37 P.2d 52 | Kan. | 1934
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The appellant, Hugh Hooper, was charged with the murder of Frank Lahey on August 24, 1931. At the trial the fact that defendant shot and killed Lahey was not controverted. The defense interposed was justifiable homicide — self-defense. Defendant was found guilty of manslaughter in the first degree. He has
The record discloses facts which may be stated as follows: About 1918 appellant moved into the southeastern part of Grant county with his family, consisting of his wife and one daughter. He purchased 560 acres of farm and pasture land and began running a small herd of cattle. By the time of the homicide in question he had increased his land holdings to 800 acres, and in addition to that leased land which he operated. In the summer of 1931 he and one C. E. Workman together operated a pasture of 1,480 acres, the land in which they owned or leased. It consisted of the east half of section 22, all of section 23, the north half and the northwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 26, and the east half of the east half of section 27, all in township 30 S., range 35 W., and which was inclosed as one pasture. The Cimarron river enters this pasture near the southwest corner and flows northward into the southeast corner of section 22, thence northeast, east and southeastward, leaving the pasture near the southeast corner of section 23. The north fork of the Cimarron river enters the pasture from the west, a little south of the center of section 22, and flows southeastward into the Cimarron river in the southwest quarter of section 23. Hooper had built a small house, frequently spoken of in the evidence as the “white house,” on the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section 22, about 125 yards from the west line and about 300 yards from the south line of that forty-acre tract. East of the white house a short distance was a windmill, and to the northeast of the white house, about 75 yards, was a water tank. No one was living at these premises at the time of the homicide. Workman lived on the northwest quarter of section 24, directly east of the northeast quarter of this pasture. Hooper lived on the southwest quarter of section 27, about three-fourths of a mile west of the southwest corner of the pasture and a little more than one mile south and about a half mile west of the white house above mentioned. Directly south of the forty acres on which the white house was situated was an eighty-
Directly south and to the southwest of the land owned and operated by Hooper the several members of the Lahey family owned and operated a considerable acreage of farm and pasture land. The elder member of this family, usually spoken of in the evidence as “Uncle Jimmie” Lahey, settled in that vicinity about forty years ago. He had a family of at least two sons, Jimmie Lahey and Frank Lahey, and two daughters, Mrs. W. R. (Ted) Rowland and Mrs. J. H. Gray; all of whom were married and had homes within a few miles of each other. “Uncle Jimmie” Lahey lived about one mile south of Hooper. Frank Lahey lived a mile west and a half mile south of Hooper, and Ted Rowland lived a mile east and a mile south of Hooper. From where the Cimarron river enters the Hooper-Workman pasture, following it upstream, its course is to the southwest, west, then to the northwest; so that Hooper lived north of the Cimarron river and the Laheys and Rowland south of it. Perhaps Frank Lahey was born at his father’s place, above mentioned;'at any rate he had lived in that vicinity practically all his life. His pasture land joined the Hooper-Workman pasture, above described, directly on the south.
For as long as five or six years prior to the homicide Hooper and Frank Lahey had trouble. ' It began over the fences between the pastures. Hooper testified — and it is the only evidence on the subject — that on a number of occasions Lahey let the fence down, or ■left the gates open, and permitted his cattle to come into Hooper’s pasture. He went to see Lahey about that. Hot words were exchanged. Hooper struck Lahey with a tug, which was a chain, or part chain. For this Lahey had Hooper arrested, and Hooper paid a fine and was also put under, a peace bond. Later Hooper complained to the officers that Lahey was operating a still and caused his arrest. A trial of that case resulted in Lahey’s acquittal. Soon after that Lahey, who was on horseback, stopped Hooper, who was in an automobile without a top, on the road. There were hot words. Lahey cursed Hooper and, among other things, said: “You turn me in and I’ll get even with you,” and struck Hooper with a quirt
