Cummins v. Commonwealth
Cummins v. Commonwealth
Opinion of the Court
delivered ti-ie opinion of the court.
We have seldom read a record where a conviction has been had with fewer mitigating circumstances than the one before us. The parties entered the residence of the deceased, where his friends and neighbors were enjoying his hospitality, and, without the slightest provocation, the appellant began to flourish his knife and make other demonstrations, evincing his intention to take possession and end the pleasures of the young people who, by invitation, had gone to the house of the deceased. All but the accused
There is no palliation or excuse for the murder, and whether Cummins shot or Weaver is immaterial; they are equally gpilty. The proof conduced to show that Cummins fired the pistol, and this is strongly corroborated from the fact that he entered the room with knife in hand, having then a murderous intent, without the slightest excuse. He was the leader of the gang, and while Weaver hung himself the next day, declaring beforehand that he fired the shot, still the proof conduces to show that the accused was the guilty party. The question of fact was with the jury, and what Weaver said about it was properly excluded. The co-conspirators were offered as witnesses to prove that there was no conspiracy, and that Weaver shot. The proof that they were together, and united in breaking up the party and taking this man’s life, is conclusive, and the court properly excluded their testimony.
Smith, one of the conspirators, as soon as he reached the house of Myers, took McGee Freese to one side and told him that he was going to raise hell there. Cummins, the
There are other facts showing a purpose on the part of these parties to invade the home of the deceased and assume control of the party; and whether the proper avowal has or has not been made as to what the parties would prove, the facts of the record present such a state of case as authorized the court to exclude them as witnesses. Smith and Snodgrass were both at the door when deceased was shot. They were then being invited in by Myers, he telling them that he was their friend; but instead of coming in, they would push first one and then the other into the door, and in their drunken condition took that man’s life in the door of his own house and in the presence of his family, without excuse, justification, or provocation, and in the midst of the poor man’s entreaties to behave themselves and enjoy, if they desired, the hospitality of his humble home. There is nothing in the case authorizing an instruction based on voluntary manslaughter.
The judgment below is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.