62 S.W.2d 56 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1933
Affirming.
Bud Jones and two others were indicted in the Laurel circuit court for the crime of willful murder, charged to have been committed by shooting and killing Ed Lewis. On a separate trial Jones was convicted and his punishment fixed at confinement in the penitentiary for the period of his natural life. In the preliminary statement of the case to the jury, the attorney for the commonwealth stated:
*219"If these three (defendants) testify as witnesses in this case we will show by every good citizen in North Corbin and in Corbin that they are a bunch of outlaws."
This was objected to by the defendant, followed by a motion to discharge the jury. The court admonished the jury to disregard the statement. It was the duty of the jury to obey this admonition. The presumption is that it did so, in the absence of a contrary affirmative showing. McGraw v. Ayers,
Jesse Leisure, a witness for the defense, stated on examination in chief and also on cross-examination that he did not see Bud Jones with a pistol on the night Ed Lewis was killed. On further cross-examination, he *220
was asked concerning a statement he had made at the courthouse, in London, shortly after the killing, in the presence of Judge Gross and others, wherein it was stated he was in company with Bud Jones on the night of the killing and saw him with a 45 automatic pistol, on depot street in Corbin, and that he had three pints of liquor. Leisure denied that he had made the statement to the persons or at the time or place named in the question. It is argued here that this question was incompetent. A witness may be impeached by contradictory evidence showing that he had made statements different from his present testimony, provided he is first inquired of concerning his previous statements with the circumstances of time, place, and persons present as clearly as the examining party can present them. Civil Code of Practice, secs. 597 and 598; Blanton v. Com.,
Lastily the accused urges that the evidence is not sufficient to support the verdict. The evidence in behalf of the commonwealth shows that at the completion of the "shakedown" or search of Ed Lewis by the accused, he began to strike Lewis on the head, and punch him with a pistol, Lewis begging, telling him that he did not want to get into a fight, or have any trouble, when the accused shot him, Lewis falling and dying instantly. Jones then directed his companions to pick him up and take him wherever they wanted to; John D. Strong (a codefendant herein) reached down and caught him (Lewis) by the legs and said, "You damn fools help throw him in the car." The accused and his companions at once left for their homes. They narrate an entirely different story. They testified that when Lewis and Smith returned from Moore's store with the "chaser," Lewis drank it, and, for this reason, another "chaser" was procured at the store of Moore, when all parties present proceeded to take a drink of liquor, the accused drinking the last of the contents of the bottle; *222
when Lewis took exceptions to his drinking all of it and began to reprimand him for it, at the same time striking at him with his hands, the accused backing away, when Lewis drew his knife from his pocket and made at the accused, and it was then that he struck Lewis on the head with his pistol; this failing to deter or stop Lewis, he shot him. This synopsis is sufficient to show a direct, positive, conflict in the evidence, fully authorizing the verdict of the jury, and that in behalf of the accused justifying an acquittal. The weight and effect of the evidence were matters wholly within the province of the jury. Clark v. Com., 105 S.W. 393, 32 Ky. Law Rep. 63; Weathers v. Com.,
Perceiving no error and none being pointed out in the brief of accused warranting a reversal, the judgment is affirmed.