In the summer of 1931 Hooper and Workman together looked after the 1,480-acre pasture, previously described, and the cattle therein, and one or both of them rode the fences every day. On the Saturday before the homicide-, which occurred on Monday, Workman, while riding through the pasture, noticed one of Hooper’s steers was sick. On the morning of the homicide Workman went into the pasture to ride the fences and to look for the sick steer. He entered the pasture near the southeast corner of section 23 and rode north, not far from the east fence, to within about a quarter of a mile of the northeast corner of the pasture. There he was met by Hooper, who had ridden across the pasture from the southwest. It was then about 10 o’clock. They talked a few minutes and both started to look for the sick steer. They rode in a southwesterly direction toward the place where the north fork of the Cimarron empties into the Cimarron river. There the land was rolling and the grass and weeds high in the low places. When they neared this point they saw two men on horseback south or southeast from them, perhaps 200 yards away, who were riding in an easterly or northeasterly direction. They testified they did not recognize the men or the horses. The men proved to be Frank Lahey and Archie Wyatt. Lahey was wearing overalls and a Stetson hat, such as cowmen frequently wear. Wyatt was dressed in white — white shirt, white pants, oxford shoes and a straw hat. He was riding a larger horse than was Lahey and was on the north and northwest side of him. The two parties did not speak or greet each other. Early that spring one of Lahey’s steers, a mottled-faced yearling, got out of his pasture into the Hooper-Workman pasture and had been turned back twice by Workman or Hooper. On Sunday, the day before the homicide, there had been a-picnic and dinner at Uncle Jimmie Lahey’s attended by his relatives and friends, including Frank Lahey, and which was also attended by Archie Wyatt. He was a young man who worked as a farm hand. His father lived in Colorado, which place he called his home, but he had worked as a
The story of the homicide is best told by summarizing as follows the testimony of the three witnesses who were present: Wyatt testified: Immediately after we left Workman I saw Hooper come through the gate in the fence at the northwest corner of the eighty-acre rye field and get on his horse and .ride east in a gallop along the north side of the fence. When he was about half way along that fence I saw he was carrying a rifle in his right' hand. Lahey said to Wyatt: “It looks like there is going to be trouble;” and a
Mr. Workman testified: -After Lahey and Wyatt talked with him, and Lahey had said: “Let’s go,” or “We better be going,” they rode off to the south and a little to the east. When they were about fifty yards away, riding side by side in a gallop, he noticed Hooper about fifty yards east of the gate at' the west end of the fence and fifty or sixty feet north of the fence, riding in a dog trot southeast -on the north side of the fence. Hooper and Lahey came to within
Hugh Hooper, defendant, testified: The morning of the homicide he started his hired man McKeegan to drilling rye in the eighty-acre field south of the forty acres on which the white house was situated, then rode to the pasture, met Workman near the northeast corner of the pasture; together they started to find the steer that had been sick. They rode leisurely southwest. As they approached the river they saw south of them, about a quarter of a mile in the pasture, two strange men, one dressed in white, riding east, perhaps a little northeast; passed within two or three hundred yards of them; did not recognize the men or their horses; they did not speak. The grass and weeds were high in the low places. Workman and he separated, Workman going northwest and he southwest, looking for the sick steer. He went along the north side of the rye field; noticed McKeegan had finished drilling in that field and had gone to the field west of the white house, through two gates which witness knew he could not close, as he was working young mules. Witness went and closed the gates, one on the west side of the rye field and two at the corner near the west end of the fence separating the rye field from the forty-acre tract on which the white house was situated. As he closed the gates at the corner he noticed three men on horses at a point east of the white house; one he recognized as Workman; saw the man in white and another man, neither of whom he knew, and started to ride to them to see who they were and what their business was. He had gone about fifty yards toward them when the man in white and the man with him started to ride south; he then directed his course southeast toward the eighty-rod fence on the north side of the rye field; he wanted to find out who those men were; he had known Frank Lahey thirteen years and knew he rode sitting erect in the saddle; the man not dressed in white rode slumped over and crouched forward in the saddle. Witness spurred his horse to a faster gait. About this time the man in dark clothing, who proved
Jack McKeegan was working for Mr. Hooper as a farm hand. On the day of the homicide he was drilling rye with a team of young mules in the field south of the forty acres on which the white house was situated. He finished drilling that field about 10 o’clock in the morning, drove through the gate, without closing it, at the northwest corner of the field, and began drilling in the field west of the white house. While working in that field he saw Hooper
The distance which Lahey traveled from the knoll, where he talked with Workman, to the fence corner where the shooting occurred, was measured to be 758 feet. The distance Hooper traveled from the gate at the northwest corner of the rye field to the corner where the shooting occurred was 1,279 feet. Hence, Hooper necessarily traveled faster than Lahey, whose horse part of the time was on the run.
