195 Ky. 600 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1922
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
On luis trial in tlie Whitley circuit court under an indictment charging him and Owen Carr (sometimes referred to in the record as Kerr) with the crime of malici
The errors relied upon for a reversal of the judgment by appellant’s counsel in their brief are: (1), the admission of incompetent evidence offered by the Commonwealth over appellant’s objections, and (2), that the court misinstructed the jury and failed to instruct it upon the whole law of the case. "We will determine these grounds in the order named, but it will be necessary to a proper understanding of them to make a brief state- • ment of the facts, which the testimony as a whole tended to establish.
The prosecuting witness, who is alleged in the indictment to be the victim of the crime, was Milford Bray who lived with his wife on the top of Pine Mountain in "Whitley county near the line between it and Bell county. Between a quarter and a half mile beyond the residence of Bray lived appellant with his wife and one infant child, and about 75 or 100 yards from his residence the defendant, Carr or Kerr, resided on his place as his tenant, and whom we will hereafter refer to as “Carr.” Between two and three miles beyond the residence of. appellant and down the mountain appellant’s father-in-law, Bob Jones, and his family resided just in the edge of Bell county. Some time during the day of June 22, 1921, Bray shot and wounded a dog belonging to appellant which he testified was worrying his sheep. Bray and his wife, who were introduced by the Commonwealth, testified in substance that between 8 and 8:30 on that night they were aroused from their sleep, having theretofore retired, by a call at or near the gate of, ‘ £ Hello Milford;” that Bray got up and went to the door and the one who had called him invited him £ 1 to. come out and let us have a talk a while,” when he answered that he was in his night clothes and for the person to come in, to which answer was made, “You killed my dog, did you?” to which Bray answered, “I don’t know but Í tried to. He was on my sheep.” "Whereupon the person at the gate said: “G— d — • you, I will kill you,” and immediately fired a shot gun, the load from which struck Bray and filled his body with small shot practically from
Garret Teague, a witness introduced by the Commonwealth, testified that he went with appellant to the latter’s house on the afternoon of the day in question, arriving there between 2 and 3 o’clock, and that Owen Carr was there when they first arrived; that some time thereafter Carr went away and at about sundown returned and informed appellant that Milford Bray had shot his dog and'had sent him word that if he “didn’t like it to come down and he would give him the same kind of a dose;” that immediately Carr took a shot gun from a rack over appellant’s door and the latter took a pistol, belonging to witness, and started toward the residence of Bray when witness, without effect, admonished them not to do so. Witness heard some shots in the direction of Bray’s house but did not remember the number, and in a short while defendants returned, and witness with appellant and his family left and went to the residence of Bob Jones in Bell county where they spent the night and a part of the next day.
Appellant and his co-defendant, Carr, in their testimony, admitted that they were with the witness, Teague, at appellant’s house on that afternoon, but they denied that either of them singly or both of them together went to the home of Bray at any time that day or that they were in front of his house or called him out or shot at him and that they knew nothing of the shooting of appellant’s dog until the next day. They corroborated Teague, however, upon the fact that he went with appellant and his family to the home of the father-in-law in Bell county where they spent that pight and some of the next day. The father-in-law and one or two members of his family, a brother of appellant and one or two other witnesses attempted to fortify the alibi by testifying that appellant was at the faher-in-law’s home somewhere between 6 and 7 o ’clock that night when it was yet daylight and that he remained there throughout the night. No one looked at
Taking up now the grounds urged for a reversal, and directing our attention first to ground (1) we find that the only action of the court necessary to be considered thereunder was the admission of certain testimony by the witness, Teague, given by him in rebuttal, contradicting the witness Carr after the proper foundation had been laid for its introduction. Carr, when on the stand, was asked by attorney for the Commonwealth if he did not state in the presence of appellant and Garret Teague, after the first two had returned from the home of Bray on that night, that “he (Carr) heard Milford Br.ay fall after they shot.” Carr denied making such statement and Teague was introduced in rebuttal and testified to it over appellant’s objections, but the court did not tell the jury the purpose for which it was admitted, and it is this alleged improper evidence of which complaint is made under this ground. If we were to view this evidence as admissible only for impeaching purposes it is doubtful if it, though admitted without any admonishment by the court, was sufficiently prejudicial to authorize a reversal of the judgment. That under the circumstances the correct practice would have been for the court to have told the jury the purpose for which it was admitted is held in the case of McDaniel v. Commonwealth, 185 Ky. 608, and many eases referred to and reviewed therein. But it is not every technical error, whether it
In 16 Corpus Juris, 658, the rule governing the introduction of statements and declarations made by a co-conspirator or a co-defendant after the commission of the crime and in the presence of the defendant on trial is thus stated: ‘ ‘ Statements or declarations by one conspirator or co-defendant, although made after the termination of the conspiracy, are competent against another conspirator or co-defendant yhere they were uttered in his presence and he assented thereto; or where, in some other way, he acted in an incriminatory manner in connection with the statement. The necessary assent may be evidenced by a direct admission of the truth of the statement; by a failure to deny its truth where the circumstances are such as to make it reasonable to suppose that, if the statement were untrue, he would have denied it.” Among the numerous cases cited in the note supporting the text from almost all of the states in the Union is that of Lyon v. Commonwealth, 29 Ky. L. R. 1020, in which this court in its opinion said: “No statements of the other parties to the crime were admitted except those made in his presence, at a time and under such circumstances as would naturally call for a response from him.” This rule of criminal practice, we think, is of practically universal application, and is almost daily followed by trial courts of this Commonwealth. The testimony is in the nature of an admission by silence or acquiescence against the interest of the one on trial and is to be considered by the jury for whatever it is worth. It is not to be introduced unless coming clearly within the rule permitting it; i. e., that the defendant on trial was present and must have heard it, and that it was made tmder such circumstances as that he was called upon to or could deny it if untrue, and that he had an opportunity to do so.
The question is elaborately discussed and the grounds upon, as well as the caution with which, such statements
In the case of Hayden v. Commonwealth, 110 Ky. 631, the accused was convicted of the crime of grand larceny for which offense he and another were jointly indicted. At his trial he was asked if he did not hear his co-defendant state in the presence of the officers that she threw the stolen goods out of a window and that he (appellant in that case) was there to grab them for her and that he did not deny that statement when she made it to the officer. He denied hearing any such statement made bj his co-defendant, and the officer was afterwards called by the Commonwealth in rebuttal and testified that the co-defendant did make that statement in the presence of appellant and that he then and there denied it. The opinion of this court in reversing the judgment for that alleged error treated the question as if the testimony was introduced wholly for contradictory purposes and never referred to or discussed the question whether it was admissible as substantive testimony. The opinion seems to have been bottomed upon the Merriweather' case, supra, but in doing so we think the court misinterpreted that opinion, since, as Ave have seen, the facts of the two eases were entirely different. In the Merriweather case the defendant on trial was manacled and in custody at the time of the making of the alleged statement and it was held that he was in no condition to freely act and that under such circumstances his silence could not be interpreted as an
Under ground (2) it is urged that the court erred in not giving to the jury the self-defense instruction, and in support thereof the cases of Rutherford v. Commonwealth, 13 Bush 608; Ratchford v. Commonwealth, 16 Ky.
Perceiving no error prejudicial to the substantial rights of appellant, the judgment of conviction is affirmed.