Stacy v. Commonwealth

254 S.W.2d 917, 1953 Ky. LEXIS 616
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 6, 1953
StatusPublished

This text of 254 S.W.2d 917 (Stacy 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
Stacy v. Commonwealth, 254 S.W.2d 917, 1953 Ky. LEXIS 616 (Ky. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

DUNCAN, Justice.

Under an indictment charging willful murder, the appellant was convicted of voluntary manslaughter and his punishment fixed at imprisonment for a period of fifteen years. Upon this appeal, it is insisted that the judgment should be reversed because: (1) Appellant was entitled to a peremptory instruction; (2) The instructions to the jury were erroneous; and (3) Incompetent evidence was admitted over the objection of appellant.

On the night of August 27, 1949, the deceased, Avery Abshire, in company with Wayne Bishop and Lester Lee Matney, went to the home of K. B. Miller on Feds Creek in Pike County, Kentucky. While there, some trouble occurred and Abshire struck Miller over the head with a pistol and shot at James Barber, who also was at the Miller home. Barber immediately left the scene of the trouble and went to the home of L. C. Robinette, a deputy sheriff, who resided near by.

After being informed of the difficulty by Barber, Robinette started to the Miller home, apparently for the purpose of suppressing further trouble and arresting the offenders. On the way, he met deceased in his jeep, accompanied by Bishop and Matney. Deceased refused to stop at the request of the officer and proceeded down the highway at a high rate of speed, forcing Robinette’s car off the road. The latter turned his car and pursued the jeep, later finding the deceased and his companions parked on the side of the road. An arrest was attempted, but deceased refused to submit and drew a pistol upon the officer. Concluding that wisdom was the better part of valor, Robinette returned to his home, leaving the deceased and his companions where he had found them.

Later in the same evening or in the early morning of August 28, James Barber procured a warrant against deceased, Bishop and Matney, charging each with a felony in connection with the trouble which had occurred in the Miller home. The warrant was delivered to Robinette after he had returned to his home, but no immediate effort was made to serve it. On the following morning about 9 o’clock, Robinette secured the assistance of Troy Bevins and Frank Phillips, two other deputy sheriffs, residing in that vicinity, and they proceeded to serve the warrant. These officers were successful in locating Bishop and Matney, each of whom was taken into custody, but were unable to find deceased at the home of his father or other places where inquiry was made. On the way to Pikeville with Matney and Bishop in custody, the officers met appellant John Stacy, who also was a deputy sheriff. Deputy Bevins desired to go to his home and he left the other officers, and Stacy accompanied them to Pikeville, where Matney and Bishop were placed in jail.

On the return trip, Phillips stopped at his home and Robinette and appellant proceeded toward their homes. Soon after leaving Phillips, the officers testified, they observed the deceased parked in his jeep on the side of the road. According to appellant and Robinette, they stopped their car and went to the jeep for the purpose of placing deceased. under arrest. Appellant, who was slightly in front, went to the driver’s side of the jeep, opened the door, and informed deceased that he was under arrest. Deceased immediately fired at appellant, and thereupon, Robinette and appellant fired at him. Appellant then ran to the rear of the jeep and Robinette to the front. Deceased fired two shots toward Robinette, and appellant fired two shots at deceased from his position behind the jeep. The officers heard the sound of a falling object striking the metal floor of the jeep and upon approaching and investigating found that deceased was wounded and had dropped his gun. Deceased was removed and placed in the officer’s car and died while on the way to a doctor. The pistol recovered from the jeep is what is referred to as a .32-caliber squeezer, and had three fired shells and two loaded ones in its chamber. The testimony of the undertaker indicates that there were two wounds on the body of the deceased which appear to have been made by the same bullet. The comparative size of the wounds indicates [919]*919that the bullet entered in the hack near the right shoulder and emerged in the front left chest.

There were no eyewitnesses other than appellant and Robinette, but their testimony is contradicted by Joe McCoy, a fifteen year old boy, and Lawrence Justice. McCoy testified that at the time of the shooting he was on a front porch about a quarter of a mile away but in sight of the jeep in which deceased was sitting. He stated that although he was not in a position to observe all the parties clearly or recognize the participants he saw some man in a white shirt run to the rear of the jeep from its right side and immediately heard three shots fired rapidly followed by a pause and then a fourth shot. Lawrence Justice, who resided about five hundred yards from the place of the shooting, testified that he heard three shots fired in rapid order and a fourth shot which followed after a pause of a few seconds. 'This witness, who claimed some familiarity with firearms, stated that in his opinion all the shots were fired from the same caliber weapon, which was either a .44 or .45. In connection-with ’the testimony of these witnesses) it should be remembered that according to. the testimony of appellant and Robinette there were at least seven shots fired from three different guns, all of different calibei*.

Appellant insists that the un-contradicted testimony establishes a case of justifiable homicide upon either the theory of self-defense or the exercise of his authority as an officer. We recognize the rule that when evidence is as consistent with a defendant’s innocence as with his guilt a verdict of acquittal should be directed. However, as we view the testimony, there was a clear issue for the jury in this case. There was substantial contradiction of the testimony of appellant and Robinette as to the number of shots which were fired, and if their testimony in that respect is untrue, it casts considerable doubt upon their entire account of the facts surrounding the shooting. There also are some improbabilities in their testimony which, standing alone, would be sufficient to make an issue for the jury. It is highly unlikely that as many shots as claimed by them could have been fired by three separate persons within a few feet of each other without more than one of the shots taking effect.

Appellant complains of Instructions 5, 6, and 7, and insists that they were prejudicially erroneous. Instructions 5 and 6 define generally, and we think substantially correctly, the rights of the appellant and Robinette, as officers, and the duty of deceased to submit tó arrest. Although usually contained in one instruction, it is certainly not improper to separate the instruction concerning the rights and authority of the officer from-the one which de'fines the duty of an accused in submitting to arrest.

We observe that Instruction 6 refers to the duty of deceased to submit to an arrest lawfully made (emphasis ours). The words “lawfully made” serve no useful purpose in the instruction and may possibly be misleading to the jury. .By Instruction 5, the jury had been informed of the circumstances • under which the officers were authorized to make an arrest, and any arrest made under the circumstances described hy that instruction, was a lawful arrest. There was no occasion to include the words in a subsequent instruction, which might have led the jury to believe that they had the right to determine the legality, of the - arrest by some standard other- than that set out' in the preceding instruction.

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Related

Smith v. Commonwealth
192 S.W.2d 92 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1946)
Correll v. Commonwealth
53 S.W.2d 199 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1932)
Crigger v. Commonwealth
225 S.W.2d 113 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1949)

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Bluebook (online)
254 S.W.2d 917, 1953 Ky. LEXIS 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stacy-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1953.