On the afternoon of the shooting Workman pointed out to a deputy sheriff where the men stood while shooting. The officer picked up three empty 25-20 rifle shells at the place he was told Hooper stood, and two empty .32 automatic pistol shells and one loaded shell indented by the firing pin of the revolver at the place where he was told Lahey stood. From all the testimony it appears Lahey fired twice and tried to fire the third time, but the shell did not explode, and that Hooper fired three times, the third shell striking and killing Lahey.
There was evidence on defendant’s behalf that Hooper had a good general reputation as a peaceful, law-abiding citizen, and that Frank Lahey had the general reputation of being quarrelsome and of fighting, especially if he were drinking, as he sometimes was. However, it was Hooper who was fined and put under a peace bond for fighting Lahey, and there is no evidence that either of them ever had any trouble or fights with anyone else.
Soon after the shooting Hooper went home. That evening he went to the county seat and told the sheriff he had shot and killed Lahey. He was placed in jail until he gave bond, which he did in a few days. He told the deputy sheriff where his rifle was, at his home, and the officer went there and got the gun — a 25-20 Stevens repeating rifle. Soon after noon on the day of the homicide the coroner, having learned of the shooting, impaneled a coroner’s jury
Directly after the hearing that afternoon before the coroner’s jury the body of Frank Lahey was taken to a mortuary, where an autopsy was held, which disclosed that a bullet had entered his back between the eleventh and twelfth ribs about two inches to the left of the center of the spinal column and was lodged in the top of the fourth rib on the interior of the chest wall in front, a little to the right of the center of the chest, and in its course had cut the abdominal aorta, causing death. Thereafter, in due course, Hooper was arrested, charged with the murder of Lahey. The case was set for trial in March, 1932, at which time defendant filed a motion for a change of venue on account of the prejudice of the inhabitants of the county. On a hearing of that motion it was denied. Owing to the illness of defendant’s leading counsel the trial was continued a time or two and it was finally held in the latter part of June, 1932, with the result previously stated.
Turning now to the questions argued on this appeal. Appellant contends that the court erred in refusing a change of venue. The application was made under R. S. 62-1318 to 62-1321. Affidavits of twenty-five residents of Grant county and sixteen of Haskell county were filed on behalf of defendant, stating in general terms that the Lahey family had resided in that part of the country for
Appellant complains that the court overruled his challenge to the array of jurors. A panel of twenty-four jurors was drawn for the regular session of court in March. In April, when it was thought this case would be tried, an additional panel of sixty-five jurors was drawn. In making the order to draw that panel the court directed that no one be placed on the panel who was a resident of Howard township. That was the township in the southeastern corner of the county in which Hooper and the Laheys lived and in which the homicide occurred. The court has statutory authority to so limit a jury panel. (R. S. 43-123; State v. Waldron, 118 Kan. 641, 236 Pac. 855.) About twenty-five jurors drawn on this last panel resided in the county seat. Appellant’s real complaint is that such a large number of the panel was from the county seat, where the county officials and the attorney employed to assist in the prosecution resided, and where it is contended the case had been discussed frequently. Evidence disclosed that this panel of jurors was regularly drawn by the proper officials. The fact that a large
Appellant next complains that the court overruled his challenges for cause to seven prospective jurors, only one of whom, C. W. Bamber, served on the jury. His examination showed that he had lived in Grant county three years, having moved there from Springfield, Colo. Most of the time he had been in Grant county he had worked for the telephone company or the electric light company as a lineman. On one or two occasions while he was working for the telephone company, between August, 1930, and May, 1931, he had been at the Jimmie Lahey residence to repair the telephone or telephone line. Otherwise he was not acquainted with any of the Laheys, nor with Hooper. At the time of the trial he was living sixteen miles northeast of the county seat, working by the month on a farm. He was a married man with two children. The day of the homicide he was working on a light pole in the county seat. He heard the deputy sheriff say to someone on the street that a man had been killed in the country and he would have to go out there. Later he had heard the case discussed by others, briefly, as many as three or four times in Ulysses, and he had read what was printed about it in the local papers. From this discussion and reading he had an opinion that Hooper shot and killed Frank Lahey; that he shot willfully and intentionally; but he had no opinion as to whether the shooting was excusable, or justifiable, nor as to whether it was unlawful, nor as to whether Hooper was guilty as charged in the information;, neither did he have any opinion as to whether the shooting was done premeditatedly, or with malice aforethought, or because of any quarrel or ill-feeling the parties had toward each other. He understood that it was not every killing of a human being that was unlawful; that the court would instruct the jury on the law of the case, and said he would follow those instructions; that he believed in the doctrine of reasonable doubt and would give the defendant the benefit of that doubt; that if the court instructed the jury as to the elements of the offense which the state must prove beyond a reasonable doubt before defendant could be found guilty he would carefully consider such instructions and require the state to so prove each of such elements. He had no bias or prejudice in the matter
The pertinent statute (R. S. 62-1409) reads:
“It shall be a good cause of challenge to a juror that he has formed or expressed an opinion on the issue or any material fact to be tried.”
