13 Ky. Op. 484 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1885
DELIVERED THE OPINION OF THE COURT.
James Sparks and* William C. Craves having been tried together, each convicted of manslaughter, and sentenced to the penitentiary for twenty-one years under a joint indictment, charging them and one William Hodges with the murder of Walter Killion in pursuance of a previous conspiracy, prosecute this appeal. Hodges, demanding a separate trial, is not a party to the appeal.
The homicide was committed in a small village in Laurel county, called Lilly, a railway station, in front of and near to a storehouse where appellants, as partners, were engaged in selling goods, beer, and probably spirituous liquors.. In the side or end of the store-house fronting the street and railway depot, about fifty steps off, was a door, and a window on each side of it, and from one of the windows was fired at the deceased a shotgun, and from the other a pistol, both of which took effect, and very soon after receiving the last wound he fell and died. The evidence shows that a week or two before he was killed, without any sufficient cause appearing, the deceased took offense at Sparks, and to a witness made a threat of violence, cursing him at the same time.
The evidence is somewhat conflicting as to the precise attitude of the deceased when the first shot Avas fired from the windoAv at him. All the witnesses agree that his right side was towards the house, but there is evidence tending to show that when first fired at his right hand was raised, and that if he did not fire simultaneously with, he did do so immediately after, the first shot fired at him, though there is other evidence to the contrary.
The first error we will notice is the refusal of the court to permit a declaration of the deceased, made a short time before he advanced towards the- storehouse of appellants, to go to the jury. That declaration, accompanied with an oath, was that he was
The next error is the refusal of the court to permit either Sparks or Graves to testify on the trial. An avowal was made that the former would testify as a witness that Graves had entered into no conspiracy ..with him to kill or injure the deceased, and did not fire a single shot, and had nothing whatever to do with the killing; and that Graves would testify that at the time the deceased was shot he was drawing his pistol, and that there was no conspiracy or com■bination whatever between him and Sparks to kill or harm the deceased. If there was no conspiracy established by the evidence, each of the appellants was .entitled to the evidence of the other; for it is not the object of the law to give to the Commonwealth’s Attorney the arbitrary power to deprive a defendant on trial of evidence essential for his defense by drawing a joint indictment, and charging a conspiracy between him and the witness to commit the crime, when, in fact, no conspiracy exists. A conspiracy is cor
It is the province of the court to determine whether a conspiracy charged in the indictment has been proved in order to pass upon the question of the admissibility of the evidence of a person so charged, and, from necessity, the decision'of that question must, to some extent, be left to the discretion of the trial court; but to deprive a person charged with a criminal offense of the testimony of one jointly indicted, with him, it should be made to reasonably appear from the evidence of the whole case that such conspiracy existed, and this court should never hesitate to revise the action of the lower court when it appears that thereby a defendant has been unjustly and illegally deprived of material evidence.
We have looked in vain through this record for a single act or word by appellant Graves, showing, or tending to show, that he confederated and conspired with Sparks, or any one else, to take the life or to injure the deceased in any way, or that he aided or assisted any one in taking his life. No threat to do him injury, nor any ill-feeling on his part towards the deceased, is shown; on the contrary, it appears from the evidence that he and the deceased were not hostile or unfriendly, the evidence tending to show that the hostility of the deceased was towards Sparks, and not towards Graves. The only circumstance from which a conspiracy could, in any state of case, be in
The following instruction was asked by appellants, and, in our opinion, should have been given:
“If the jury believe from the evidence that defendants, or either of them, at the time of the killing, Avere in their oAvn house, and that they had reasona. able grounds to believe, and did believe, that Killion Avas then and there about to forcibly enter the same Avith the view of doing them, or either of them, great bodily harm, then they, or either of them, so believing, had the right to use such force as was necessary to prevent such entry and avert such threatened danger, even to the taking of his life.”
As there is no proof of a conspiracy, the court erred in .giving any instructions based upon such a hypothesis ; and, in our opinion, the court was not authorized to give any instruction based upon the assumption, that appellant Graves aided and abetted Sparks in killing the deceased, for there was not, as the record now stands; any evidence whatever implicating Graves.
We think the appellants were also entitled to an affirmative instruction upon the hypothesis of self-defense and apparent necessity.
For the reasons indicated, the judgment as to both appellants is reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial, and further proceedings consistent with this, opinion.