125 Ky. 126 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1907
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
Nathan Day, Edgar Patrick, and the appellant, Newton Reed, were jointly indicted by the grand jury of Morgan county for the murder of Charles Frisby. Day was separately tried for and acquitted of the crime charged. The indictment as to Patrick was filed away on motion of the commonwealth’s attorney. The appellant, Newton Reed, was accorded a separate trial, which resulted in his conviction of the crime of voluntary manslaughter at the hands of the jury, and their fixing his punishment at confinement in the penitentiary for a period of two years. He was refused a new trial, and by this: appeal seeks a reversal of the judgment of conviction.
The indictment charged that Frisby was shot and killed by Day, but that Patrick and appellant were at the time present, and “did aid, abet, unlawfully, feloniously, and of their malice aforethought, assist, and encourage the said Nathan Day to do the killing.” As shown by the hill of evidence, the material facts were that Day, as town marshal, had arrested Frisby for disorderly conduct in' the forenoon of the day of
Appellant admitted on the witness stand that he shot at Frisby more than once before he ran behind the building, but denied that he fired upon him after-wards. This denial was supported by at least two witnesses introduced in his behalf. Upon this point, however, the evidence was conflicting, for several bystanders testified that appellant did shoot at Frisby after he followed him behind the building, and it is argued in the brief of the assistant attorney general that Frisby was shot and killed by appellant, though it is equally apparent from the evidence that both Day and Patrick shot at him after he ran behind the building. Counsel’s contention that appellant fired the fatal shots rests upon the theory that they were received by deceased in the back, and that his back was toward appellant, when, as some of the witnesses stated, the latter shot at him behind the building. There was, however, one fact established by the evidence that' apparently militates against this theory, which is that the wounds upon the body of the
"While there can be no donbt from the evidence that appellant, Day, and Patrick each shot at deceased, it is difficult to determine whether the fatal shots were fired by Day and Patrick, or one of them, or whether they were fired by appellant. It is, however, insisted for appellant that he was only a principal in the sec- ■ ond degree in committing the homicide, and, in view of the acquittal of Day, named in the indictment as the slayer of Frisby, the jury should have been peremptorily instructed by the trial judge to acquit appellant. This contention is unsound. No better statement of the law on the subject here presented can be announced than is found in Roberson’s Kentucky Criminal Law, vol. 1, section 78, wherein it is said: “The distinction between principals in the first and second "degree is of no practical importance-. All the offenders may be included in the same indictment, which may charge the offense as done generally by all, or specially as done by one and abetted by the rest. Thus, if two or more persons are indicted as the actual perpetrators of a crime, they may be convicted as principals in the first degree, although some of them were merely aiders and abettors. So, when two persons are jointly indicted, the one as principal and the other as -aider and abettor, the one charged as principal may be found guilty of aiding and abetting, and the one charged as aider and abettor may be found guilty as principal. This is for the reason that each is the agent and instrument of the other. There is in law but one crime-. Hence each, although
Ye find that the doctrine announced by Boberson has been approved by this court in numerous cases. One of the best considered of these is Benge v. Commonwealth, 92 Ky. 1, 13 Ky. Law Rep. 308, 17 S. W. 146. The appellant Benge, Jere Hampton, and others were indicted for the murder of Joseph Bowling by cutting him wiith a knife; Hampton being charged in the indictment as the perpetrator of the deed, and appellant Benge and the other defendants as aiders and abettors. The facts stated in the opinion are strikingly like those of the case at bar, for they conduced to prove that Benge, though charged as
In Evans v. Commonwealth, 12 S. W. 768, 11 Ky. Law Rep. 573, the appellant was jointly indicted with others for the crime of house-burning. The jury were instructed that, if the burning was done by either of the persons indicted with appellant, and he-was present aiding or abetting, they should convict him. This instruction was approved by this court, in the following language: “The indictment charges the accused with the burning. It does not speak of aiding or abetting... If, however, the torch was applied by a codefendant of the accused, and he was then present, aiding and abetting, he was, under our law, a principal, and the indictment therefore authorized such an instruction. ’ ’
The authorities supra are fully supported by the following cases: Gaskins v. Commonwealth, 17 Ky. Law Rep. 352, 30 S. W. 1017, 97 Ky. 494; Young v. Commonwealth, 8 Bush 366; Thompson v. Common