Counsel for appellant, displaying extraordinary diligence, have cited our many decisions dealing with the opinion or impression of a prospective juror as to the issue or some material fact of the case to be tried formed from what he had heard or read of the case; have quoted from many of the decisions, and have argued earnestly that this juror was disqualified. We shall not attempt a résumé of these decisions, nor to write a thesis on the subject. Two points, well settled by our former decisions, are determinative of the question before us: (1) The words “issue” and “material fact to be tried,” as used in the statute (R. S. 62-1409) just quoted, mean controverted issue, or controverted facts to be tried. This is illustrated by the language of Justice Brewer, speaking for the court, in State v. Spaulding, 24 Kan. 1, where a city clerk was being prosecuted for embezzlement. It was said:
“So far as the fact that defendant was city clerk is concerned, we do not think actual knowledge thereof would disqualify. There are facts in many cases which must be proved, and yet facts which all men know. The fact that a certain party is an incumbent of a prominent public office, is one which would be difficult, if not impossible, to find a citizen ignorant of. In a prose-, cution for malfeasance in that office, must the knowledge of such incumbency disqualify a juror? If a public building is destroyed by fire, every one knows of it. Could no man sit as a juror upon the trial of one charged with setting it on fire who knew that the building had been burned?” (p. 5.)
“And if the defendant, by his counsel, had not conceded that he killed the deceased, such killing would have been a very material fact in issue in the case, and a very material fact to be tried. As the fact of the killing, however, was everywhere conceded in the present case, as it was not in reality a material fact in issue in the case, as it was not a fact contested by the defendant before the jury, but was a fact admitted and confessed to the jury, we think the court below did not commit any material and substantial error in overruling the defendant’s challenge for cause.” (p. 323.)
In State v. Gould, 40 Kan. 258, 264, 19 Pac. 739, several jurors on their voir dire expressed an opinion that defendant had shot and killed his wife. The fact that he did so was not controverted. The defense was insanity at the time of the homicide. The prospective jurors had no opinion upon that question. As this was the only controverted question in the case the court’s action in overruling defendant’s challenges for cause was held not to be material error.
In State v. Sorter, 52 Kan. 531, 34 Pac. 1036, the defendant, charged with murder, admitted killing the deceased, but claimed he was justified on the ground of self-defense. Several jurors in their voir dire stated they had an opinion that the deceased had been shot and killed by defendant, but had not formed or expressed any opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant. It was held the court committed no substantial error in overruling the challenges for cause.
In State v. O’Shea, 60 Kan. 772, 57 Pac. 970, the pertinent syllabus reads:
*499 “The mere fact that a person called as a juror had formed or expressed an opinion that the defendant shot and lulled the deceased did not disqualify him as a juror, where the shooting and killing was conceded by the defendant, who claimed that it was done in self-defense.” (¶ 1.)
In State v. Morrison, 67 Kan. 144, 72 Pac. 554, a murder case, where a defendant admitted the killing and justified it on the ground of self-defense, it was held:
“. . . the act of killing is not the issue to be tried in the case, and a juror who, in his examination upon his voir dire, states that he has formed or expressed an opinion as to the guilt of defendant is not for that reason alone disqualified, if from his entire examination it clearly appears that such opinion is based upon the belief that defendant killed deceased, and that the juror has neither formed nor expressed any opinion as to whether the defendant was justified in taking the life of deceased, as that is the material fact or issue to be tried.” (Syl. ¶ 3.)
