280 S.W. 1104 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1926
Reversing.
The defendant, charged with murder, was convicted of manslaughter, and his punishment fixed at confinement in the penitentiary for 21 years. The circumstances under which this homicide was committed are fully set out in an opinion delivered upon a former appeal. See
One Murty O'Brian was charged with murder. He was put upon trial, the jury selected, sworn and the hearing of the evidence begun. Spilman, one of the jurors, announced that he was a member of the grand jury that had returned the indictment against defendant, and thereupon the court, on its own motion and over the objection of the accused, discharged the juror and impanneled another in his stead. O'Brian was convicted. He appealed and the judgment was reversed. See 6th Bush 563. As one of the reasons for reversal, O'Brian had insisted very strongly, upon a plea of former jeopardy, but the case was reversed on other grounds. Upon the return of the case, O'Brian entered a formal plea of former jeopardy. He was again convicted and appealed. This court held that his plea of former jeopardy was not presented on the first appeal, and reversed the case, but in doing so said:
"Conceding, however, that this question was properly before the court upon the former appeal, still no former adjudication gives to the state the right to take the life of the accused when he is entitled to an acquittal. The Commonwealth is not in pursuit of victims, but desires to inflict punishment only in a legal and constitutional way upon the guilty."
See O'Brian v. Com., 9 Bush 333.
We have already said that this case must be reversed for reasons already stated, and as it must be retried, the defendant should have a fair trial, and while we would not have reversed this judgment for the failure to give this instruction in this case, still, it should be given upon the next trial. In Andonique v. Carmen,
*268"Appellant does not complain that this was an erroneous statement of the law, but insists that the former opinion is the law of the case, and that the giving of the instruction quoted was error, because it was not given on the former trial, and there was no direction for it in the opinion. . . .
"The mere circumstance that an instruction, although a proper one, was not given on the first trial, and, therefore, not considered and approved by this court on appeal, does not of itself preclude the giving of it on the second trial."
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.