196 Ky. 479 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1922
Opinion op the Court bt
Affirming.
The appellants were by separate indictment, each accused of the crime of wilfully and maliciously shooting at and wounding Harvey Miracle, with the intent to kill him, but, from the shooting* and wounding, he did not die, as denounced by section 1166, Ky. Stats. The shooting at and wounding of Miracle, by each of the appellants, occurred at the same time and place, and in the course of an attempt, as contended by the Commonwealth, by Miracle, a deputy sheriff to arrest the appellants. The witnesses in each case, were the same, and the defense of each defendant, was the same and by an agreement between- the Commonwealth’s attorney and appellants the prosecutions were consolidated, and the indictments tried together, as though they were properly indicted together. The trial resulted in a verdict of the jury, finding each of the appellants guilty, and fixing the punishment of each, at confinement in the State Reformatory for a period of three years. The motion of each to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial was overruled, and judgment was rendered against each of them in accordance with the verdict, and each has appealed. The grounds relied upon for a reversal of the judgment are (1) that the court failed to properly instruct the jury, as to the entire law of the case, and (2) the verdict is not sustained by a sufficiency of evidence.
To determine the soundness of the first contention it will he necessary to consider the issues made by the evidence. The evidence offered by tbe Commonwealth conduced to prove that the appellants were publicly drunk, armed with drawn pistols, talking and cursing in a loud and boisterous manner, in the presence of Miracle, who was a deputy sheriff, and who attempted to arrest them for a breach of the peace, and disarm them, when the appellants resisted successfully the attempt to arrest them, and in so doing, Shelton shot at and wounded Miracle, in.
The jury was instructed as to the right and duty of an officer to arrest a person, who commits a public offense in his presence, and to use such force as may be reasonably necessary to overcome resistance to him, and the duty of the one committing the offense to submit to the arrest. The appellants insist that the court erred to their prejudice in failing to instruct the jury, as to their right to resist an unlawful arrest, as the deputy sheriff was not armed with a warrant, and was not authorized to arrest them, unless they had committed a public offense in his presence, and that the evidence was contradictory upon the question, as to whether, they had committed any kind of an offense in the presence of the officer, and hence the jury should have been told, that, if it did not believe from the evidence, that they had committed a public offense in the presence of the officer, that the attempt to arrest them was unlawful, and that it was their right to use such force as appeared to be reasonably necessary to resist the trespass upon them. As an abstract legal proposition this contention is only partially sound. The principle which governs the right of a person attempted to be unlawfully arrested, to resist the arrest is thus stated in 21 Cyc. 803. “But where the attempt to arrest is unlawful in itself or by reason of the manner in which it is attempted, the person being arrested may resist with force; and, if in the course of the
The judgment is therefore affirmed.