16 S.W.2d 769 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1929
Affirming.
Joe Kidd shot and killed Major Hatfield. The grand jury returned an indictment for murder against Kidd, upon which he was convicted of manslaughter, and condemned to serve a sentence of 20 years and 1 day in the state prison. He has prosecuted an appeal to this court, insisting that the trial court erred in several particulars, which will be stated and determined in the course of the opinion.
1. A motion to quash the indictment was orally submitted to the court and overruled. The basis of the motion, as stated by appellant's counsel, was that the indictment had been made without an order of resubmission after a former grand jury had investigated the case and failed to indict. The record does not disclose whether an examining trial had been held, or whether the case had been considered by a previous grand jury, or whether any prosecution had been dismissed. In the absence of facts appearing of record to bring the case within the purview of sections 115 and 116 of the Criminal Code, the court could not properly sustain the motion. If the motion was made under section 117 of the Criminal Code, the same observation would apply, as the record does not show any previous submission of the charge to a grand jury. Cf. Criminal Code, secs. 157, 159, and 160. The question, in any event, is addressed to the discretion of the circuit court (Sutton v. Commonwealth,
2. It appeared from the evidence that Kidd, at the time of the homicide, was a deputy sheriff. It is argued from this circumstance that he was entitled to an instruction of the character approved in Fleetwood v. Commonwealth,
3. Criticism is leveled at the instructions given by the court. It is said that the instruction on accidental killing failed to exclude the element of volition, but the instruction does not merit the criticism. The jury was told in plain words that, if the killing was accidental, as thereafter defined, the jury should acquit the defendant. The definition of "accidental," as used in the instruction, was the unintentional, unexpected, and unforeseen happening of the shooting. The fact that the instruction was incorporated in two separate numbered paragraphs did not militate against its accuracy, as the jury was bound to know that instructions must be read together and considered as a whole. Hobson, Blain
Caldwell on Instructions to Juries, sec. 685. Denison v. Com.,
Another criticism is that the instructions on murder and voluntary manslaughter were combined in a single instruction. No fault with the substance of either instruction is found, but criticism is that they should have been given separately. The argument is inconsistent with that made respecting the one on accidental killing, and is plainly unsound. The jury was told to find Kidd guilty of willful murder if the shooting was done with malice aforethought, but guilty only of voluntary manslaughter if the shooting was done without malice aforethought, but in sudden affray, or in sudden heat of passion. They were further directed to fix the punishment in accordance with the degree of crime, if any, which they found to exist. Plainly, the instruction was correct, and not capable of confusing the jury, or susceptible to the construction that it required a conviction of the lesser offense, if appellant was acquitted of the greater one.
4. It is also insisted that the court failed to give to the jury the whole law of the case. This argument is *90
predicated upon an assumption that there was sufficient evidence to warrant the court in giving an instruction upon involuntary manslaughter, and another upon the careless and reckless use of firearms. Rains v. Common-wealth,
Three witnesses for the commonwealth made out a plain case of willful murder, whilst an equal number of witnesses for the appellant gave versions of the transaction indicating that the shooting was done in self-defense. The credibility of the witnesses is exclusively for the jury. The case was fairly submitted to that tribunal, and we may not, upon conflicting evidence, revise or reverse its verdict. Perkins v. Commonwealth,
The judgment is affirmed.