214 S.W.2d 1018 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1948
Affirming.
Neither of the grounds relied upon to reverse the judgment of voluntary manslaughter with two years' imprisonment can be sustained. One is that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain the conviction, and the other, that there was a prejudicial error in an instruction.
All of the witnesses were introduced by the Commonwealth except the defendant himself. Lugene Campbell, the owner of a taxicab at Estill, had his driver, the defendant, Robert Lee Brown, called Buster Brown, to start on a journey to Ashland on the evening of May 2, 1947. Along the way they picked up Scott Cornett and Kenneth Roberts. Roberts, a policeman, gave his pistol to Brown to be locked up in the glove box of the automobile, and threw the holster back of the seat. The parties stopped at a saloon above Prestonsburg called "Welcome Inn." Toward midnight, a fight broke out between Campbell's party and another group of men, although the testimony is that of this party, only Campbell and Roberts were actually involved when the killing occurred. Beer bottles and fists were the weapons used in the general affray. There is no specific evidence as to the part the defendant had in this fight. When several men had been knocked down to the floor, two shots were fired which struck Fred Stilton in the chest and killed him instantly. Campbell, Cornett and Roberts saw the defendant with the pistol in his hand immediately afterward. Dills testified that he thought the man with the pistol was wearing a taxicab driver's cap. The witness was not asked to identify the defendant as that man. There are several conditions or circumstances that might have been more satisfactorily established. Sarah Gibson and Mary Carmody took the pistol away from Brown after wrestling with him. Other witnesses say they did not see the defendant in the room, but some of them had already been knocked out, or were not in position *488 to see him. It appears that Brown and his party were strangers to the others, as was Stilton to them. Campbell gave Brown the key to the car in order that he might take the wounded man to a hospital. Brown left alone in the taxicab, and was arrested before morning at his home some distance away. He then told the officer he had not heard of anyone being killed.
The defendant denied the testimony of Campbell and Roberts that he had been given the pistol to be locked up in the car. He testified that when the fight started he got in the car and went directly home, leaving his employer, Campbell, and companions there; that he knew nothing about the killing.
The citation of any precedent is unnecessary to support the decision that the evidence justified the conviction.
In some jurisdictions where the defense is an alibi, a self-defense instruction need not be given. But, in accordance with the weight of authority, it has been the rule in this jurisdiction from the beginning that such an instruction, as well as one on the defense of another person, should be given in every case where the evidence affords an inference that the homicide was committed under such circumstances. This is so even though the defendant claims that he was not present. In the instant case, the only justification for such an instruction is the evidence that the defendant's companions were engaged in a fight with a number of other men. Therefore, only liberality in the consideration of the legal rights of the accused warranted the giving of the instruction about which complaint is made. Moreover, the defendant had the benefit of the absence of a qualification that would have denied the right of self-defense and the defense of others if they had begun the fight as aggressors or had voluntarily engaged in a mutual combat.
The given instruction authorized the acquittal of the defendant if the jury believed from the evidence that, if at the time he shot Stilton (if he did so shoot) he believed, and had reasonable grounds to believe, that Stilton and others of his party, acting in concert with him, were about to inflict death or great bodily harm upon him, the defendant, or Roberts, or Campbell, or Cornett, "or it reasonably appeared to the defendant that such *489 was the care, and it further reasonably appeared to him that the only reasonably safe means of protecting himself, or them, against such danger, real or apparent, was to shoot the said Freddie Stilton, or others of his party acting in concert with him, and the shooting and killing of the former was done under these circumstances."
In Tompkins v. Commonwealth,
The instruction given in the instant case with respect to the use of "reasonably safe means" of protecting himself or others was that prepared by this Court to be given on another trial in Watkins v. Commonwealth,
The judgment is affirmed.