192 S.W.2d 385 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1946
Reversing.
Subsection (1) of section
The grand jury of Knott County returned an indictment against appellants, James Hatfield, Forrest Sturgill, Mabrie Sturgill, Sid Blizzard and Haskel Hopper, of the offense denounced in section
The instructions of the court are not made a part of the record by any bill of exceptions, nor are they otherwise contained in the record; the reason for which — as stated in brief of appellants' counsel only — is, that when the bill of exceptions was prepared the instructions had disappeared and could not be found by the Clerk; but there was no motion made to supply them in the manner prescribed by law. However, the bill of evidence does contain, in narrative form, the evidence heard at the trial.
John Conley, the victim of the alleged offense, testified that he was returning from a country store in Knott County from which he had purchased some meat, and that at a point some 400 feet or more from his residence the defendants, traveling in an automobile, approached him from the rear and offered to carry him to his home, but he told them that the distance was so short that he could walk. But finally he agreed to and did get into defendants' car; that they passed his residence — although he informed them that it was the place he desired to make his exit — and stopped the automobile opposite a barn on the side of the highway about the same distance beyond his residence; that at that point all of the defendants, except one, got out of the vehicle, as did he, when, as he said: "They began striking and beating me and trying to get their hands in my pockets. No one ever ask me for any money or ever mentioned money, or asked me for anything." He also testified that only two of them tried to do anything to him, and they were Sid Blizzard and James Hatfield; that the defendant, Jack Hatfield, begged them to let him alone and not bother him, and that Forrest Sturgill remained in the car all the time; that the two who he claimed did bother or assault him knocked him down on the ground and ran their hands in his pockets: that K.E. Nichols *504 about that time drove up in an automobile from the opposite direction, with Kathleen Thacker as a passenger, when his attackers walked away, and he got up and went back to his home. Nichols and Miss Thacker testified that they saw some of the defendants and the alleged victim in a scuffle as though they were fighting, but neither they, nor the victim, testified that any weapon or other offensive instrument was attempted to be used, or even displayed, by any of the defendants, nor did they see anyone strike Conley. That testimony is all that was introduced by the Commonwealth.
On the other hand, defendant, Sid Blizzard, who was the first witness introduced by the defense, testified that he and his companions on Christmas Eve, 1944 — the date of the alleged offense — were in search of whiskey when they overtook their alleged victim (the witness, Conley), who flagged them to stop, which they did. He then asked them for a ride which they granted, and he got into their automobile. They then informed him of their vain search for liquor, and he stated that he had some in a barn just below his residence, where he had deposited it rather than keeping it in his residence, and that he would sell them a quart; that when they stopped opposite the barn Conley went into the barn and returned with a quart of whiskey which defendants then and there purchased from him; that after some of the defendants and Conley had taken two drinks therefrom the latter (Conley) took charge of the bottle with the remaining contents and started toward his home, when defendants objected, since they insisted that the remaining portion of the liquor belonged to them; that he did not heed their protests but continued to walk away with the remnants of the liquor, when two of them went to him and endeavored to take it away from him, which they did, but which he vigorously resented, and in their efforts to rescue their liquor he was pushed down by one of the two defendants who endeavored to obtain the liquor from him. That testimony was completely corroborated by the other defendants and by a disinterested witness. That account of the struggle or assault was all that the witnesses for the prosecution, Nichols and Thacker, saw or testified to. Notwithstanding the instructions are not contained in the record, it does contain the evidence so as to enable us to ascertain whether or not the conviction was or is erroneous. *505
Assuming (but without deciding) that the indictment is sufficient to properly accuse defendants of the offense denounced in section
Moreover, the same section prescribes for a minimum punishment of 21 years' confinement in the State Reformatory, or for a term of his life, or by death, but the verdict returned is for such confinement for only ten years. It might be insisted that defendants are in no attitude to complain of their being given a lesser punishment than that prescribed by the statute under which they were indicted, but with which we do not agree, since the jury might not have returned a verdict of guilty where the minimum punishment was as much as 21 years' confinement in the penitentiary, but were willing to convict with a punishment at ten years.
Assuming (but without deciding) that the offense dealt with by the sections of the statute supra — as well as the common law offense of assault and battery — are degrees of the higher offense, then the same criticism which we have made as to the higher one denounced in section
Lastly, we are convinced that the verdict of guilty of any of the offenses to which we have referred is overwhelmingly *506
against the evidence and so flagrantly so as to bring the case within the rule announced in the case of Nugent v. Nugent's Ex'r,
Conley denied the testimony adduced by the defendants as to his procuring and selling appellants the quart of liquor, but he was silent on other facts testified to by defendants, so that at best his testimony as to the way and manner he was assaulted is flatly contradicted by that given by each of the five appellants and which, as we have hereinbefore said, is fortified by the fact that no demand was made for the delivery of any property or thing of value belonging to the victim to appellants, and that they took from him nothing whatever, except the remnant of their own purchased quart of liquor, which he possibly was carrying at the time in an overcoat pocket, since the transaction took place in mid-winter, and if true, it was necessary for the procurer of the liquor to run his hand in the pocket of the prosecuting witness. We therefore conclude that in any view of the case appellants' motion for a peremptory instruction should have prevailed.
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed with directions to sustain the motion for a new trial, and upon another trial, if there should be one, and the evidence is the same, to sustain the motion, and for other proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.