Muncy v. Commonwealth

59 S.W.2d 570, 248 Ky. 621, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 293
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedApril 21, 1933
StatusPublished

This text of 59 S.W.2d 570 (Muncy 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
Muncy v. Commonwealth, 59 S.W.2d 570, 248 Ky. 621, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 293 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

— Reversing.

The appellant, Arthur Muncy, a deputy sheriff of Leslie county, was jointly indicted with Ed Brock, Thee Brock, and Jerry Brock by the grand jury of Leslie county, charged with the willful murder of Wilk Sparks.

On appellant’s separate trial, he was convicted of manslaughter and his punishment fixed at two years in the state penitentiary.

His motion and grounds for a new trial having been overruled, he appeals, relying upon the following grounds for reversal: (1) The court erred in instructing the jury and (2) the verdict is flagrantly against the evidence.

The homicide occurred on the morning of January 27, 1932, on the public highway near the appellant’s home and also that of the deceased, but a short distance lbeyond.

According to appellant’s testimony, he had received information a short while before the shooting in evidence that the decedent was unlawfully engaged in operating a still nearby and, on the day the decedent was killed, the appellant had deputized his co-defendants to assist him in raiding the still, when he, with his deputies, upon making an early morning visit, found the decedent, Wilk Sparks, his brother, Joe Sparks, and three companions, Rufus, Silas, and Thee Brock, at the moonshine still, whom they arrested. Wilk Sparks, whose pistol was taken from him when arrested, managed to escape from the officers, but his companions were by appellant and his codefendants started on their way to Hyden.

*623 The evidence is undisputed that the deceased, Wilk Sparks, after escaping the officers’ arrest of him at 'the still site, by his flight, hurriedly went to his home, about a mile distant, where he procured another pistol and also a rifle and 'thus armed started back to overtake the officers and his arrested companions, who were then being taken to Hyden, and did overtake them as they stopped along the highway a short distance from appellant’s home, where, it appears, he had momentarily halted and called to his daughter, Laura Muncy, to bring him his overcoat.

When bringing the coat to him, she informed the appellant that she had just seen the deceased, Wilk Sparks, armed with a rifle, a short distance up the road, coming towards them.

Appellant, upon being thus informed, drew his gun and awaited Sparks’ coming and the discovery of his purpose in so returning.

The evidence as to their meeting is somewhat conflicting as to who of the two, appellant or deceased, first drew his gun upon or fired at the other. It is substantially alike to the effect that the deceased, after coming within a few feet of the appellant and his party of deputies and prisoners, stopped in the road, when he was hailed by the appellant, who asked him, “Wilk, do you mean any trouble?” who answered, “No.” The appellant then stepped towards him and demanded that he give him the gun or rifle he carried in his hand, which he took from him and then told him to, “Come on now, let’s go to town. Get in front, let’s go to Hyden.” To this command of arrest, the deceased replied, according to some of the witnesses, “Wait and let’s talk awhile,” or, according to defense witnesses, he said, “No by God, I am going no damn place,” and jumped back, and grabbed his pistol and pointed it at Muncy, when Muncy drew his gun on him and they both fired. Joe Sparks, commonwealth witness, testifies as to this that deceased said, “Wait and let’s talk awhile,” as appellant stepped behind him, when he too stepped back, when appellant threw his gun on him and fired, when he, Wilk, did not have his pistol out or on appellant.

The appellant testifies that he was unable to say which of the pistols fired first, upon this encounter, but *624 thought both fired about the same time; stating that when the deceased drew his pistol, he hollered to him not to do that, but, seeing that he was going to shoot, he fired to save himself.

Both the appellant and the deceased emptied their guns at each other at short range, when Sparks was shot and killed.

The appellant’s defense was that he attempted to place the deceased under arrest, when the deceased resisted arrest, making it necessary for him to shoot him in his own self-defense.

It is the contention of the commonwealth that this defense is not available, for the reason, it contends, the appellant was not a deputy sheriff at the time he killed the decedent.

While the evidence shows that the appellant had, for some time before the homicide, been acting as a deputy sheriff of Leslie county, the commonwealth contends that he had been discharged by 'the sheriff as such officer a few days before the homicide occurred.

In support of this contention, the sheriff was introduced as a witness, who testified as follows:

“Q. Tell 'the jury what you told him about whether he was a sheriff any more and what you told him to do about stills? A. Well, he asked me if anybody had to be sworn in after the first of the year, said he didn’t want to violate the law, said he had a few papers and he wouldn’t execute them, that they had been some fellows had said that a fellow had to be sworn in after the first, I told bim some people said that and I didn’t know, and he said he wanted to give me up the papers that he was not a Deputy Sheriff, and I said under all circumstances I will have to discharge you Arthur.
“Q. After you told him you would have to discharge him, what else did you tell bim about whether he could go hunt up a still. A. He had some papers he had worked on a little up there and served them and got some more out at the same time.
“Civil papers. A. Yes sir, I told bim to execute them papers and I couldn’t let him work any *625 longer, he said he would go ahead and get the summons.”

Section 4560, Kentucky Statutes, provides in part as follows:

“Every sheriff may, by and with the approval of the county court, appoint his own deputies, and may revoke the appointment at his pleasure.”

Also, in the case of Poague v. Culver, 15 Ky. (5 Litt.) 132, the court held that under this section a deputy may be removed at any time by the sheriff, it being unnecessary to obtain the consent of the county court for his discharge.

Thus, it may be conceded that the sheriff had ample authority, at his pleasure, to discharge the appellant as his deputy, but we do not interpret the sheriff’s testimony here given as indicating that he exercised such authority, with which he was admittedly vested, or that he had ever notified the appellant that he was discharged. On the contrary, his testimony is that as the appellant, his deputy, “had some papers he had worked on a little up there and served them and got some more ■out at the same time, ’ ’ that he, the sheriff, had told him “to execute 'them papers and I couldn’t let him work any longer, he said he would go ahead and get the summons.” Appellant denies that he was either discharged or that anything was said by the sheriff about discharging him as his deputy.

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Related

Smith v. Commonwealth
122 Ky. 444 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1906)
Chilton v. Commonwealth
186 S.W. 191 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1916)
Williams v. Commonwealth
72 Ky. 274 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1872)
Poague v. Culver
15 Ky. 132 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1824)

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Bluebook (online)
59 S.W.2d 570, 248 Ky. 621, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muncy-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1933.