Hemphill v. Commonwealth

379 S.W.2d 223, 1964 Ky. LEXIS 221
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 15, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 379 S.W.2d 223 (Hemphill v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hemphill v. Commonwealth, 379 S.W.2d 223, 1964 Ky. LEXIS 221 (Ky. 1964).

Opinion

DAVIS, Commissioner.

Parker Hemphill was convicted of voluntary manslaughter by the Knox Circuit Court for the slaying of Jim Smith, a police officer of Barbourville. He appeals, seeking reversal of the conviction and consequent sentence of 21 years’ imprisonment.

Appellant submits five separate grounds for reversal. It is our conclusion that the judgment must be reversed for error in the court’s instructions to the jury, hence, we omit a list of other claimed errors.

The homicide occurred in the front yard of appellant’s residence in Barbourville about 10 p. m. in July, 1962. The prosecution’s evidence showed that Jim Smith, victim of the homicide, was then on duty as a police officer of Barbourville, and was in the company of his fellow officer Mays. Mays testified that as he passed the appellant’s home he was hailed by appellant’s 74-year-old mother from her wheelchair on the porch of the residence. Mays responded to Mrs. Hemphill’s cries, and was asked by her to go into the residence to see what appellant had done toward “tearing up the house.” At that *225 time the victim Smith was not present. Mays entered the home and found appellant, who asked whether Mays had a warrant.

Mays responded that he had no warrant and was not there to arrest appellant. The witness said that he observed Nancy Hampton 1 sweeping dishes, glass and food that had been broken on the floor. Meanwhile, Jim Smith had come into the house; appellant then latched the screen door to the porch and told his mother she would have to stay out. Then Mays unlatched the screen, walked onto the porch and was followed there by Smith. Mays swore that appellant “got kindly mad about the screen being unlatched.”

Mrs. Hemphill then said to Mays, “Don’t leave me. If you do, he will kill me.” (In her testimony, Mrs. Hemphill denied this.) The officers explained to Mrs. Hemphill that they could not arrest appellant without a warrant; Smith went next door to telephone the county judge pro tam with a view to obtaining a warrant for appellant’s arrest. Mays said that appellant’s mother warned that appellant had a shotgun, but Mays reassured her that appellant “don’t want to hurt nobody.”

Just then Mays heard the back door slam and then two shotgun blasts in the back yard. Nancy Hampton came to the front door and inquired, “You reckon he shot my car up?” At this Mays started around the right side of the house to the back yard, when Jim Smith came running out of the next door house and “hollered” at Mays. Thereupon Mays, followed by Smith, went back across the Hemphill yard, at which time appellant came from the end of the porch with a shotgun. Mays testified that appellant held the gun on him and told Mays he would shoot out his guts. Mays pleaded with appellant, suggesting they were friends, and that appellant would get in trouble if he fulfilled his threat. Appellant agreed, “cussing.”

Smith had come closer by then, and appellant told Mays to get in the police cruiser and leave, but then turned to Smith and said, “You can’t ride. You are going to have to walk.” Smith then turned toward appellant, but said nothing, at which appellant shot Smith in the groin. Appellant and Smith “was right up against each other” then, said Mays. Smith’s pistol was still in the holster when appellant shot him, then Smith drew the weapon and fired all of the six shots from it, and appellant was wounded in six places. Mays withdrew to a point behind the cruiser and fired his revolver four times, but it is not known whether any of his shots struck appellant.

Mays said that appellant shot at him twice, but neither shot hit him. Appellant and Smith grappled after Smith was shot, and they fell to the ground together. Smith died a few minutes later.

Appellant’s version of the tragedy is quite at variance with Mays’ account. He testified that Smith ran toward him with his pistol drawn, while appellant had the shotgun in a nonoffensive position — that Smith’s first shot struck the shotgun and appellant — that appellant was knocked to the ground, and that the shotgun was accidentally discharged as the result of this. Appellant denied that he had fired the shotgun twice, or at all, in the back yard. He made a vague reference indicating that he may have fired the shotgun while lying on the ground, and after the shotgun had been discharged accidentally, “trying to get away from them.”

Some neighbors testified to facts indicating Smith was attempting to disarm appellant. Appellant’s mother acknowledged that she had requested the officers to take the gun from appellant, not because she feared he would hurt anyone, but because she felt this would prevent appellant’s going to his farm that night.

*226 By Instruction 1, the trial court submitted the questions of willful murder and voluntary manslaughter, substantially as set out in § 868, Stanley’s Instructions to Juries.

Instructions 2 and 3, as given by the trial court, also are patterned precisely from the second and third instructions set out in § 868, Stanley’s Instructions to Juries.

The third instruction was the usual self-defense instruction. If the evidence on a new trial is substantially the same as in the instant trial, the self-defense instruction should be qualified to reflect that appellant may not avail himself of self-defense if appellant brought on the difficulty. See § 897, Stanley’s Instructions to Juries, and collected cases therein.

The fourth instruction given by the court is as follows:

“4. Although the jury may believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant shot and killed deceased with a gun, as in Instruction No. 1, described, if they believe from the evidence that he committed the act without previous malice, but shall believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that such shooting and killing was unlawfully and wilfully done by defendant in a sudden affray or in sudden heat and passion and with felonious intent to kill deceased, or shall believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the shooting and killing of deceased, if done by defendant, was the direct and natural, though unintentional result of a reckless, wanton or grossly careless use or handling, if any of said gun by defendant in struggling with deceased for its possession, when he knew it was dangerous to life if so handled by him, they should find him guilty of voluntary manslaughter, and fix his punishment at confinement in the penitentiary for not less than two nor more than twenty-one years.”

It would appear that the genesis for the quoted instruction may have been § 883, Stanley’s Instructions to Juries. It is observed, however, that the form as contained in § 883, op. cit., was published before the effective date of KRS 435.022. That statute became effective June 14, 1962, approximately one month before the instant homicide. By the terms of KRS 435.022 the crime of involuntary manslaughter is separated into two degrees; the first degree is a felony in which the range of punishment is confinement in the penitentiary from one to fifteen years.

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Bluebook (online)
379 S.W.2d 223, 1964 Ky. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hemphill-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1964.