200 Ky. 591 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1923
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
(On Sunday, October 15, 1922, appellant was arrested by _ George Fitzpatrick, a deputy sheriff, for disturbing religious services being conducted in the open air, “near a country church. A few minutes later he grabbed the officer’s pistol and shot him and his brother, Thomas Fitzpatrick, who was a deputy constable. The latter died from his wounds in a few hours, and, accused of murdering him, appellant was convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to twenty-one years’ confinement in the penitentiary.
His first complaint upon this appeal from that judgment is of the action of the trial court in selecting the jury from an adjoining county, but such action is not subject to review by this court. 'Section 281, Criminal 'Code; Sergent v. Commonwealth, 133 Ky. 284, 117 S. W. 362; Logan & Tribble v. Commonwealth, 174 Ky. 80, 191 S. W. 676.
_ The next insistence is, that the court erred in the admission of evidence with reference to how and from whom appellant obtained whiskey on his way to the place of the killing; but there likewise is no merit in this complaint, since the defendant did not object to any material part of this evidence when introduced by the Commonwealth, and, as a witness for himself, testified fully and without substantial variance about the whole matter.
■Complaint is also made of the admission of evidence that, prior to the homicide, defendant had been accused of stealing a shotgun, and arrested several times upon other charges by decedent and his brother George Fitzpatrick. It would have been error, of course, to permit the Commonwealth to introduce this evidence, but this was not done. The defendant, in an attempt to prove he killed Thomas Fitzpatrick in self-defense, testified that he shot him and George after George had arrested him without cause, and at a time when he was being attacked and his life endangered by George and Thomas. To
Upon cross-examination, the attorney for the Commonwealth asked him what George had accused him of upon one such occasion described by him, and in reply he said that he accused him of stealing a shotgun, and that there was no truth in the charge. He answered this question without objection, but later asked the court to exclude from the jury all evidence with reference to the shotgun, which the court declined to do. In other words, the defendant seeks the benefit of his own evidence- that he had been arrested upon unfounded charges by decedent and his brother, without being required to state what those charges were. In our opinion, his position is wholly untenable.
It next is insisted that.the court erred in failing to admonish the jury that evidence introduced by the Commonwealth in rebuttal was competent only for the purpose of affecting, if it did affect, the credibility of the defendant as a witness.
Most of the evidence introduced by the plaintiff in rebuttal was simply contradictory of the testimony of the defendant and some of his witnesses as to how the killing occurred and about which no admonition was required, since it was not introduced for the purpose of impeaching the character of the defendant or any of his witnesses. The principal evidence introduced, impeaching in character, related to the averments in an affidavit which appellant had filed in support of his motion for a continuance.
But admitting the error of the court in failing to admonish the jury as to -the purpose of this evidence, it is not a reversible one under the many decisions of this court, unless it appears from the whole record that the substantial rights of the accused were prejudiced thereby. Ochsner v. Commonwealth, 128 Ky. 761, 109 S. W. 326; Johnston v. Commonwealth, 170 Ky. 766, 186 S. W. 655; Hayes v. Commonwealth, 171 Ky. 291, 189 S. W. 415.
In this ease, appellant was convicted of manslaughter only, upon evidence which, in our judgment, overwhelmingly proved him guilty of willful murder. The record, therefore, affords no ground for the belief that appel
Another ground for reversal is, that the court’s remarks and conduct, during the trial and in- the presence-of the jury, were improper and prejudicial.
The record not only fails to support this charge, but: contains many evidences of an unusual solicitude upon the part of the court to safeguard defendant’s substantial’ rights. He frequently excluded from the jury’s consideration evidence adduced by the- Commonwealth of doubtful competency, to which defendant offered no objection, and, in sustaining defendant’s objections to evidence introduced by the Commonwealth, as well as in-overruling objections offered by the Commonwealth to evidence introduced by the defendant, the ruling’ was in the defendant’s favor in practically every instance where-there was.room for doubt.
Averments in an affidavit filed by appellant in support of his motion for a new trial are relied upon to support this and several other ground therein asserted, but they cannot be considered since they relate to matters-alleged to have occurred on the trial, not otherwise apparent from the record. Not having been included in the bill of exceptions, such matters may not be injected inte the record by affidavit. Bannon v. Louisville Trust Co., 150 Ky. 405, 150 S. W. 510; Miller’s Appellate Practice, section 51; Criminal Code, section 282.
The remaining contention is, that the court erred in failing to instruct the jury upon the whole law of the case.
The court gave instructions upon murder, manslaughter, self-defense, and reasonable doubt, and of these there is no criticism. But it is insisted there should have been an instruction with reference to the official duties of George Fitzpatrick in arresting defendant upon the charge of disturbing a lawful assemblage, -and keeping him in custody thereafter and at the time of the homicide.
Whether the homicide resulted from an effort upon the part of the defendant to escape, as shown by the evidence for the Commonwealth, or from mistreatment of the defendant by the officers, as feebly indicated by the evidence for the defendant, we are unable to see how any instruction as to the officers’ duties could have had any
There is no suggestion by counsel as to what kind of instruction the court' could have given in this respect, and we confess our inability to think of one, the absence ■of which would have been prejudicial to the defendant.
A careful consideration of the entire record fails to ■disclose any substantial error prejudicial to the appellant, and the judgment is affirmed.