This principle has never been deviated from in this state and is followed elsewhere. State v. Draper, 27 P. 2d 39, 49 (Utah), and State v. Hoffman, 94 Mont. 573, 23 P. 2d 972, where our decisions, with others, are cited and followed.
(2) The determination of the question whether a prospective juror is qualified to sit in a case is a trial of that question to the court (R. S. 62-1410). The trial court’s decision on that question will not be disturbed on appeal unless disqualification appears as a matter of law, or it is disclosed that there has been an abuse of the court’s discretion. (State v. Stewart, 85 Kan. 404, 116 Pac. 489.) “It is the mind of the court which must be satisfied that the challenged juror is free from bias and prejudice.” (Morton v. The State, 1 Kan. 468, 472.) (See, also, State v. Molz, 91 Kan. 901, 139 Pac. 376; State v. Mullins, 95 Kan. 280, syl. ¶ 6, 147 Pac. 828; State v. Tucker, 137 Kan. 84, 91, 19 P. 2d 346.) Applying these principles, it was not error for the court to overrule defendant’s challenge for cause to the juror C. W. Bamber.
Six other prospective jurors answered questions on their voir,dire substantially as did the juror Bamber. Defendant challenged them for cause. It was not error for the court to overrule those challenges. One of these, J. H. Titus, in the course of his examination stated that his wife is a cousin to the wife of Jimmie Lahey. No special attention was given to the statement at the time, and we are unable to find from the record that the trial court’s attention was ever called to that fact as being a ground for challenge for cause. The challenge was “to this juror on his whole examination.” It directed
“Where any indictment or information alleges an offense against the person or property of another, neither the injured party nor any person of kin to him shall be a competent juror on the trial of such indictment or information; . . .”
We would be justified in declining to determine this question, since no point was made of it in the trial court, or if it can be said to have been made it was buried in the general language used in challenging the juror and was never again brought to the court’s attention. A party should fairly and explicity call the attention of the court to a point on which he relies. (State v. Bell, 121 Kan. 866, 870, 250 Pac. 281, and cases there cited.) But since we are not urged to take this view we will consider the question.
The Jimmie Lahey mentioned by Titus in his examination obviously is the brother of Frank Lahey, as he is elsewhere so referred to in the evidence, and not the father of Frank Lahey, as he appears always to be referred to as “Uncle Jimmie,” although the matter was given so little attention that the distinction was not brought out in the examination of Titus. Neither was it brought out whether the wife of Titus is a first, second, or forty-second cousin to the wife of Jimmie Lahey.
The word “kin,” as used in our statute (R. S. 62-1406), above quoted, and in a similar section of our civil code (R. S. 60-2906), appears never to have been defined in any of our decisions, although a part of our law since 1859 (Laws 1859, ch. 27, § 181; Comp. Laws 1862, ch. 32). One may be related to another by consanguinity, that is, through blood line; or by affinity, that is, through marriage. The primary and ordinary meaning of the word “kin” is related by the ties of consanguinity (State v. Tucker, 174 Ind. 715, 93 N. E. 3; 35 C. J. 914; Bouvier’s Law Dict.). At common law kinship by consanguinity within the ninth degree, as computed by the civil law, disqualified a juror (Bailey v. Turner, 108 Kan. 856, 860, 197 Pac. 214; 35 C. J. 317). Perhaps our statute (R. S. 77-201, ¶ 28) would limit that to second cousins. But we are not concerned here with any degree of kin by consanguinity, for it is not even contended any such kinship existed. If we apply to the word “kin” used in the statute in question its common and ordinary meaning the juror was not disqualified. In many states the statutes
The word “kin” is sometimes used in a general sense to include relationship by blood or by marriage. (35 C. J. 914; Bouvier’s Law Dict.) A Missouri statute like ours has been held to apply to kin by blood or marriage (State v. Walton, 74 Mo. 270; State v. Stewart, 296 Mo. 12, 246 S. W. 936, 939). And in State v. Tart, 199 N. C. 699, 155 S. E. 609, it was held that relationship by blood or marriage within the ninth degree disqualifies. Hence, we will examine the qualifications of the juror Titus, using the word kin as including relationship by marriage. Affinity is the relation which one spouse, because of the marriage, has to the blood relatives of the other. Degrees of relationship by affinity are computed as are degrees of relationship by consanguinity. The doctrine of affinity grew out of the canonical maxim that marriage makes the husband and wife one. The husband has the same relation, by affinity, to his wife’s blood relatives as she has to them by consanguinity, and vice versa. The doctrine, however, as originally outlined, which is as above stated, never went so far as to hold that a husband (or vice versa as to the wife) became related by affinity to a spouse of a blood relative of the wife. (2 C. J. 377.) It is true a few cases have so held (State v. Joseph B. Wall, 41 Fla. 463, 26 So. 1020), but the great weight of authority is to the contrary. “Blood relations of the husband and the blood relations of the wife are not related to each other by affinity.” (2 C. J. 378.) “The aflfines of the wife are not those of the husband, nor are the affines of the husband, those of the wife.” (2 Stephens Commentaries, 285.)
