300 S.W. 330 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1927
Affirming.
Appellant was tried under an indictment charging him with the murder of Elhannon Collins, and was found guilty of manslaughter. His punishment was fixed at 21 years in the state penitentiary. He appealed to this court, and the judgment was reversed on the sole ground that the instructions given by the lower court were erroneous. Saylor v. Com.,
It is further complained that the lower court admitted other incompetent evidence, and counsel quotes evidence illustrating his general statement that much incompetent evidence was allowed by the court. The evidence quoted relates to a portion of the dying declaration testified about by some of the witnesses. It was testified to that decedent, in making his dying declaration, said that Giles Saylor, a brother of appellant, shot him first in the back, and that he and appellant then began shooting about the same time. This was all a part of the res gestae, and for that reason could be embraced in a dying declaration. We find very few objections to the evidence made by the appellant except to that portion of the evidence relating to the dying declaration, and a careful examination of the evidence where objections were made convinces us that the court was not in error in overruling the objections. It is true that much of the evidence was elicited from witnesses for the commonwealth through leading questions, but counsel for appellant at the time generally did not deem the form of the questions sufficiently prejudicial to require an objection, and we concur in that position.
No errors are pointed out in the brief filed in behalf of appellant which would enable us to conclude that he did not have a fair trial.
Judgment affirmed. *132