Oder v. Commonwealth

80 Ky. 32, 1882 Ky. LEXIS 8
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 22, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 80 Ky. 32 (Oder 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
Oder v. Commonwealth, 80 Ky. 32, 1882 Ky. LEXIS 8 (Ky. Ct. App. 1882).

Opinion

JUDGE HARGIS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant, Alexander Oder, and Volney Hall, ■ were brothers-in-law, and the evidence tends to show that Hall’s daughter Mary staid with Oder some two years.

About the time she left his house he told her father that he had discovered improper relations between her and a young man who was laboring for Oder.

Hall disbelieved this statement, and imputed his daughter’s misfortune to Oder, if any had befallen her.

He threatened to kill Oder, waylaid him, assaulted him with a pistol, and sought an ex-convict, who testifies that he offered him $500, which he refused to accept, to kill Oder.

The threats and lying in wait occurred several times, and were communicated to Oder, who armed himself with a shot-gun, which he carried about with him.

He and a man by the name of Conrad came once or twice to Cynthiana together. Each time Conrad was seen at the depot; and on the morning of Tuesday, the 31st of May, 1881, Conrad went to the depot, and Hall, who had been to-Fayette county, got off of the train. Shortly after the train arrived, Oder went to a livery-stable where he had [34]*34left his horse and buggy and shot-gun, and got the gun. He then proceeded to Pike street; Conrad came by the stable, went on to Pike street, and went down it on the opposite side from Oder, who came upon Hall in front of the post-office, asked him “if he was ready,” and while he was turning, and before he got turned around, at a distance of fifteen, or twenty feet, shot him through the heart, and after he fell, advanced a step or two, and fired the other load of the gun into his head, tearing away the skull, and leaving the brain exposed.

Conrad came across the street and said to Oder, “ Come on, you have killed him.” Oder immediately surrendered himself, and was subsequently indicted, and after having been tried once, which resulted in a hung jury, he was again tried, convicted, and sentenced to the penitentiary for the period of fifteen years. From that sentence he prosecutes this appeal.

On the trial the court instructed the jury first as to murder, second as to manslaughter, third with reference to the doubt as to the degree of the offense, and fourth in this language: ,

“If the jury shall believe, from all the evidence, that, previous to the time of killing, the deceased, Volney Hall, lay in wait for the defendant, and menaced and threatened to kill him, and attempted violence upon his person with a ■ deadly weapon, or did any or either of them, then he had the right to consider the same in determining whether he was in danger of losing his life, or of suffering great bodily harm at the hands of Hall, whenever with or near him; these alone will not excuse the killing; but the defendant had the right to bear arms openly, and when he met the .deceased, if from such lying in wait, threats, menaces, and [35]*35attempted violence, if any, and from the circumstances attending the meeting, or if, from the circumstances attending the meeting alone, he in good faith believed,- and had reasonable grounds to believe, that he was then and there in danger of losing his life, or of suffering great bodily harm at the hands of the deceased, then he was not obliged to wait until he was actually assaulted,» but he had the right to use such means as were at hand, and as were necessary, or apparently necessary, to protect himself from such immediate danger, and if, in doing so, he shot and killed deceased, he is excusable on the ground of self-defense, and should be acquitted, unless the jury shall believe, from all the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that at the time of the killing the defendant sought the deceased with the intention, .and for the purpose of killing him, in which case he is not entitled to an acquittal on the ground of self-defense.”

By the terms of this instruction the appellant was1 excluded from considering the menaces, lying in wait, and threats by Hall, unless the jury believed, from the evidence, that they actually occurred.

While their proof would add weight to the claim of self-defense, yet they are not to be entirely cut out of the defense, unless shown to the jury to have existed.

The appellant had the right to consider the threats which were heard and communicated to him by others; also the waylaying of him by Hall, which -was known to others, who informed him thereof, whether he heard the threats or had personal knowledge of being waylaid by Hall or not,, provided he in good faith believed, and had reasonable grounds to believe, from the circumstances as they appeared to him, that Hall had waylaid and threatened him; but in [36]*36forming a belief, upon such information, the appellant must have acted at his peril, and with the utmost good faith, and been free from making such information a pretext to slay Hall. The question is not whether the jury believed Hall threatened and waylaid the appellant, but whether the appellant believed, and had reasonable grounds to believe, he had done so, and the jury should have been so instructed and allowed to decide.

The maintenance of self-defense in a court of justice,, under such a state of facts as exhibited by this record,, requires, upon the part of the court, the utmost care, SO' that the accused may not be deprived of its right upon the one hand, and assassination excused on the other.

After a careful review of the authorities on the subject, we declare the law to be this: that when a person has been merely threatened by even the most lawless character, it furnishes no legal excuse for taking his life.

But when a person has been threatened, waylaid, menaced,, and assaulted with a deadly weapon, and he afterwards casually meets his foe, if, from his character, antecedent conduct, and the circumstances of the meeting and his presence, he believes, and has reasonable grounds to believe, judging thereof for himself, but at his peril, that his foe is about to' inflict on him loss of life, or great bodily harm, or will then and there carry into execution his design to kill him, or do> him such harm, unless prevented, he is not bound to wait until actually assaulted, but he may lawfully use such force as shall be necessary to avert such impending danger; but it is always a question for the jury to judge of the reasonableness of the apprehended danger, and the unfeigned! belief of its existence by the person imperiled by it.

[37]*37And in this connection, in view of the qualification added to the instruction quoted, it is necessary to determine the rights of the accused under an opposite tendency of the evidence from that contemplated by the qualification.

It must be.accorded as a right, to which all citizens are entitled, that the accused ‘ ‘ may leave his home for.

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Bluebook (online)
80 Ky. 32, 1882 Ky. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oder-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1882.