Campbell v. Commonwealth

11 S.W. 290, 88 Ky. 402, 1889 Ky. LEXIS 47
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 26, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 11 S.W. 290 (Campbell v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Campbell v. Commonwealth, 11 S.W. 290, 88 Ky. 402, 1889 Ky. LEXIS 47 (Ky. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

JUDGE PRYOR

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant, Peter Campbell, was indicted by the grand jury of Jefferson county for the murder of his son-in-law, Michael Eady, the trial resulting in a verdict of manslaughter, with the punishment fixed at confinement in the State prison for the period of ten years. The deceased and the daughter of the accused had been married about five years, and, from the testimony in the case, it was not long after the marriage before his conduct toward his wife became cruel and inhuman. Iiis blows upon her person caused the premature birth of a child. She was driven from his home at midnight with her two infant children, or her presence sought by the police of the city at that hour upon a warrant issued at the instance of the husband, and the policeman, instead of giving her shelter in the station-house, carried her to the house of her father. At other times she sought shelter [406]*406in the outhouses near their residence, or in the cabins of the humblest negroes in the vicinity — was abused and beaten in public by the husband, and denounced as a street-walker and common prostitute in the presence and hearing of her neighbors. This cruel treatment of the daughter was brought home to the father, who has been convicted in this case, and he remonstrated time and again with his son-in-law for this brutal conduct, resulting in widening the breach between them and causing the deceased at one time to attempt to take the life of the accused by shooting him with a pistol, and was prevented by parties present from firing. On the Saturday night preceding the difficulty in which Eady lost his life, the deceased had driven his wife from her home to her father’s, and on the next day (Sunday) the deceased went to the home of the accused, with pistol in hand, threatening to' kill him, and was prevented from executing his threat by the wife of the accused closing the door and hiding' her husband from his sight. The deceased, from the evidence before us, had an unnatural aversion to both his wife and her father, and this passion, fed and inflamed by the constant use of intoxicating drinks, kept the wife in constant danger of his brutal assaults, that seemed to increase as their married life progressed.

Such is, in substance, the history of these domestic troubles and the connection of the accused with them up to the 81st of May, about nine o’clock at night, when the accused fired the shot that ended his son-in-law’s life.

The accused was told about four o’clock in the evening of that day that the deceased was abusing his daughter,” and at eight o’clock another messenger arrived, informing [407]*407.him of what was transpiring. Tie lived about three squares distant from the residence of his son-in-law, and on receiving the last information seized his pistol and hurried to the residence of the deceased and there found his daughter and her children, at night, in the streets, •driven from their home; and on meeting his daughter’s husband, after some words had passed, according to the theory of the Commonwealth, fired at the deceased as he was leaving him, but, from the weight of the evidence, when he was fronting him, the shot producing death. The theory of the defense is based on the testimony of the accused aifd another, who state that when they met, Eady cursed and abused the appellant, and made a motion with his hand behind him as if to draw a pistol, when the appellant fired; and in this the accused is coi’roborated by an eye-witness, who says he saw the pistol on the deceased at the time. Other persons, several in number, heard words pass between the accused and the deceased, but did not understand what was said, and their statements conducing to show, also, that the deceased was making no demonstration when he was shot, but in a defenseless condition. *

This is in substance the testimony heard on the trial. The grounds for a reversal of the judgment of conviction .arise from the instructions given by the court, and in refusing to permit evidence of the various assaults and batteries made upon the wife by the husband during their married life, with a view of showing the bona fides of the father in leaving his home on the night of the killing with pistol in hand, and going to the rescue of his daughter. It seems to us, from the uncontradicted [408]*408. proof in the ease, that there was evidence sufficient to> satisfy any reasonable mind that the apprehension by the father of his daughter’s danger alone prompted him to go to the home of the deceased on the night', of the killing. Threats had been made from time to time against the accused by his son-in-láw by reason of his-having interfered for the protection of his daughter, and the entire circumstances and acts transpiring, from which these threats originated, were permitted to go to the jury with a view of sustaining the plea of self-defense by the accused and his purpose in leaving his home on the evening of the killing. The details of the treatment of the daughter by her husband, as stated by these witnesses, placed before the jury the real facts of the case and left, no room to question the good faith of the father in the effort to protect his daughter. Other acts of personal violence than those admitted were excluded, but enough was admitted showing that the wife was in constant danger of bodily harm; and, therefore, this court could not well have reversed this case for the .reason alone that this evidence was excluded. To have permitted such an investigation would have prolonged the trial and shed no light upon the issue between the Commonwealth and the accused.

At the time of the shooting the daughter was not in imminent peril. The trouble had just ended and the daughter and her children on the street when the accused reached the ground, and, therefore, there was no reason for permitting these threats against the accused or the-assault and batteries of the wife to go to the jury in support of the proposition that the father shot his son-in-law [409]*409to save the life of his daughter. The previous bad treatment of the wife would not justify the accused in taking Eady’s life, but it would be competent, as already indicated, to show the lawful pui’pose of the accused in going to the place of the tragedy.

The threats of the deceased to take, the life of the accused, accompanied by an effort to do so, such as the attempt to draw his pistol, would, of course, be competent on the issue of the defense of the person of the accused at the time he shot. The surrender of all parental control in confiding to the deceased the care and custody of his daughter did not'lessen the love of the father for his child, but seems to have created new ties of affection in the birth of two children, that made her the more the object of his love than when she left the parental roof; and, having a knowledge of such cruel treatment as not only destroyed her happiness, but endangered her life, it was his natural and legal right to go to the rescue of his daughter,- to prevent the infliction upon her person of cruel and inhuman blows. Having the right to go to the premises of the deceased for this lawful purpose, he had the right to defend his own person, whilst there, from bodily injury.

The objection to the manslaughter instruction is that it only follows the law as in ordinary cases of homicide, the jury being told that

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 S.W. 290, 88 Ky. 402, 1889 Ky. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1889.