198 Ky. 158 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1923
(Opinion of the Court by
•Affirming’.
Between 5:30 and 6:00 o ’clock on the afternoon of August 12 (Saturday), 1922, Emmett Gilbert was shot near a buggy shed about one hundred yards in front of his dwelling on Cat creek in Powell county. Early the next morning he was carried.to a hospital in Winchester, Kentucky, where he died that afternoon or the next day from the effects of the wound. Appellant, C. C. Daniel, was indicted by the grand jury of Clark county- charging him with the wilful murder of the deceased, Gilbert, and upon his trial he was convicted of the offense of voluntary manslaughter and punished by the jury with confinement in the penitentiary for the term of twenty-one years.
Up the hollow about half a mile from the residence of the deceased, some one was operating a moonshine still and he was on that day working at it. About two o’clock in the. afternoon defendant and Lawton Lacey went to the still, evidently, as appears from, the record, to get some whiskey. They found there the deceased and Sid Allen. The parties did more or less drinking and after about two hours the deceased and defendant engaged in a difficulty .in which they clinched and in the scuffling broke some of the jars of whiskey that were sitting upon the ground. That difficulty grew. out of a charge that defendant had made against deceased accusing the latter, at some time prior thereto, of stealing some whiskey, and in it the damn lie was passed, which the defendant and Lacey say was used by deceased against him, but Allen says he does not know who used that epithet. The parties were in their shirt sleeves and if defendant had any pistol at that place no one knew it or saw it, nor did he offer to draw it. They were separated and somewhere about 4:30 o’clock they dispersed, Gilbert leaving first with a jug of whiskey, Allen going in' another direction with a jar of the same goods, and Lacey and defendant then left, with the former carrying a sack with a jug.or some jars of the same goods in it, but whether defendant had any of the whiskey when he left is not made clear. They went direct to the house of the deceased who was at the time eating his supper, the other members of his family having finished their supper before he arrived. At the still Lacey had a' German pistol which he offered to sell to deceased for $30.00, but no trade was consummated. He carried that pistol along when he and defendant went to- the home of deceased, and when they arrived there they asked if the latter was at home and being informed that he was defendant requested deceased to shave him, but before that they were asked to eat their suppér which they declined and stated
The defendant testified that when they got to the buggy shed they commenced talking in the usual way, but does not state any .subject discussed. Finally the sjibject of purchasing the pistol was brought up and deceased said that he would like to try it and that if he was pleased with it he would give $30.00 for it, provided Lacey would accept moonshine whiskey as part pay; that he then suggested that it was too dark to try the pistol
It is proven by a witness for the Commonwealth that defendant aJbout seven o’clock that night and after the shooting, came to his house and tried to borrow a pistol. Either that night or the next morning, he told two witnesses who testified for the Commonwealth that he “guessed” or “expected” that he had killed deceased the night before and that the reason he did so was that the deceased was coming on to him with a butcher knife, and he exhibited to one witness a wound on one of his hands
The Commonwealth offered to prove a dying declaration by the hospital physician which, as testified to by the witness, was: “He said: ‘No, the man came to my house for a shave, and after I shaved him, he asked me to go to the barn and take a drink, and then he told me he was going to shoot me, and he proceeded to shoot me.’ He said he wasn’t armed, and wasn’t expecting to have any trouibe.”' The court excluded it, presumably upon the ground that it was not made in extremis. However, if that was the ground, we think the court erred, since the physician testified that it was made about 3:30 o’clock on the same afternoon when deceased died and that he stated at the time that “He felt like he was going to die,” and after the doctor had told him that he would die from the effects of the wound. Since, however, that declaration was not admitted we cannot consider it on this appeal, but from the brief outline of the evidence which we have made, it is apparent that it was sufficient to submit to the jury the issue of defendant’s guilt or innocence, and likewise sufficient to sustain the verdict returned, and ground (1), must therefore be denied.
Under this ground it is vigorously insisted that the court erred in permitting the Commonwealth to prove the business, or occupation in which deceased was engaged. The witnesses testified that he was a farmer and that he cultivated a small acreage in corn and a garden and when not so employed he hired out to others and did such work as he could obtain. It is claimed' that such testimony was, in substance, proof of good character
The alleged newly discovered evidence is that of two witnesses, who said in their affidavits that -shortly prior to the difficulty deceased told them “that there were two men who had been interfering with his business and that he would have to get rid of them and that he intended to do it,” and that one of them was the defendant and one of them was John Rogers.
Defendant filed an affidavit for continuance on account of the absence of material witnesses, one of whom was Wesley Mayfield, and in that'affidavit he stated that the absent witness would testify, if present, to identically the same threat made a short while before the difficulty, which affidavit the Commonwealth consented might be read as the testimony of the witnesses, but defendant did not do so or offer to read it. He thus had in his possession the same character of testimony which he or his counsel did not regard of -sufficient importance to introduce.' We think under the circumstances his ease should be treated as though it was introduced, in which event the affidavits of the discovered witnesses would be cumulative on the issue ’ as to threats generally, but not as to any specific one and for'which character of testimony a new trial will not -ordinarily be granted, unless it is of such an overwhelming nature and upon such á material point as to render it-reasonably probable that a different verdict would be returned. Moreover, the rule applied in this court 'is to hesitatingly graiit new trials upon this grouiid because it-is one ’which-may be-easily
Lastly it is insisted that the court failed to instruct the jury upon the whole law of the case in that he should have given an instruction on accidental shooting, and in support of this contention the cases of Eastridge v. Commonwealth, 195 Ky. 126; Wayne v. Commonwealth, 154 Ky. 698, and Crum v. Commonwealth, 196 Ky. 807, are relied on. Other later cases on the same point are: Davis v. Commonwealth, 193 Ky. 507, and Terrell v. Commonwealth, 194 Ky. 608. The rule as to the duty of the court in instructing the jury, as stated in the Davis case, supra, is: “ That the law applicable to every state of case supported by the evidence to any reasonable degree should be given to the jury is an axiom, but it is equally true that the law applicable to a state of case which the evidence does not conduce to support need not be given in an instruction to the jury, as the questions at issue would not be elucidated by instructions on abstract legal principles not supported by the facts, though such an instruction is not always held to be prejudicial.” In all of the cases where it was held that the instruction on accidental shooting was proper it appeared from the evidence that the defendant, when he fired the fatal.shot, did not intend to' do so, although he may have been engaged at the time in the reckless handling of firearms. In this case defendant not only stated to witnesses who testified for the Commonwealth that he had killed or “guessed he had killed” deceased, but he was asked “Were you conscious
Finding no error prejudicial to the substantial rights of the defendant, the judgment is affirmed.