82 Ky. 424 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1884
DELIVERED THE OPINION OF THE COURT.
Appellant having been tried • under an indictment •charging him with the murder of Martin Cody, found .guilty and sentenced to confinement in the penitentiary for life, appeals.
The homicide occurred after nightfall, on the corner of Twelfth and Grayson streets, near to a grocery store and saloon, in the city of Louisville, and there was evidence introduced on behalf of the Commonwealth, which tended to show the offense charged was committed. - -
The first witness introduced for the defense was one ~W. A. Cain, who testified he saw the first 'part of the
The next witness called for the defense was Ed. Kenedy, who, upon being asked if he had heard deceased say any thing about appellant, answered in the negative. He was then asked what he had said, as a witness, when testifying before the judge of the court,, upon the application of appellant for bail. But the-question being objected to, and the witness not answering, he was asked if what he said then was true. To-that question he answered, “No; Charley Rankin made-it up, and influenced me to say it. I don’t intend to-tell a lie.” Being again asked what it was he swoi’e to-before, he answered that he then swore that he was sitting on the corner of Fourteenth and Madison streets, and Martin Cody came along and stopped and said: “Do you see that man,” pointing to Rankin, “I got it-in for that man ; he insulted my sister. I bursted his-head with a brick, and the next time I will finish him.”
Upon further interrogation the witness detailed, circumstantially, the time and places when the story for him to swear to, and which he did swear to, was, as he said, made up. And in the course of the interrogation it was developed that the day before he was called as a witness in this case, he and his mother, together, went, to the office of the Commonwealth’s attorney, and informed him that what he had sworn to, upon the motion.for bail, was false. But he never, before being introduced as a witness on the trial, informed any one besides his mother and the Commonwealth’s attorney
Thereupon counsel for the defense moved the court to discharge the jury and continue the case, and, in support of the motion, filed an affidavit by appellant. In that affidavit he stated substantially that he was sur- ■ prised by the statement and conduct of the witness, Kenedy, who, before being summoned, voluntarily gave • information to appellant’s counsel of what he subsequently stated on the motion for bail, and he, appellant,. fully believed that said statement was true, and had. not the slightest knowledge it was false, or any information before the witness was sworn on this trial that he-would swear it to be false; that the Commonwealth’s, attorney, with full knowledge before the witness was called, that his testimony was false, told him not to so inform appellant’s counsel. He further stated that he believed if the opportunity was afforded him by a continuance, he could show that the witness, Kenedy, had been induced to change his testimony, and that, without fault upon his (appellant’s) part, he had been put to great disadvantage, and could not safely continue the trial before the jury then empaneled.
On the next day of the trial, appellant’s counsel' asked that' the witness, Cain, might .be recalled. But-the witness failing to. appear, counsel for appellant, .stated to the court that since the adjournment of court they have ascertained that he testified falsely in his.
The Commonwealth’s attorney thereupon moved to expunge the testimony of the witness, Cain, from the record, stating that he was informed he testified without being sworn, and the motion not being objected to, the evidence was, by the court, directed to be withdrawn. But subsequently it was directed by the court to remain for the consideration of the jury, and they were instructed to consider it.
Appellant’s counsel again moved the court to dis■charge the jury and continue the case, and, in support ■of the motion, he filed an affidavit stating in substance that he had no knowledge, before the witness, Cain, testified, that he had not been sworn, or had been in the penitentiary, and that he had, by the flight of the witness before being discharged, been deprived of the ben■efit of his testimony given on oath.
Both motions for a discharge of the jury and continuance were overruled by the court.
Although the conduct of the witness, Cain, was cal•culated to have an influence upon the minds of the jury unfavorable to the defense, we do not think that was a sufficient ground for discharging the jury and continuing the case. For, in the first place, it was not the fault •of the Commonwealth that the witness was permitted to testify without being first sworn, even if such was the case, nor that he fled before being discharged by ■the court; and, in the second place, his whole testimony
But the question arising upon the other motion is. more serious.
It is a rule, sanctioned by both reason and authority, that a party is not entitled to a new trial on the sole • ground of surprise occasioned by a witness whom he. has called failing to give the evidence, or giving evidence different from that he was expected to give. And that rule is as well applicable on a motion to discharge the jury and discontinue a trial already begun, as on a motion for a new trial.
In every such case it should be made to appear that injustice or injury has resulted to him, without his fault, which might be remedied by a continuance or new trial, as the case may be.
It is not made to appear by the affidavit of appellant, or' otherwise, that a continuance of the case would or could have resulted in supplying the evidence which he expected from the witness, Kenedy, nor that he went into the trial, relying upon the evidence of Kenedy, in the-absence of another witness, by whom he could, at another trial, establish the same fact.
It, therefore, follows that appellant, was not entitled to a continuance of the case upon the ground of the injury done to him by the failure of the witness,. Kenedy, to give, on the final trial, the evidence he was expected to give, and which, from his testimony upon the application for bail, appellant had reason to believe he would give.
But in all criminal prosecutions the accused is, under' the Constitution, entitled to a fair trial by an impartial
That the minds of the jury were, by the conduct and statements made in their x>resence by the witness, Kenedy, and the action of the Commonwealth’s attorney, prejudiced against appellant to such a degree as to deprive him of an impartial trial, we think is manifest.
Subsequent to the introduction of the witnesses, •Cain and Kenedy, one or more witnesses testified in behalf of appellant, whose evidence .tended to show that he killed the deceased, if not in self-defense, under such circumstances as the jury might have concluded reduced the offense charged to the degree of manslaughter. But the conduct and statements of Ken§dy had a tendency to throw suspicion upon the honesty • and good faith of appellant, and .the integrity of all the witnesses thereafter introduced by him, and to prevent the jury from impartially considering their ■ evidence.
Whether or not it was the duty of the Commonwealth’s attorney, when told by Kenedy he had sworn falsely upon the trial of the question of bail, to give the information to appellant’s counsel, and thereby prevent them being entrapped by a perjured witness, is a question of professional courtesy, which it is not the province of this court to decide. But he had no right to compel the witness to conceal the information from appellant’s counsel; for, in view of the fact that the witness, after making the confession, was at the will of the Commonwealth’s attorney, subject to indictment
Thus is presented the startling fact, that, by the use •of official power, that which it was essential to the -defense of appellant for his counsel to know, and they had a right to know, was purposely kept concealed from them and. him.
It is not necessary to speculate whether Kenedy would, but for the action of the Commonwealth’s attorney, have given the warning it was his duty to give to .appellant’s counsel or not. For the latter, himself, states the reason Kenedy did not do so was that he told him not to do it.
There is nothing in the testimony of Kenedy, or else•where in the record, which shows that appellant directly ■ or indirectly suborned the witness', Kenedy, or attempted to do so. On the contrary, he states in his ¡affidavit that he believed Kenedy’s testimony, upon the motion for bail, was true. But the result was as disastrous to him, as if he, instead of his son, Charles Rankin, had been charged with doing it, particularly .■after the unnecessary and ill-timed remark of the Commonwealth’s attorney, that his object in telling the witness not to inform appellant’s counsel he would not testify as he had previously done was to show the methods of the defense.
Not only were appellant’s counsel thus entrapped, but he was made to suffer for alleged misconduct of his .son, illegally and wrongfully put in evidence before the jury, which he is not shown by the record before us to have been at all cognizant of, or responsible for.
In our opinion the court‘erred, to the prejudice of-
Wherefore the judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial and further proceedings consistent with this opinion.