Ky. Stats., 1903, section 1128, provides: “In all felonies, accessories before the fact shall be liable to the same punishment as principals, and may be prosecuted jointly with principals, or severally, though the principal be not taken or tried, unless otherwise provided in this chapter.” In construing the statute supra, this court said, in Commonwealth v. Hicks, 26 Ky. Law Rep. 511, 82 S. W. 265, 118 Ky. 637: “The very object of the statute is to make the punishment of the accessory entirely independent of the conviction or punishment of his principal.” While such is undoubtedly the object of the statute, it is likewise true that, in order to convict an accessory, whether before or after the fact, it is necessary to establish the guilt of the principal. At any rate, this seems to be the conclusion expressed in Begley v. Commonwealth, 82 S. W. 285, 26 Ky. Law Rep. 598, in the opinion of which, after quoting the above statement from Commonwealth v Hicks, supra, it is said: “So in this view of the statute (and we think it susceptible of no other construction), it is dear that the conviction of appellant could not be made to depend on that of the principals, or any of them, or even upon their being in custody, although, in order to convict as an accessory before the fact, it was necessary upon his trial for the commonwealth to establish the guilt of the principals; or some' of them, of the crime which he procured them to commit. ”
The statute was intended to abrogate the rule of the common law which required the principal to be disposed of before the accessory. An accessory is one who is not the chief actor in the offense, nor present at its commission, but is in some way con
We have considered the objections urged to the instructions that were given the jury by the court. The instructions are, in some respects, inaptly expressed ; but, on the whole, they substantially conform to the law, yet do not contain all the law of the case. Another should have been given defining the duty and powers of Day as a peace officer and of the posse acting with him in attempting to arrest Frisby. According to the e\ddence, Day was attempting to arrest him the second time that day. There can be no doubt from the evidence but that a few minutes before Frisby was killed he committed a breach of the peace by shooting-his pistol in the street. It is useless to discuss the power of the acting police judge who saw the act of lawlessness, or to decide whether he had the right without issuing a warrant for Frisby, to command Marshal Day to arrest him, for the latter had the right as a peace officer to make the arrest without a warrant, and without an order from the acting police judge to do so, as Frisby fired the pistol in his presence and hearing. In view of the turbulent conduct of Frisby throughout the day, the threats that he made against Day for having arrested him in the forenoon, and the fact that he was armed, Day had. reasonable ground to apprehend that Frisby would resist a second arrest, and in all probability use his pistol in doing so. Under such circumstances, Day acted properly in summoning appellant and Patrick to assist him to make the arrest. In approaching Frisby, Day used the same forbearance toward him that characterized Ms conduct throughout, telling him that, if he did not go home peaceably, he would have to arrest Mm for shooting on the street. Instead of
In arresting one guilty of a misdemeanor, the officer is never justified in killing merely to effect the arrest, and this is true whether the offender be fleeing to avoid arrest or to escape from custody. To kill him in either case would be murder, but, under some circumstances, it may amount only to manslaughter, if it appear that death was not intended. If the officer meet with resistance, he may oppose sufficient force to overcome it, even to the taking of life, provided the offender is resisting to such an extent as to place the officer in danger of loss of life or great bodily harm, and the officer must use no greater force than is reasonably necessary, or apparently so, for his protection, or to prevent the prisoner, if in custody, from effecting his escape by overcoming the officer by violence or force. But, in making an arrest for a felony, a different rule obtains. In that event the officer may use such force as is necessary to arrest the felon, even to- the extent of killing him when in flight. This rule also applies to one charged with felony, though he be innocent. But so highly does the law regard human life that, if a felon can be arrested without the taking
The court should therefore have given an additional instruction embodying the principle referred to, because what would have justified Day, the officer, in shooting or killing Frisby, would amount to justification to appellant as a member of Ms posse. While the original offense, for which the attempt to arrest Frisby was first made was merely a misdemeanor, yet, when he shot at the officer and his posse, as they approached Mm, or rather as they were leaving him at his command, he became guilty of a felony, to arrest him for which they had the right to use such force as was reasonably necessary, as well as to exercise the right of self-defense. And if, under these circumstances, and in order to effect his arrest, the officer or appellant, as a member of his posse, shot and killed Frisby while trying to escape, it was excusable in law. The failure, therefore, of the court to give such an instruction as we have indicated, was necessarily prejudicial to appellant, and doubtless prevented him from having a fair trial.
For the reasons indicated, the judgment is reversed,