117 Ky. 138 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1903
Opinion op the court by
Reversing.
Appellant was convicted and sentenced to death under and indictment charging him with murdering Jim Brame.
The widow of deceased, Jim Brame, was one of the principal witnesses against the appellant. She had formerly been appellant’s wife. She testified that she had, however, been divorced from him, and then had married Jim Brame. Appellant objected to the admission of parol evidence of the divorce on the ground that there was necessarily a record of the judgment of divorce, and that, being the best evidence, must be produced. This is the general rule, and, in a proceeding involving directly the legitimacy of the second marriage, it would doubtless be applied. But here the main inquiry is not whether the witness had or had not been divorced. That question arose collaterally. The law raises a presumption based upon existing conditions. That is, it will be presumed, nothing to the contrary appearing,
In instructing the jury, the court gave the law of self-defense in- its instruction No. 4, as follows: “If the jury believe from the evidence that the defendant, at the time he shot said Jim Brame, if he did shoot him, had reasonable grounds to believe, either real or apparent, and did in good faith believe, that he was then in imminent danger of losing his life or suffering great bodily harm at the hands of said Brame, and there was, as it then appeared to the defendant, no reasonably safe means of averting said danger, then the defendant had the right, in the exercise of a reasonable discretion, to shoot and kill the said Brame; and if, under these circumstances, he took the life of the said Brame, he is excusable on the ground and under the law of self-defense, and the jury will find him not guilty.
The other matters complained of — that of limiting the argument, and the alteration of an instruction after the argument was finished — are practices which have been discussed and to some extent questioned by this court in the cases of Williams v. Commonwealth, 82 Ky., 642; 6 R., 764; Harris v. Commonwealth, 25 R., 297, 74 S. W., 1044; Combs v. Commonwealth, 97 Ky., 24, 16 R., 699, 29 S. W., 734; Smith v. Commonwealth, 100 Ky., 133, 18 R., 652, 37 S..W., 586; Wilhelm v. Commonwealth, 16 R., 428, 28 S. W., 783; Pearce and Howell v. Commonwealth, 19 R., 782, 42 S. W., 107. We will presume that the trial court is familiar with these opinions, and will conform the practice to what is therein said.
The judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial under proceedings not inconsistent herewith.