193 Ky. 495 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1922
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
John Sexton, who was convicted of assault and battery and his punishment fixed at a fine of $100.00 and fifty days in jail, seeks a reversal of the judgment.
According to the evidence for the Commonwealth, the facts are as follows: On December 17, 1920, as Claude Collins and Orbin Hammons were passing the home of the defendant, the defendant came out and said: ‘ ‘ Claude, I am going down to your house to see your father. I
The defendant further testified that S. E. Combs, a justice of the peace of Letcher county, issued a warrant for him charging him with the offense of a breach of the peace, by reason of the acts charged in the indictment; that said warrant was issued on the 20th day of December, 1920, and that he had nothing to do with having or causing the same to be issued; that after same was issued he appeared before said justice of the peace, and entered a plea of guilty to the charge in the warrant, and that the justice of the peace thereupon entered judgment against him, imposing upon him a fine of one dollar, which he had paid. He also offered in evidence a copy of the judgment duly certified by S. E. Combs, the justice of the peace before whom the trial was had. Thereupon the Commonwealth objected to the reading of the certified copy of the judgment, and the court, after inquiring of
The first ground urged for reversal was the refusal of the court to admit evidence of the trouble that occurred between the defendant’s children and the prosecuting witness. The law, out of respect for the frailty, of human passions, may look with an eye of some indulgence' upon a violation of good order occasioned by provocation so recent and immediate as to induce a presumption that the violation was committed under the immediate influence of the passion thus wrongfully excited, but where there has been time for deliberation, the peace of society requires that men "should suppress their passions, and neither reason nor law will suffer them to claim a diminution of their responsibility for their misconduct. Rochester v. Anderson, 1 Bibb 428. Here, the assault and abuse of one of defendant’s children, 'and the punishment of the other in the school room did not occur immediately before or at the time of the difficulty, but took place some time prior thereto. Therefore, the assault committed by the defendant took place after the lapse of a sufficient cooling time, and must be regarded as the result of deliberation. That being true, the evidence referred to was not admissible either in justification of the offense, or in mitigation of the punishment. Slater v. Sherman, 5 Bush 206; 2 R. C. L. 554.
Another contention is that the court erred in not sustaining the defendant’s plea of former conviction and dismissing the prosecution. It has long been the settled rule in this state that a judgment of acquittal or conviction for a breach of the peace, unless obtained by fraud or collusion, is a bar to a subsequent prosecution for assault and battery. Commonwealth v. Hawkins, 11 Bush 603; Commonwealth v. Foster, 3 Metcalfe 1; Commonwealth v. Bright, 78 Ky. 238. It is also the rule that, upon a trial of a plea of former acquittal or conviction, the burden is upon the accused to show that he was convicted of the identical offense for which he was being tried, and the burden of avoiding the plea by showing fraud or collusion is upon the Commonwealth. Commonwealth v. Crowder, 177 Ky. 268, 197 S. W. 643. It ap
Other errors are relied on, but as probably they will not occur on another trial, we refrain from discussing them.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for a new trial consistent with this opinion.