150 Ky. 663 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1912
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
On the first or second day of October, 1897, Hiram Fee was arrested and placed in the Leslie County jail at Hyden, Kentucky, on the charge of having murdered one Robert Asher. He employed J. M. Bicknell and Judge William Lewis, members of the Leslie County
On the return of the case additional testimony was taken, and on final hearing the chancellor entered judgment in favor of appellee. From that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.
The proof in the case as now presented is in substance as follows:
J. M. Bicknell and William Lewis both say that they were employed to represent Hiram Fee. They were to receive $150 for their services. Not desiring to undertake the employment until their fee was secured, they approached Hiram Fee on the subject of security. He stated that he owned the tract of land in question. That appellee- and his wife had deeded the land to- him and his wife, and that the deed had been burned when his house was destroyed. Appellee was in Hyden before the examining trial, and consulted them several times with reference to the defense of his son-in-law. In order to assure themselves that Hiram Fee’s statements were correct, they talked to appellee with reference to the deed. He stated in substance that he had made the deed in question, that the title was in Hiram Fee and his wife, who had a right to make a mortgage, and that the attorneys need not be afraid to take the mortgage. Their statement is corroborated by the evidence of L. D. Lewis, who claims to have been present when the conversation took place. Lillie Witt, who stayed with Gr. W. Morgan at the time Hiram Fee was in jail, says that he saw appellee in Hyden before Fee’s examining trial. John Fee, a brother of Hiram Fee, says that he was present when the deed from Hall and wife to Hiram Fee and wife was executed, acknowledged and delivered. James Sizemore saj^s that about six months before Hiram Fee killed Eobert Asher, he swapped coats with Fee. There were some papers in the pocket which he took out and handed to Fee who remarked that one of the papers was his land deed. He also says he stayed all night with Fee the night before Fee killed Eobert Asher. On the next day he heard Fee say he had gotten his land deed burned up, but he was not uneasy about the old man making him another. Henry Sizemore says that he had a conversation with appellee, William Hall, after Hiram Fee had been tried and sent to the penitentiary for the killing of Eobert Asher, concerning the Eidner’s branch
Opposed to this testimony is the testimony of Hall that he was not in Hyden at all on the occasion in question, and did not make any representations to the attorneys with reference to the deed. Some six or seven witnesses testified that he was not present at the examining trial of Hiram Fee. He also introduces several witnesses who claim to remember that a day or two before the examining trial, which occurred about 14 years before they testified, they saw Hall on his way to Harlan, and he said he was going to Harlan. Some three of four witnesses also testified that Hiram Fee, at the. time of the execution of the mortgage, was not living on the land in controversy and had not been for sometime.' He had left it and gone to another tract which he had purchased from Jane Hall. He gave as his reason for leaving the land in controversy that his father-in-law had declined to give him and his wife a deed to it.
The veracity of William Fultz and one of the Size-mores is impeached, and the veracity of two or three of appellee’s witnesses is also impeached. While an attempt was made to impeach John Fee, the attempt was not very successful.
The fact that appellee, Hall, was not in Hyden on the day of the examining trial is immaterial. This may be true, and yet he may have been there before the examining trial, and may have made the statements attributed to him by the attorneys. The testimony of the numerous witnesses who say that about 14 years prior to the time they testified, and on a day or two before Fee’s examining trial, they saw Hall on his way to Harlan is of little probative value. We have the testimony of four persons who say he was in Hyden before the examining trial, and the testimony of three witnesses, who are unimpeached, to the effect that he said that he had deeded the land to Fee and wife, and that the attorneys need have no fear about taking the mortgage, as the title was in them. As to the execution of the deed, John Fee’s evidence is very convincing, and the circumstances rather favor the appellants. Hiram Fee was appellee’s son-in-law. Naturally, appellee was interested in seeing that he was properly defended. It is much more reasonable to con-
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded with directions to enter judgment in favor of appellants.