201 Ky. 199 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1923
Opinion of the Court by-
Reversing.
In the indictment under which appellant, Bill Combs, was tried in the Letcher circuit court, he and one John Moore were-accused of unlawfully, wilfully and feloniously conspiring, confederating and banding together with the unlawful purpose of killing and murdering John Sexton, and under the evidence and instructions of the court he was convicted of murder and his punishment fixed at confinement in the penitentiary for life. His motion for a new trial being overruled, he has appealed, urging a number of grounds for a reversal of the judgment; but after a careful examination of the record, we feel it necessary to consider only the last, viz.:
“Because the jury rendering the verdict in said case was prejudicial to the defendant and its findings contrary*200 to the law, and in violation of defendant’s rights, and, further, not supported by evidence to sustain such a verdict or the judgment of the court.”
On January 13, 1922, John Sexton was killed in the home of appellant’s wife, Anna Combs, from whom it appears he had been separated for a period covering six or eight months; although the evidence discloses that he as Well as a number of other men, including the deceased, visited there frequently. About seven o’clock on the night of January 15, Sexton (who lived some distance away on Camp branch), with a companion, Sam Adams, visited Anna Combs ’ house, where there were some three or four women and seven children, five of whom belonged to Anna Combs and two to one of the visitors; and possibly an hour later John Moore and the appellant, Bill Combs, also made their appearance. The evidence discloses that these women were all of questionable character and that a general air of depravity pervaded the premises; but upon this particular occasion, throughout the entire testimony, there is not a scintilla of evidence furnished that would lead to the suspicion that any trouble was brewing or that any of the visitors had gathered there with a malicious or sinister intent, but rather on the contrary it would appear that all of them were in a particularly good humor, and three of the witnesses for both appellant and appellee testified that words of good cheer and of a most friendly nature were constantly indulged in, especially between the men, one of whom, Sam Adams, had accompanied John Sexton and left shortly after the arrival of appellant and John Moore. The festivities continued, interspersed with, more or less drinking out of a bottle supplied by John Moore; though at no time does the evidence show that any of the men were drunk, as the supply of liquor seemed very limited, in consequence of which Moore stated that he would return to the home of Monroe Collins, a brother-in-law of appellant and with whom appellant had been making his home since the separation from his wife, and augment their stock with a bottle he had left there, but upon reaching Collins’ residence, appellant.suggested that they retire for the night as he was sleepy and did not care.to go out again. To this Moore demurred and said that he would go over on Smoot creek to the home of one Johnny Adams and purchase an ample supply of whiskey, and requested appellant to lend him his pistol, he having left his at
After reviewing the evidence carefully and scrutinizing with exceeding care the slight evidence that might tend to show that appellant was or could have been pos
Judgment reversed.