Stamp v. Com.
Decision Date | 22 June 1923 |
Citation | 253 S.W. 242,200 Ky. 133 |
Parties | STAMP v. COMMONWEALTH. |
Court | Kentucky Court of Appeals |
Appeal from Circuit Court, Jefferson County, Criminal Branch Criminal Division.
Walter P. Stamp was convicted of manslaughter, and he appeals. Affirmed.
Huggins & Oldham, H. M. Denton, and Meritt O'Neal, all of Louisville, and M. M. Logan, of Bowling Green, for appellant.
Thos B. McGregor, Atty. Gen., Lilburn Phelps, Asst. Atty. Gen and Joseph Lawton and Frank M. Drake, both of Louisville, for the Commonwealth.
At twilight on a June evening in 1922, J. Smith Russell, with his wife and infant daughter, were driving north on Third street boulevard, in Jefferson county, when appellant, Walter P. Stamp, also in an automobile, approached from the rear, crowded the Russell car to the sidewalk, and fired five shots into the Russell car, killing J. Smith Russell instantly, and wounding Mrs. Russell in the head, so that she lost one eye, and slightly injured the infant daughter, who was on the rear seat, and then dashed away in his car, leaving his victims to die.
The indictment in this case accuses appellant, Stamp, of the willful murder of J. Smith Russell, and this is the crime for which he was tried and found guilty of manslaughter. This is the second trial, his punishment being fixed at 15 years' confinement in the state penitentiary. The judgment on the first trial, when he was given a death penalty, was reversed by this court for manifest errors. 243 S.W. 27. He appeals again, insisting that the judgment should be reversed because of alleged errors committed against him.
After carefully reading and studying the transcript of evidence presented on this appeal, the court quite agrees with appellant, Stamp, that the judgment should be reversed if error can be found justifying it, because the verdict is not the result of a fair and impartial trial, but our reasons for so concluding are very different from those assigned by him. We think the commonwealth, and not Stamp, has a right to complain of the result.
The Russells were quietly and peacefully driving along the right side of the avenue at the time of the homicide. It was their custom to be upon this avenue on evenings like that and at about the same hour. This fact appears to have been known to Stamp, who hated them because he conceived, without evidence worth mentioning, that they had kept his wife from returning to him after he had cruelly and unmercifully abused her and left her a second or third time. The deceased, so far as the record discloses, did not know that appellant intended to do him injury, and was entirely taken by surprise when Stamp began to fire into the Russell automobile. Certainly Russell had done nothing whatever at the time of the shooting to provoke the deadly shots, although Stamp claims self-defense. Stamp could not have been jealous of Mrs. Russell, for she had not taken his wife from him, as he asserts Russell had done, nor did anything but that which was commendable. The innocent little child, sitting on the rear seat of the car, at whom he fired one shot, injuring her but slightly, had not seduced his wife.
After stating that it was the custom of the deceased, Russell, to take his wife and baby for a drive in the afternoon on Third avenue, and that while driving on the afternoon of the homicide she saw appellant in the twilight driving his car near that of deceased in a hesitating way, Mrs. Russell, wife of the deceased, stated in answer to the question:
On the first trial appellant, Stamp, did not testify, but filed his own affidavit, which set forth in detail a complete alibi. He then denied that he fired the shots, or knew anything about the commission of the crime. He filed the affidavit of two or three other persons, sustaining him in his false alibi. On the last trial, when the commonwealth had so enmeshed him in the evidence showing that he had not only fired the fatal shots, but had planned willful murder before doing so, he changed his defense from that of alibi to self-defense, and the unwritten law, in the name of which so many atrocious crimes have recently been committed.
Appellant testified on the last trial that the deceased, Russell, was reaching for his hip pocket, as though to get a pistol with which to shoot appellant, when appellant, to save himself, fired the fatal shot. The evidence shows beyond question that Russell was not armed. He had no firearms. No pistol was found upon his body or about his automobile. He had none. So this defense is not worthy of consideration. In view of the other false statements, which appellant now admits he heretofore made, the most damning defense of all is that in which this vile criminal undertakes, in order to save his neck, to traduce the good name of his wife, the mother of his child, by pretending that he thought the deceased, Russell, and his wife had been guilty of criminal conversations. The evidence shows that, while he lived with his wife at different times before the homicide, he was very abusive to her, and frequently wrongfully accused her of intimacy with men. His letters written shortly before the homicide in an endeavor to procure other persons to induce his wife to take him back prove beyond peradventure that he did not believe his wife had been untrue to him, or that she was anything less than a virtuous, good woman. One letter, dated April 15, 1921, reads:
Granting, however, that all that appellant testified concerning his suspicions of his wife and the deceased were true, he was no less a murderer when he fired the fatal shot. We do not believe from the evidence, however, that the wife was guilty of the charges which her wicked husband now makes against her. The overwhelming weight of the evidence is to the contrary.
Appellant relies upon several alleged grounds for reversal of the judgment, and, if the court can find merit in any one of them, it will not only be its duty, but its pleasure, in this case to reverse the judgment, in order that the state--the people--may have a fair trial, and that this vile criminal may pay the penalty of a red-handed murder by taking his seat in the electric chair. His first ground is stated in brief of counsel as follows:
"The court erred in overruling appellant's motion for a change of venue, and his motion for a special venire to be called from another county."
This appellant bases upon sections 194 and 207 of the Criminal Code, the second of which appears inapplicable. Section 194 of the Criminal Code reads:
"If the judge of the court be satisfied, after having made a fair effort, in good faith, for that purpose, that, from any cause, it will be impracticable to obtain a jury free of bias in the county wherein the prosecution is pending, he shall be...
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