Lightfoot v. Commonwealth

80 Ky. 516, 1882 Ky. LEXIS 96
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 9, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 80 Ky. 516 (Lightfoot 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
Lightfoot v. Commonwealth, 80 Ky. 516, 1882 Ky. LEXIS 96 (Ky. Ct. App. 1882).

Opinion

JUDGE PRYOR

delivered the opinion op the court. •

On the 7th of March, in the year 1881, in a village called •Cross Roads, in the county of Rowan, the appellant, M. F. Lightfoot, shot and killed Joseph McDermott, for which he was indicted, tried, and convicted, and his punishment fixed at confinement in the state prison for nine years. He has appealed from the judgment of conviction to this court. The appellant and the deceased were both young ■men, and lived in the little village of Cross Roads.

Appellant was about twenty-two years of age, and the ■deceased had not attained his majority. A bad feeling had existed between them for many months prior to the hostile meeting that terminated in McDermott’s death.

The real origin of the difficulty seems not to have been developed by the proof,'and all that is learned of the feud •between them is, that each one of them, on almost every occasion where they happened to meet, was ready for an assault or a deadly combat, making threats to kill, and on more than one occasion McDermott drew his pistol, and ■at another time shot twice at the appellant, but in both in.-stances, or in almost every instance, the proof conduces to show that the appellant was as anxious for the difficulty as the deceased.

It appears that the appellant was generally under the influence of liquor, and we have no doubt, from the facts of this record, that its effect upon a mind naturally excited ■•at- the appearance of his adversary, led to the tragedy resulting in the death of McDermott.

The testimony is very conflicting as to the acts and conduct of both parties for months prior to the killing, and the mind is impelled to the conclusion, after a careful reading [518]*518of the rec'ord, .that the one was as- much in fault as the-other.

On the day of the fatal' shooting; the appellant was inPitman’s saloon, and saw • the deceased approaching the saloon, or coming in that direction.' He remarked at the-time: ‘ ‘ There comes the d — d little son of a bitch; watcff me step out and kill himor, let me go out and kill him.. This was a few minutes before the shooting, and the substance of the language used is given by more than one witness.

The appellant left the saloon, and stepped on the platform in front of it. The decased continued to cross the-street, and came on to the same platform. The appellant-then placed his hand on the shoulder of the deceased, and said to him: “ ‘ You ordered me out of the yard the other day,’ and Joe (the deceased) said nothing, and defendant (appellant) repeated it, and added, ‘ I suppose it is all right, or-you wouldn’t have done it,’ and he said 'Yes, he reckoned' it was.’ ” The appellant then said, “ I am as good a man as-you,” and Joe said, “I am as good a man as you.” Judge-Irving then ordered them off the platform on to the street, and the appellant told him “to get away from’' before him, or he would lend him one.” Appellant then stepped down into the public street, and said, .“I am ready for him now.”' The defendant had cocked his pistol at the time this was said, and, according to the testimony of one of the witnesses for the Commonwealth, the deceased fired the .first shot; but there is testimony conducing to show that the-first fire was from the pistol of the appellant. ■ The witness-who says the deceased fired first, states that when he (the-witness) first came up, the appellant had his hand-in the-[519]*519right pocket of his overcoat, and drew his pistol.about half way out, and cocked it.

It is plain, we think, from the. testimony, although the-deceased was armed when he crossed the street, that his purpose was not to molest the appellant, and but for the aggressive movement of the appellant, and his fixed determination to bring about the difficulty, this killing would not have taken place. The appellant was under the influence-of liquor at- the 'time, and the moment he saw his adversary, recollecting their previous troubles, he expressed his purpose to leave the saloon, and slay him. It was not his-fear of the deceased, or the belief that the latter would kill him, that caused him to announce this purpose, because,, when he left the saloon, and the deceased came on to-the platform, the appellant laid -his hand upon deceased’s shoulder, and reminded him of the insult, he had offered him when requiring him to leave his father’s yard. If it was the purpose of the deceased to shoot the appellant,, every opportunity was afforded him as he crossed the street, and if no such opportunity was presented, it clearly appears, from the conduct of the deceased, that he had no intention of assaulting the appellant, and, so far as the record shows,, was doubtless not aware of the fact that appellant was in the saloon at the time he started’ from the opposite side. This case is unlike the case of Bohannon, reported in 8th Bush. In that case the danger of the appellant losing his life became imminent whenever in the presence of his adversary. The party slain by him was a desperate and dangerous man, and the- accused in that case had the right to believe that his life was in danger whenever the deceased, was near enough to inflict upon, him bodily injury. In thépresent case, if the appellant feared the taking of his life.[520]*520'by McDermott, it was a fear originating from threats and -hostile meetings between them, for which the one was as ■.much in fault as the other. If the one was a desperate ■man, the other was also. . They stood upon the same footing, and we see no reason for applying the rule laid down in the case of Bohannon, by which Bohannon had the right to .■shoot his adversary, in the casual meeting of each, because he believed, and had reasonable grounds to believe, from what had previously transpired between them, connected with the desperate character of the deceased, that he, Bohannon, would be killed by him whenever the opportunity was afforded him. Bohannon was a peaceable, quiet citizen, assaulted, threatened, and his life attempted to be taken by ■one as reckless of his own life as he was that of others.

Here both parties are in fault, the blame attaching with reference to the previous difficulties as much to the one as the other, and the proof showing that, at the time the attack was made, the appellant was seeking his adversary with a view of taking his life.

Instruction No. 4 was therefore properly modified; for if the accused, to use the language of the court, had so menaced .and assaulted the deceased as to justify the belief on the part •of the deceased that he intended 'to assault and kill him, or ■do him great bodily harm, then the deceased had the right to defend himself, and if, in making such defense, he was killed by the appellant, the latter was as much guilty as if the deceased had made no effort to save his life.

• This instruction, if even erroneous, could not have misled the jury, for, in the next instruction, the jury was- told for the • defendant, "that in determining whether or not the •defendant had reasonable grounds to believe that McDermott, at the time he was killed, was then and there about [521]*521■to shoot and kill, or do him (appellant) great bodily harm, 'they are not confined to the facts and circumstances proven ■to have transpired and existing at the time of the killing, ■but they may and should take into, consideration all the proof in the case.” . ;

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80 Ky. 516, 1882 Ky. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lightfoot-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1882.