In Central Railroad Co. v. Roberts, 91 Ga. 513, 18 S. E. 315, a juror was held not to be incompetent because his stepdaughter married the brother of the plaintiff. The marriage established no relationship or affinity between the juror and the plaintiff. In the opinion it was said:
*502 “Marriage will relate the husband by affinity to the wife’s blood relations, but will not relate the husband’s brother to any of her relations. The husband of the juror’s stepdaughter was not related to the juror, but only to the juror’s wife. The husband’s brother, the plaintiff, was further off still; he was not related even to the juror’s wife.
“The groom and bride each comes within
The circle of the other’s kin;
But kin and kin are still no more
Related than they were before.” (p. 516.)
See, also, Carl S. Strickland Co. v. Union Bkg. Co., 42 Ga. App. 645, 157 S. E. 115; Carpenter v. State, 34 Ga. App. 133, 128 S. E. 687; Bliss v. Caille Brothers Co., 149 Mich. 601, 113 N. W. 317, 319; Wolfe v. Commonwealth, 229 Ky. 385, 17 S. W. 2d 219; State v. Chandler, 178 La. 7, 150 So. 386; Farmer’s Nat. Bank v. J. W. Wallace & Co., (Tex. Civ. App.) 263 S. W. 1105; Gantt v. Belk-Simpson Co., 172 S. C. 353, 174 S. E. 1. The juror Titus was not related by affinity to Jimmie Lahey — much less to Frank Lahey, the deceased. It was not error for the court to overrule defendant’s challenge for cause.
Titus did not sit as a juror in the trial of the case. He and five other persons challenged for cause by the defendant, which challenges were overruled, were later challenged peremptorily by defendant. Of the twelve jurors who heard the evidence and reached the verdict only one, C. W. Bamber, was challenged for cause, and as to him we have held the court properly overruled the challenge. Our constitution (bill of rights, § 10) guarantees to an accused a trial by an impartial jury. That is all the accused can constitutionally demand. (16 R. C. L. 291.) While our statutes contemplate the use of peremptory challenges on jurors qualified for cause, error in the court’s ruling on a challenge for cause, especially if the soundness of the ruling is seriously debatable, should not require a reversal of judgment of conviction, if in fact, as here, the defendant had a trial before an impartial jury.
Several questions are raised respecting the admission of evidence: (1) On the cross-examination of Workman, a witness for the state who had testified with respect to the location of the parties about the time of the homicide, was asked if Jack McKeegan was on the outside of the pasture. The court sustained plaintiff’s objection as not being proper cross-examination. There was no error in the ruling. More than that, the testimony as a whole left no room for any doubt as to where McKeegan was. (2) A deputy sheriff, called
In the course of the trial it developed that counsel for the state had a transcript of the testimony taken at the coroner’s inquest on the afternoon of the homicide. Defendant’s counsel immediately asked for a copy of it and moved the court to require counsel for the state to furnish them a copy. Counsel for the state declined voluntarily to give a copy of the transcript to counsel for defendant, but were willing to do so if the court ordered them to do it. On the hearing of the motion it developed that the coroner’s inquest was never completed and no verdict was returned by the coroner’s jury. It further developed that the testimony had not been taken by the order or request of the coroner. Mr. Wesley, a former county attorney, without having any general or special .authority to do so, assumed to act in the matter in the absence of the county attorney. He had requested Miss Hollingsworth to take the testimony in shorthand, and she had done so. Later she had transcribed it and given the transcript to. the attorneys for the state. It had not been shown to the witnesses and they had not signed it. It does not appear whether she ever was paid for doing this by anyone. At the time she was a stenographer in the office of an attorney, then out of the state, who later was employed to assist in the prosecution. The court held that the attorneys for the state were not required to furnish counsel for defendant a transcript of this testimony. It was not an official document, nor a part of any court record. There was no error in that ruling. (State v. Laird, 79 Kan. 681, 100 Pac. 637; State v. Lawellin, 125 Kan. 599, 602, 264 Pac. 1035.)
