78 Ky. 586 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1880
deliverf.d tpie opinion of ti-ie court.
The appellant, George Meece, having been indicted for the murder of Jack Gardner, was tried and convicted of manslaughter in the Larue circuit court, and sentenced to hard labor in the state prison for twenty-one years. He is in this vcourt asking a reversal of the judgment. Upon the facts. of the record it would have been difficult to have given an instruction prejudicial to the substantial rights of the accused. It was a killing without justification or excuse, and the law of the case as presented to the jury was more favorable to the accused than the facts warranted. The first question necessary to be considered is in reference to the action of the court in receiving the verdict on Sunday. After a long and.
Some of the cases proceed on the idea that the delivery of the verdict is a mere ministerial act, while others place it on the ground of necessity, and hold that such proceedings are not void when the judgment on the verdict is entered on a subsequent day other than Sunday. Section 253 of the Criminal Code, with reference to cases submitted to a jury, provides, that “while the jury are absent the court may adjourn from time to time as to other business, but it shall be deemed open for every purpose connected with the cause submitted to the jury until a verdict is rendered or the jury discharged.”
The jury was compelled to consider the case on the Sabbath, or, if not, was in charge of the sheriff, with no power to adjourn or separate until the case was disposed of. When ready to deliver their verdict, it was more consistent with the observance of the Sabbath as a day of rest and for re
It is no more a violation of the-Sabbath to receive the verdict than to keep the jury locked up that they may consider the case.
It is urged by counsel that the record fails to disclose the fact that the prisoner was arraigned, or that any plea was entered in his behalf, and for that reason this court should reverse the judgment of conviction. The record fails to show that the plea of not guilty was entered, but it is manifest from the entire record that an issue was made, and the accused had a fair and an impartial trial. The court was engaged for several days in the trial of the cause; and after-numerous witnesses had been examined on the part of the Commonwealth and the defense with reference to the killing, the court gave nine instructions. In one the jury was told what constituted the crime of murder, and in another the crime of manslaughter, and further, that the burden of proof was on the Commonwealth to show the guilt of the accused
The law of the case as given was more favorable to the . accused than the facts authorized, and an issue directly made '.by the instructions as to the killing, and whether or not the • accused acted in self-defense.
It was a mere omission of the clerk to enter the plea of not guilty, and although not on the record, the instructions ..show plainly what the issue was. When the judgment of ■ conviction was pronounced the prisoner was informed of the ■nature of the indictment, the verdict, and the plea entered by him, and yet the question is made for the first time in this ' court that no plea was entered by the accused or issue raised.
The accused was present during the progress of the trial and until his case was finally submitted to the jury, and the attention of the court was at no time called to the fact that the plea had not been entered of record. It would be a mockery of justice, as well as trifling with the action of the court below, to hold that no legal trial was had upon the facts of this case. The court, in attempting to distinguish between the crime of murder and that of manslaughter, told the jury that if there had not been sufficient time between the difficulty at the store and the time at which the shooting
The accused and Gardner had a difficulty on the morning ■of the day preceding the night of the killing. The accused ■originated the trouble by abusing Gardner because his brother liad employed a lawyer to assist a negro who was litigating
The presence of the accused may be, and certainly is, éssential to the ends of justice in the trial of all criminal Offenses when his life or liberty is involved. When instructions are given by the court, or when the jury, returning from their room, desire to be further instructed, the presence of the accused is of the greatest importance, as he may be able to suggest to the court or his counsel some information that would throw additional light on his defense. He should also be present that he may except to the ruling of the court; but while this is the case, the court to which his appeal is presented is not authorized to reverse the
Judgment affirmed.