191 Ky. 138 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1921
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
The appellant, Stanley Duke, upon an indictment accusing him of the crime of murder, by shooting and
The grounds upon which he assails the fairness of his trial, are that :
1. The court erred to the prejudice of his substantial rights in the admission of testimony which was incompetent as, evidence against him.
2. The court erred in excluding competent evidence in his behalf.
3. The court erred in the instructions to the jury.
The above stated grounds for reversal will be considered in their order, but before doing so it will be necessary to give as condensed a statement as practical of the salient facts established or attempted to be established by the evidence, and the contentions of the parties with reference thereto in order to make the discussion of the grounds relied upon for the reversal of the judgment, intelligible.
The appellant was a young man thirty-three years of age, a farmer, and a manufacturer of illicit distilled spirits, and who, also, went around in his community habitually armed, the weapon with which he committed the homicide being an automatic pistol which could be discharged in rapid succession nine times, before recharging. This weapon, however, he claims, to have habitually carried upon his person to protect himself from apprehended violence at the hands of his victim Wells, who' resided three or four miles away. The victim, Wells, bore an unsavory reputation as being a dangerous character when aroused or drinking, and who, also, went about habitually armed, and when slain had a revolver concealed upon his person. He had served a term in the penitentiary at Eddyville for a felony. At some time or other he had been shot in the leg, which stiffened his ankle and made him slightly lame in walking, and the appellant had, also, suffered a gun shot wound, which he claims had lessened his ability to do manual labor. The accused and Wells were enemies of several years standing, but, the record does not disclose the original cause of their mutual animosity. There was evidence to the effect, that each of them had threatened the other with death. About three years' before the horn-
The theory of the prosecution is, that the accused, prompted by hatred or fear, or probably both, sought out the deceased, provoked a quarrel with him and shot him to death to gratify his malice toward him, while the accused claims, that he came upon the deceased suddenly, and without knowledge of his being at the place, when deceased with a threat to kill him started to do so, when he, from his knowledge of the animosity of deceased toward him, his previous threats to do him violence, his known character for violence, and his apparent purpose to carry the threats into execution, believed in good
(a) After Elmer Overton had testified as a witness for 'the appellant, the Commonwealth’s attorney introduced a witness, who as a stenographer, had taken shorthand notes of a conversation between the county attorney and Overton, a short time after the homicide, in regard thereto, and over the objections of the accused was permitted to prove by the stenographer, statements made by Overton to the county attorney in regard to the homicide, which were inconsistent with and contradictory of certain statements made by him. upon the trial, and it is now insisted that the evidence of the stenographer was incompetent upon the ground that the statements made upon the trial, which were proposed to be contradicted, were concerning immaterial and collateral matters, and, also, that it was an undertaking'to prove and make substantive testimony of the occurrence of certain facts by proving that'the witness in the conversation had with the county attorney, had stated that certain facts occurred, the occurrence of which the witness denied upon the trial. That the credibility of a witness may be impeached by proving that on another occasion he has made a statement inconsistent with the one made by him upon the same subject upon the trial, is authorized by our Code of Practice, as well as the rules of the common law, is not questioned, but the right to impeach by proving inconsistent statements, of the witness, is in all cases restricted to the contradiction of statements made upon the trial, which are relevant to the issue. The witness cannot be impeached by inquiring concerning collateral matters and then contradicting' him in regard thereto. When a party asks a witness concerning a collateral matter, he must abide by his answer. Loving v. Commonwealth, 80 Ky. 511;
(b) The ruling of the court, in excluding testimony offered by him, of which the accused complains, is that he offered to prove by the clerk of the court, that prior to the killing of Wells, in the year 1916, Wells was indicted, convicted and committed to the penitentiary for the crime of accessory before the fact to the crime of shooting and wounding the accused. There is no pretense that the clerk had any personal knowledge of the shooting and wounding of the accused, or the connection of the deceased with it, and the offered evidence was doubtless excluded, and properly so, upon the well settled principle that the best evidence of a fact must be offered, and anything less than the best evidence within the power of a party to produce is not competent, and the only way to prove the existence and contents of records, which are in existence, is the production of same. The bill of exceptions, then recites that the appellant offered as evidence an indictment accusing the deceased of counseling and advising and paying Elgin Davis to willfully and maliciously shoot and wound the accused, but upon objection the reading of the indictment as evidence was excluded by the court. The indictment is copied into the bill of exceptions and it shows that the deceased was indicted for such a crime, and the name of the accused, as well as the names of five or six other persons, were endorsed upon it as witnesses. The record which must necessarily have been made as to the disposition of the indictment, was not offered, nor is it embraced in the bill of exceptions. TIence, the one question before us is the admissibility of the indictment as evidence, alone. It is very clear that an indictment, which is a mere accusation, would not be competent evidence to prove anything alleged in it, or anything beyond its. own existence. If Wells did procure another to attempt to kill the accused, it is clear that the latter was entitled to prove such fact,
(c) The fourth instruction is criticized as not defining correctly, the right of the accused to defend himself, under the state of facts, which according to his theory and insistence, existed at the time and place of the homicide. It is insisted that the instruction made the right of the accused to kill the deceased depend upon whether or not in the opinion of the jury, the necessity existed for the actions of the accused and not upon the belief of the accused at the time. It is furthermore, insisted that the instruction limited the force, which the accused might exert in his defense to what was necessary or appeared to the jury to be necessary for that purpose. If the instruction was subject to such interpretations, they would be fatal to its correctness, as a declaration of the rights of the accused, if the facts were such as he contends. The decisions of this court are uniform in holding that the necessity for taking human life in self-defense, is not an actual necessity, as may appear to the jury at the time of the trial, but it is the necessity which the accused may, in good faith, believe, existed at the time and place, and the circumstances under which he acted. The grounds upon which his belief is founded, however, must be such as would induce a belief of the necessity in a reasonable mind. The force which one may exert in his self-defense, is not limited to the actual force necessary to effect it, but is limited to the force which appears to'one when assailed, to be necessary, at the time and place, and under the circumstances which may appear to him to exist. In the force exerted, however, he can not go beyond what appears to him in the exercise of a reasonable judgment to be necessary, and that can be no less than the taking of the life of his adversary, if in the exercise of a reasonable judgment such appears to him to-be necessary. Biggs v. Commonwealth, 164 Ky. 227; Heck v. Commonwealth, 163 Ky. 518; Tolliver v. Commonwealth, 161 Ky. 81; Reynolds v. Commonwealth, 185 Ky. 379; Wagner v. Commonwealth, 32 K. L. R. 1185; Austin v. Commonwealth, 28 K. L. R. 1087; Coyne v. Commonwealth, 29 K. L. R. 340. The instruction complained of, though not aptly drawn, and has the fault somewhat of reiteration, substantially directed the jury to find the accused not guilty, if it believed, from the evidence, that, at the time
There are, indeed in the record some minor errors, such as appear in nearly every trial by jury, but they were not such as to in any degree, in our opinion, effect the substantial rights of the accused.
The jury heard the evidence, and saw the witnesses. A conclusion that the homicide on the part of appellant was an unnecessary slaying, finds support in the evidence, and we do not feel justified in disregarding the finding of the jury upon the facts.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.