Curtis v. Commonwealth

184 S.W. 1105, 169 Ky. 727, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 739
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 28, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 184 S.W. 1105 (Curtis 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
Curtis v. Commonwealth, 184 S.W. 1105, 169 Ky. 727, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 739 (Ky. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Hurt

Affirming.

The appellant, James J. Curtis, was in the business of conducting a saloon and restaurant in Paris, Kentucky. A door led from the restaurant into the saloon, opening opposite the counter in the saloon and about eight or ten feet from it.

Curtis had in his employ a negro, whose name was Reuben Henderson, and' who had been engaged by appellant for five or six weeks in cleaning up the saloon and restaurant and waiting upon the customers in both places. On the evening of the 13th day of February, 1914, the appellant was drunk- and the negro was drinking to some extent. Near to twelve o’clock on that evening the negro was behind the counter in the saloon waiting upon some customers, when the appellant came into the-saloon from the restáurant and directed the negro to serve certain parties, who were standing before the counter, with whiskey or whatever they wanted. The negro replied to him that he had already given them a sufficiency of liquor and that it was about time to close the saloon for the night. The appellant replied that it could be kept open for fifteen minutes yet, and going behind the counter, commanded the negro to' go out and that he would wait upon the customers himself. The negro said nothing, but did not go, when appellant pushed him. The negro turned around and the appellant struck him twice, once in the breast and once upon the face, when the negro seized appellant by each arm between the hand and elbow, when they scuffled down to the end or near to the end of the counter, when the negro pushed appellant against a door. Appellant had said several times to the negro to turn him loose, but the negro without saying anything continued to hold appellant, when-two bystanders interfered, one of them going behind the counter and taking hold of Curtis and the other taking hold of the negro, pulled him from behind the counter and directed him to get out. The negro [729]*729went toward the door which lead into the restaurant with his back to appellant, who instantly* seized a revolver and discharged it across the counter, the bullet taking effect in the negro’s back about two inches to the right-of the median line and passing through his bladder and bowels, which it perforated in several places. The negro had just gotten inside' the restaurant at the time he was shot, when he went on out of the restaurant and was next seen lying upon the ground, which was covered with snow, about twenty-five or thirty feet from the outside door of the restaurant. As quick as appellant discharged the pistol the two men who interfered took the pistol from him, when he at once secured anr other and rushing around the counter in the saloon, went into the restaurant, to which place one of the men followed him and took the revolver away from him. The negro died from the effects of the wound, in two or three days thereafter. The above is substantially the facts of the case with substantially no contradiction of the evidence which tended to prove the facts above stated, except that appellant himself testified that some time before the beginning of the controversy in which the shooting occurred the deceased refused to serve two negro women in the restaurant, and that he had ordered him to go out, which he did, but returned in two or three minutes and said he was going to close up the saloon, and he furthermore stated that when he took hold of the deceased behind the counter of the saloon, that deceased had struck him a blow iu the breast. Appellant did not pretend that deceased was offering him any violence of any kind at the time he shot him, and the only excuse which he gave for the shooting was that he was very mad and that he fired the pistol without any intention of shooting the deceased and without intention of shooting any one in particular.

The appellant was indicted in the Bourbon circuit court for the crime of murder and his cause coming on for trial, he was found guilty by the jury of the crime of voluntary manslaughter and sentenced by the court to confinement at hard labor in the State Reformatory, at Frankfort, Kentucky, for an indeterminate period of not less than two nor more than twenty-one years. He filed grounds and moved the court to set aside the verdict of the jury and the judgment of the- court and to grant him a new trial, which motion was overruled, [730]*730and being dissatisfied with tbe judgment, he seeks a reversal of it upon the following grounds:

First. That tbe court erred in giving instructions 1, 2, 3 and 4 to tbe jury as to' tbe law of tbe case.

Second. Because tbe court refused to give an instruction 'marked “A,” wbicb was offered by appellant.

Third. Because tbe court erred in failing to instruct tbe jury upon tbe whole law of tbe case.

Tbe instructions given to tbe jury by tbe court provide that under tbe facts of tbe case tbe jury might find tbe appellant guilty of murder, voluntary manslaughter or involuntary manslaughter, and might acquit him upon tbe ground of self-defense and apparent necessity for bis conduct in shooting and killing tbe deceased. Tbe jury was, also, directed that if it entertained a reasonable doubt from tbe evidence of appellant being proven guilty of any offense, to find him not guilty; and if it believed him, beyond a reasonable doubt, to be guilty of one of the three offenses, of murder, voluntary manslaughter or involuntary manslaughter, but bad a reasonable doubt of which, it should find him guilty in each instance of tbe one wbicb was tbe lesser of tbe offenses, and by another instruction it defined tbe meaning of tbe word “malice” and" of “aforethought,” as used in tbe instructions.

Tbe instruction upon tbe subject of murder directed tbe jury, that if it believed from tbe evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that tbe appellant unlawfully, feloniously, wilfully and of bis malice aforethought and not in bis necessary or apparently necessary self-defense, shot and killed Henderson, it should find him guilty of murder. Tbe contention is made that tbe court erred in defining tbe word “malice,” as used in tbe instruction. Tbe definition wbicb tbe court gave of tbe word malice was the intentionally doing of the act of violence toward another without legal justification or excuse therefor. It is true, that a better definition “of bis malice was the intentionally doing of an act of violence cause, of any wrongful act, but tbe criticism here is a mere verbal one and without merit. This small inaccuracy as to tbe particular word that should have been used, however, could not have been prejudicial in anywise to appellant or to any right of bis, as the jury did not find bim to be, nor tbe court did not adjudge him to be guilty of murder, but of voluntary manslaughter [731]*731only, which was a finding that the criminal act of which he was accused was one not done with malice, hut without malice. Taber v. Com., 26 R. 754. If he had been found to be guilty of murder another question would then be presented, but having been found to be guilty of voluntary manslaughter, which is a finding that he committed the act without malice of any kind, an incorrect definition of malice could not have prejudiced him. The same may be said of the criticisms which are made in the brief of counsel upon instruction number 3, in which the court undertook to advise the jury as to the law pertaining to the right of appellant to act in his self-defense upon the occasion upon which the homicide was committed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 S.W. 1105, 169 Ky. 727, 1916 Ky. LEXIS 739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curtis-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1916.