109 Ky. 685 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1901
Reversing.
Appellants, Lane Smith and Fanny Smith, were indicted in the Letcher Circuit Court for the crime of incest. The jury to whom the case was submitted returned a verdict finding them guilty, and fixing their punishment at confinement in the penitentiary for two years. Kentucky Statutes, section 1219. The only witnesses on whose testimony the conviction rests are Solomon Holcomb and Ferriby Frazier. Holcomb testified that in the month of September, 1897, he was working in a clearing for John Smith, the father of appellants, near his house, and at noon took dinner there; that after dinner appellants, Fanny and Lane, stepped out of the house; that he heard some sort of noise, and went out at the door, slipped to the corner of the house, and peeped around; that he then ’saw Fanny standing up against the house, and Lane had her clothes up, cohabiting with her; that the house was a a log house, with hirge cracks through the walls where they were standing, and they could have been seen on the outside by one bn the inside sticking his head out through the hole. He had a sea.r on his face at the time of the trial, the result of a difficulty between Mm and appellant Lane in the fall of the year 1898. Soon after this difficulty, he went before the grand jury and swore out the indictment in question. At the time of the alleged crime, Fanny was thirteen years old and Lane something over a year older. Ferriby Frazier stated that she was- out getting sang in the mountains about four miles from where appellants lived in the fall of 1897; that she saw a dog barking, and she went across the point to see whose dog it was, and then saw appellants down in the hollow having carnal intercourse. This witness was not before the grand jury, and -shortly -before the trial of the case she had said
It is also insisted for appellants that the court should have given the jury an instruction asked by them to the effect that the evidence of Ferriby Frazier could only be considered as corroborating the testimony of Holcomb. The indictment did not identify the particular act