Kuykendall v. Edmondson

77 So. 24, 200 Ala. 650, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 587
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1917
Docket8 Div. 38.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 77 So. 24 (Kuykendall v. Edmondson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kuykendall v. Edmondson, 77 So. 24, 200 Ala. 650, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 587 (Ala. 1917).

Opinion

MeCLELLAN, J.

On July 20, 1915, Kuykendall killed plaintiff’s (appellee’s) intestate, Edmondson, by shooting him with a shotgun. The action is for damages under the homicide statute (Code, § 2486). The defendant (appellant) sought to justify himself by recourse to the doctrine of self-defense. These men had entertained for each other a strong hostility during a long period next preceding the tragedy. Their difference arose over a dispute with reference to a line dividing their farms. They had either fought or threatened to- fight on several occasions; and direful threats, each toward the other, are attributed to each of them. When the defendant shot Edmondson, Edmondson was in the public road in his buggy drawn by a mule, and defendant was on his front porch, from which point he fired two shots at Edmondson. Plaintiff’s theory was that defendant, being aware that Edmondson had previously during the morning passed up the public road and would likely later return to his home, awaited his anticipated presence in the public road, and was prepared and intended to shoot Edmondson when Edmond-son came within shotgun range from the defendant’s nearby porch, which design, the plaintiff contended, defendant carried out; Edmondson not firing any shot or making any effort to draw his weapon or to fire a shot. On the other hand, defendant’s insistence was that he (defendant) had, just previous to the shooting, gone to the woods on his place for the purpose of .killing a squirrel; that with gun in hand he came around a corner of his dwelling, with a view to entering the house by the way fronting the public road, almost at the same time Edmondson arrived at a point in the road nearly opposite defendant’s front steps; that defendant, without then seeing Edmondson, walked up his front steps, with his gun on his shoulder, to the next step to the top, and was brushing dirt off his shoes, when he saw Edmondson stop his mule and give unmistakable signs of a purpose and an effort to draw a pistol from the waistband of his trousers; that defendant then made a step or two to the floor of the porch, and thence to a point nearly behind a pillar of the porch, wherefrom he at once fired the first shot at Edmondson, who, the defendant asserts, had by that time fully drawn his pistol; that the mule, frightened by the shot from defendant’s shotgun, started with a jump, and, swerving somewhat from the roadway, proceeded about 25 feet, when defendant shot a second time, having, in the meantime, discharged the empty shell and reloaded the single-barrel gun by the use of the automatic mechanism; that between the time the defendant fired the first and second ■shots Edmondson had his pistol in his hand, ready for use, and continued to face the defendant; that the mule went on down the road, Edmondson, when last seen by defendant, being in the usual sitting posture of one riding in a buggy; and that defendant did not know until some hours afterwards that he had wounded or killed Edmondson.

It is apparent that all of the issues presented by the complaint and by the special pleas were solvable alone by the jury. Having purposely shot Edmondson with a shotgun, it is manifest that the liability vel non of the defendant depended upon whether the justification asserted by the defendant was found by the jury to have been sustained. The jury awarded the plaintiff damages in the sum of $5,000. The appellant has assigned on the record 77 errors, but has expressly waived, in his brief, 23 of these assignments. All of the errors urged in brief for appellant relate to rulings on the admission or rejection of evidence and to the -instruction of the jury in giving three special charges requested by the plaintiff and in refusing a large number requested for the de-fendant. It is impracticable to separately treat all of the upwards of„50 errors assigned. In the main, the restatement in the opinion of the principles applicable to and governing those having at least colorable bases for the insistence of error must suffice.

[1] There was no error in permitting the witness Robert Edmondson to testify that “he saw some places,” like sores, on the. mule driven on this occasion by his father. Originally this witness stated that it was three or four days after the tragedy that he noted these bloodless places on the mule; but latterly, in connection with the statements indicated, he testified that “it might have been the next day” that he saw these places. The whole facts and circumstances surrounding and relating to the event were admissible, including the clothing worn by the deceased, the marks and range of bullets from the defendant’s gun on the vehicle, the person and clothing of deceased, on the animal • being driven by him, if such there were, on the trees, and the presence and location of wads from the gun found in the yard. There were important, earnestly controverted issues to which these circumstances bore an evident relation. Rollings’ Case, 160 Ala. 82, 49 South. 329. The direction in which the defendant fired the first and the second shots at Edmondson, the defendant being at the time practically stationary on his veranda, and the vehicle,, with Edmond-son in it, in motion forward after the first shot, was material to the phase of the inquiry involved in the relative location of the parties when the two shots were fired. It is *652 not inappropriate to note at this point that, according to the doctrine of the following decisions, the court erred in defendant’s favor in excluding the witness Edmondson’s statement that the marks on the mule “looked like shot places”: Perry’s Case, 87 Ala. 30, 6 South. 425; Walker’s Case, 153 Ala. 31, 45 South. 640; S. & N. R. R. Co. v. McLendon, 63 Ala. 266, 276; Watkins’ Case, 89 Ala. 82, 87, 88, 8 South. 134.

[2] In one aspect of the case the plaintiff’s contention was that the first shot gave the fatal wound, causing immediate paralysis. Supporting this theory — serving, if established, to refute the defendant’s insistence that Edmondson thereafter menaced defendant with his pistol, and in consequence affording a basis for considerations reflecting upon the credibility of the defendant, who was the sole surviving witness to the tragedy — the plaintiff was permitted, over defendant’s objections, to show by the opinion of qualified medical men who examined the body that certain wounds on the . head or neck of Edmondson caused instant death, paralysis, and that one so wounded could not thereafter raise or hold a pistol or the reins to control the animal drawing the buggy. It has been often decided here that a qualified, expert witness may give his opinion upon the effect a certain wound had on the body of the victim, even to the extent of justifying the reception of such opinions where the opinion given was that a certain wound produced death. Sims’ Case, 139 Ala. 74, 36 South. 138, 101 Am. St. Rep. 17; Burkett’s Case, 154 Ala. 19, 45 South. 682; Smith’s Case, 165 Ala. 50, 57, 51 South. 610. The principle recognized and applied in those cases was applicable to the subjects of inquiry and of opinions drawn from the experts in this instance. The Elliott Case, 166 Ala. 419, 52 South. 28, Walker Case, 34 Ala. 469, and Councill Case, 172 Ala. 295, 55 South. 314, respectively, decide nothing to the contrary.

[3] 'jNTo prejudice attended the original declination of the court to permit the proof by one witness of the fact that defendant went to the woods a short time prior to the shooting to kill squirrels. Latterly the court changed its ruling in that respect. This fact was otherwise shown without dispute..

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Related

Harris v. Wright
144 So. 834 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1932)
Kuykendall v. Edmondson
94 So. 546 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1922)
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92 So. 409 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1922)
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Kuykendall v. State
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Terry v. State
82 So. 113 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1919)

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Bluebook (online)
77 So. 24, 200 Ala. 650, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 587, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kuykendall-v-edmondson-ala-1917.