122 Ky. 626 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1906
OpiNiok op the Court by
— Affirming.
Appellant was tried in the Monroe Circuit Court under an indictment returned by the grand jury of that county which charged Mm with the willful murder of Jeff Harlan. By the jury’s verdict he was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter, and his punishment fixed at confinement in the penitentiary twlenty-one years. The lower court refused Mm a new trial, and he has appealed.
Appellant’s defense was accidental homicide. According to the evidence, Harlan was shot and killed by appellant at the door of the store of John Roton, in Tompkinsville, on the night of December 24, 1904. Appellant and deceased were about the same age, twenty-one years, had known each other from boyhood, and were apparently the best of friends. According to the testimony of John Roton, in whose store appellant was then employed as a salesman, the latter, in a conversation with Mm after the killing of Harlan, and as they were following the body to the hotel, to which it was removed, said: “I would not have killed Jeff for anytMng on earth. He was the best friend I had.” No motive for the homicide was shown upon the trial, unless it grew out of something that took place in a conversation between appellant and deceased in front of the store a few minutes
There were several things said and done by appellant immediately after the shooting that appeared to be inconsistent with his innocence; for instance, though numerous inquiries were made in his presence by individuals of the gathering crowd as to the identity of the slayer of Harlan, he made no reply, and upon being directly asked by several persons, among them a brother and sister of deceased, who had shot him, he said he did not know, and in reply to one or two of these inquiries he said deceased must have been shot by a stray ball, as he was not shot from the store, and, furthermore, that, if the shooting had occurred from the store, it would have been manifested by powder smoke in the store. These statements, attributed to him, appellant denied; but we think the great weight of the evidence was to the effect that they were made by him, and
Appellant testified in his own behalf to the effect that he and deceased Were intimate friends, and that no trouble or misunderstanding had ever arisen between them; that on the night of the homicide no such conversation occurred between them as was related by Crawford, though he admitted that he and deceased were together out in front of the store when Crawtford made his appearance; that he had with Crawtford the conversation about some article he wished to purchase from the store; as testified by the latter; and that, leaving deceased in front, he and Crawford went into the store to get the desired article, after which appellant went out of the store, took a drink of whisky with Crawford, then returned, and had a talk with Harlan, who had in the meantime entered the store. According to¡ appellant’s further statement he then went to where two- pistols were kept under the counter one- out of repair and unloaded, and the other loaded and in proper condi-' tion for use, and getting, as he believed, the unloaded
Appellant insists that the lower court erred in instructing the jury, and in refusing certain instructions asked by him. The instructions complained of are numbered 1 and 3a. The first advised the- jury in what state of case they might find appellant guilty of murder. It is properly worded, and, if this were not true, it could not have been prejudicial, because it did not influence the jury; for they found appellant guilty of voluntary manslaughter as authorized
As the killing of Harlan was admitted by appellant,
We do not think the instruction in question pre^-judiciai. It, as well as instruction No. 2, correctly defined voluntary manslaughter,- though the wiord “voluntary!’ is not used in No. 3a. In Montgomery v. Com., 26 Ky. Law Rep., 356, 81 S. W., 264, it is said: “It is essential to the commission of voluntary manslaughter that the homicide should have been Willfully and intentionally committed, or under such
In Spriggs v. Com., 113 Ky., 724, 24 Ky. Law Rep., 540, 68 S. W., 1087, after a review of all the authorities in this State, it was held: ‘‘ The cases cited seem amply to sustain the proposition that, under our law, the common-law offense of manslaughter has been subdivided by carving out of it the statutory crime of voluntary manslaughter, and leaving involuntary manslaughter to be dealt with as at common law. The term ‘manslaughter’ has, therefore, become a generic term, covering two specific offenses or degrees of homicide, punishable, the one under the statute, by confinement in the penitentiary, and the other under the common law, by fine and imprisonment in jail. The common-law learning of the text-writers upon the offense of manslaughter can have no place in the definition of the'two' deg'rees of homicide which have been carved out of manslaughter by the effect of our statute, however apt such learning may have been under the ancient practice, when the punishment of both grades was a matter resting in the discretion of the judge. ’ ’ The conclusion stated in the opinion supra Was deduced from the cases of Connor v. Com., 13 Bush, 714; Buckner v. Com., 14 Bush, 601; Trimble v. Com., 78 Ky., 176; Bush v. Com., 78 Ky., 268; Smith v. Com., 93 Ky., 318, 14 Ky. Law Rep., 260, 20 S. W., 229; Com. v. Matthews, 89 Ky., 287, 11 Ky. Law Rep., 505, 12 S. W., 333. But it is conceded by the learned writer of the opinion that the distinction asserted is ignored by the court in the following cases: Sparks v. Com., 3 Bush, 111, 96 Am. Dec., 196; Chrystal v. Com., 9 Bush, 669; York
It is, however, clear that none of the cases referred to hold that if a person intentionally, or wantonly and recklessly- discharge a pistol in a store, street, or other public place where people are wo-nt to be or congregate, and death thereby results to one of them, such killing would not be voluntary manslaughter, punishable by statute by confinement in the penitentiary from tWoi to twenty-one years- It is likewise true that they contain nothing that impairs the common-law definition of involuntary manslaughter or that questions the propriety of inflicting upon one guilty of that offense the punishment' of a fine, or imprisonment in jail, either or both, as by the common law provided. As already stated, the court might safely have omitted instruction 3a; but, as it was ,in substance-but a repetition of instruction No-. 2 as to voluntary manslaughter, the error in giving it was harmless. The first of the two- instructions refused appellant by the court might properly have been given; but, as what both were intended to express to the jury was better presented' by the one instruction given on appellant’s motion, it was not error to refuse them.
It is insisted for appellant that the court erred in refusing him a new trial upon the ground that the jury were permitted to separate during the trial, and were also' guilty of misconduct in going upon and viewing the premises where the homicide occurred without permission of the court, and in the absence of appellant and his counsel. As to the first complaint, it appears from an affidavit in the record that on one occasion during the progress of the trial one
It is, however, beyond our power to reverse this case for such errors as these; the right to- do so being expressly denied by section 281, C'r. Code, which this court has repeatedly construed to be mandatory. Howard v. Commonwealth, 118 Ky., 1, 80 S. W., 211, 25 Ky. Law Rep., 2213; Curtis v. Commonwealth, 23
Judgment affirmed.