner, until the murder occurred, for which he was convicted. Shortly after he came to Bowling Green, he became acquainted with Maggie Cherry, who then kept a small restaurant in the city, and by the end of the year, he and Maggie appeared to have become lovers, as a number of letters, which he wrote to her from New Albany, about the first of the year, were read, in the evidence, and ■they abounded with many endearing terms, which he bestowed upon her. In one or more of them, he addressed her as his wife. The letters, also, showed, that he had been, borrowing money from her, and, in one of them, he made the inquiry, if when he returned to Bowling Green, she .would furnish him money for transportation. He seems to have returned to Bowling Green, in February or March, 1917, and, in the meantime, Maggie Cherry had
The appellant denied, that he was, in anywise, guilty of the murder, or had any knowledge of it, and stated that he did not see the victim of the homicide upon the night of her disappearance or during the day previous thereto, and that he was in various places in the city on Thursday night, among them being the park and a moving picture show, and retired to his own room at 10 o’clock in the evening, where he remained, until the following morning. These statements, of his, were, more or less, corroborated by a number of witnesses, by an exactness more or less convincing — only one or two of the witnesses being able to remember, that it was on Thursday evening, that he was seen at the places mentioned by him. The keeper of a grocery testified, that about 9 o’clock, on Thursday night, Maggie Cherry, accompanied by a tall, thin young man, named George Bewley, was in his store, and a party, working at a livery stable, testified, that on the same evening a tall, thin, young man wanted to engage a horse and buggy to be kept by him until 2 o’clock, on that night, but he refused to let him have them. Another party,, who worked at the same stable, testified that George Bewley, a tall, thin young man, hired a horse and buggy one night that week, and did not return with them until about 12 o’clock, but that it was not Thursday night, but was Monday, Tuesday or Friday night.' It was proven by persons living on the road beyond the “tie yard,” that about one week before Thursday, June 21st, Maggie Cherry and a tall, thin young man were driving, on that road, in a buggy, and that she had, shortly theretofore, been on the same
The foregoing is a statement of a sufficiency of the facts to make clear the reasons for the opinion at which ■we have arrived.
(a) The newly discovered evidence, which was relied "upon for a new trial, was as follows:
Upon the trial, Morris Greenberg could not fix the time, when he and Shapiro saw appellant and Maggie Cherry, together, on Center street, between 10 and 11 o ’clock, as being on Thursday night, the night upon which the murder occurred, but stated that it was the same ■evening upon which Shapiro passed his store, and said that he had been in the country that day, and which Shapiro stated was Thursday night, June 21st, and fortified his recollection, by the fact, that it was upon the night following the day upon which he gave a check to a man named Pillow, for a load of old iron, and the- check bore the date of June 21st, and he further fortified his recollection by the circumstance, that an acquaintance of his, by the name of Lorch, was in the city upon that night, and that he accompanied him to near the depot, when Lorch took his departure for Louisville. After the trial, an affidavit was procured from Lorch, in which he stated, that it was the night of Friday, June 22nd, that he was in Bowling Green, and not Thursday,. June 21st, and Shapiro, also, made an affidavit, to the effect, that he was mistaken, when he stated, that the night, upon which he saw appellant and Maggie Cherry, together was the same night, upon which he was in company with Lorch. These affidavits were filed with the motion for a new trial.
(b) The incompetent and prejudicial evidence complained of was as follows: When the appellant was testifying as a witness in his own behalf, upon his cross-examination, the Commonwealth’s attorney was permitted to ask him, over his objection, and he was required to answer the following questions:
“Q. You say you have been married twice? A. Yes, sir. Q. When was it that you first married? A. In 1908. <2. To whom? A. Lida Bohannon. Q. Where? A. In New Albany. Q. How long did you live with her? A. Six. or eight months. Q. Were you divorced? A. Yes, sir, she got a divorce from me. Q. What were the
It will thus be observed, that, although the only issue,, in this case, was, whether the appellant was guilty of the crime of murder, by killing Maggie Cherry, he was asked and required to give answers, which showed, that he had been guilty of seduction, in two instances, or at least of' the offense of fornication, under circumstances of bestiality from which seduction could be inferred, and had, also, been .guilty of an assault and battery upon one of' his wives, from whom he had afterwards been divorced,, and had been tried and convicted and punished for such offense. The offenses did not and could not have any connection with the crime, with which he was accused and for which he was being tried. The general rule is,, that when an accused is put upon trial for one offense, he is to suffer conviction, if at all, by evidence, which shows that he is guilty of that offense, alone. Very obvious reasons exist for the support of the soundness of' this rule. If permitted to prove that a defendant has-been guilty of other crimes, in no way connected with the one for which he is being tried, conviction would be-
The fact, that counsel for appellant inquired of him upon his direct examination, if he had been married and divorced, and he so stated, did not justify the inquiries made upon cross-examination, and the answers he was required to make. The direct examination only showed, that he had been twice married and divorced before his acquaintance with the deceased, and it was not improper for him to show that he was an unmarried man and eligible for marriage to the deceased. The evidence offered .of his guilt was the proof of a number of circumstances, and inferences, only, and it is apparent that the proof of other offences, with penalties, of which he had been guilty, was greatly prejudicial to his substantial rights, and makes necessary a reversal of the judgment. If guilty, there can be no doubt, that the severest punish
It is therefore ordered, that the judgment be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial consistent with this opinion.