At the trial a controversy arose as to whether the witness Wyatt, at the examination held before the coroner on the afternoon of the homicide, had been asked the question, “What, if anything, was said between Mr. Lahey and Mr. Hooper just a moment before the shooting took place?” and had answered, “If there was anything said I didn’t hear it.” Defendant produced witnesses who testified that this question had been asked of Wyatt and so answered by him. In rebuttal the state produced a number of witnesses, including each member of the coroner’s jury, who testified the question was not asked Wyatt and that he made no answer to it. Wyatt testified to the same effect. The state then called Carrie Hollingsworth, who had taken the stenographic notes of that testimony and later tran
Appellant complains that the court did not give an instruction requested relating to testimony of previous good character of defendant. The instruction given, with one change favorable to defendant, was taken verbatim from the instruction considered by this court in State v. Sorter, 52 Kan. 531, 34 Pac. 1036, and held not to be erroneous, and again approved in State v. Moore, 135 Kan. 164, 9 P. 2d 653. Perhaps both the instruction requested and the one given can be improved upon in wording^ but the one given was more complete than the one requested, and it is free from the objections raised against it by appellant.
Appellant requested the court to instruct the jury “that your verdict in this case must be either for murder in the first degree or an acquittal. There is no evidence in this case which will justify a verdict of manslaughter in any degree.” The court declined to give that instruction, but gave the usual instructions on first and second degree murder and each of the degrees of manslaughter. Appellant argues that defendant shot to kill, that he had no less intention than to kill, hence if he was guilty of any offense he was guilty of murder in the first degree. The contention puts the case stronger than defendant did in his testimony, and yet it omits the element of premeditation essential to murder in the first degree. It is not argued the instructions of the court on these matters were improper if there was any evidence to support a verdict of guilty for an offense less than murder in the first degree. The contention is there is no evidence to support such a verdict. With this we cannot agree. The testimony on some points was in conflict. Indeed, the jury might have drawn different inferences from some of the evidence over which there was little or no dispute. While there is evidence in the record which would have supported a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree, it was for the jury to weigh this evidence, pass on
Appellant complains of an instruction given to the effect that if Frank Lahey in good faith thought one of his steers was in the Hooper pasture he would be guilty of no offense if he went in there to look for it, and before Hooper would be justified in assaulting him it was his duty to order Lahey to leave, and if he refused to go defendant would then have a right to use such force as was necessary to put him off the place. The contention is that this instruction injected into the case an issue not raised by the testimony or involved in the trial. Early in the case, and repeatedly throughout the trial, defendant’s counsel injected into the case the theory that Lahey was a trespasser in Hooper’s pasture; that he had no right there, and sought to bring out that he had come there armed and had brought Wyatt, a stranger to Hooper, as a bad man from Texas, armed; that they had come for the purpose of following Workman and Hooper, and killing Hooper. It is true there was not much evidence to support that view — in fact, much of it was directly to the contrary — yet it was kept prominent throughout the trial. Obviously the instruction was given because the question had been injected into the case by defendant and his attitude concerning it throughout the trial. In view of that it was not an improper instruction to give.
In one of the instructions the court told the jury: “The defendant in this case has admitted the shooting and killing of Frank Lahey, as charged in the information, and the actual killing of said Frank Lahey is therefore removed from your consideration.” Appellant complains of that instruction and says that since Hooper was charged with murder in the first degree the instruction that he admitted the killing, “as charged in the information,” told the jury outright to find him guilty of murder in the first degree. Obviously this is an afterthought. No one. at the trial placed that interpretation upon the instruction. If the jury had so interpreted the instruction the verdict would have been “guilty of murder in the first de
Lastly, it is argued that the court erred in overruling defendant’s motion for a new trial. That depends upon questions previously discussed herein.
We find no material error in the record. The judgment of the court below is affirmed.