State v. Jackett

105 P. 689, 81 Kan. 168, 1909 Kan. LEXIS 322
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 6, 1909
DocketNo. 16,470
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 105 P. 689 (State v. Jackett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Jackett, 105 P. 689, 81 Kan. 168, 1909 Kan. LEXIS 322 (kan 1909).

Opinion

[169]*169The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mason, J.:

W. E. Jackett appeals from a conviction of manslaughter in the fourth degree. The state’s evidence tended to show these facts: On the night of October 31, at about one o’clock, a party of thirteen boys, and young men, of ages varying from seventeen to twenty-three years, while engaged in a number of lesser depredations, for a period of three or four minutes stoned a small wooden house occupied by Jackett. as a restaurant and also as his home, throwing against the sides and roof stones described as varying in size from that of a hen’s egg down. Some one, presumably Jackett, cante out of the building and fired five shots from a revolver. The assailants left, but returned in. about twenty minutes and the episode was repeated. This time two shots were fired, one of which wounded a member of the party, causing his death.' On being-arrested Jackett admitted that he had probably fired', the fatal shot.

At the trial Jackett took the stand on his own behalf and denied having done the shooting, denying also-that he had any recollection of having admitted it. He testified that during the assault upon his house he had heard some person using oaths and telling others tp shoot. This was partially corroborated by a witness-for the state, who said that such language was used by one of the assailants, possibly more than once, but not until the last shot had been fired. There was also evidence that at the time of the trial — some six weeks after the homicide — holes were observable in the building apparently made by bullets. The defendant further-testified that shortly before the attack some one came-to his door and tried to get in. He also made an offer-to show that during the throwing of the stones against the building he was in great fear of personal injury and believed his life to be in danger; that he had been, warned that an attempt would be made on that night'. [170]*170to kidnap him and take him from his house; that about a month before he had had trouble with a member of the attacking party and had caused his arrest, and that the person arrested had since threatened him with personal violence. This offer was rejected.

The trial court refused to instruct the jury upon the law of self-defense, taking the view that no issue of justifiable shooting could be involved after the defendant had testified that he had not shot at all. This view is certainly a plausible one, for in denying that he did the shooting the defendant necessarily denied that he had done it for his own protection under stress of fear. In a civil case the testimony which a party gives in person ordinarily is absolutely binding upon him and limits the scope of inquiry quite as much as though the statements made by him on the stand were formally inserted in his pleading by amendment. But in a criminal case no further pleading can be required of the defendant who has entered a plea of not guilty, and under that he may make any ordinary defense. He is not absolved from all obligation to be consistent in his attitude, but be is not to the fullest extent controlled by the rules of equitable estoppel. Here the testimony offered by the accused was not contradictory to that which he had already given. It might be true that he did not shoot, and yet the circumstances might have been such that shooting would have been justifiable, just as one sued for uttering defamatory words may truthfully maintain that he never spoke them, and that they were true. (Cole v. Woodson, 32 Kan. 272.) The fact that a man denies that he killed another is not complete proof that, if he did, the act was without excuse, inasmuch as in making the denial he may be actuated by a repugnance to admit that he has taken human life under any circumstances. Jackett’s proffered testimony that during the attack upon his house he entertained a reasonable fear of bodily harm was not objectionable on the ground that it contradicted [171]*171what he had already sworn to, but only on the theory that what he had already said, by eliminating the issue of self-defense, had made testimony as to his own state of mind immaterial. That theory is unsound because the jury were not bound to treat his testimony as wholly false or wholly true, for it in fact might be partly false and partly true. (The State v. Kittle, 70 Kan. 241, 243.) Their first duty was to decide whether he did the killing. If they had found otherwise, their labor would have been at an end. But having disbelieved his testimony on this point, it then became necessary to determine the circumstances of the killing. This involved inquiring not only whether certain conditions were present — such as willfulness and premeditation — that would aggravate the offense, but also whether certain other conditions existed — such as heat of passion or the appearance of imminent peril— that would palliate it or even absolve the defendant from legal liability altogether.

In a number of homicide cases it has been held that the. denial by the defendant that he did the killing rendered it unnecessary to instruct upon the matter of •self-defense. But in nearly or quite all of them there was an entire lack of evidence that the killing was .justifiable, so the decisions resulted from the application of the ordinary rule. (10 Encyc. Pl. & Pr. 173.) Where there is evidence that would support a finding of self-defense it has been held that the instructions should cover that feature of the case, notwithstanding the defendant's testimony that he did not do the act from which the death resulted. (Reed v. The State, 141 Ind. 116; Morris v. Commonwealth [Ky. 1898] 46 S. W. 491; Gatliff v. Commonwealth [Ky. 1908] 107 S. W. 739.) In the Indiana case cited the defendant not only testified that he did not throw the stone that caused the death for which he was prosecuted; he also ob[172]*172jected to instructions being submitted on the theory of self-defense. The court said:

“In view of the fact, therefore, that appellant in his testimony to the jury testified to some matters . . . which might have given color, or tended to make it appear to the jurors in the event they believed that appellant did cast the fatal stone, that he was justified in so doing, under the belief, upon his part, that the deceased intended to inflict upon him bodily harm, we can not hold, in a legal sense, that the instructions thus, assailed were wholly irrelevant and inapplicable to the-evidence. It was 'the duty of the court, under the statute, at least, to state to the jury all matters of law"for their information in arriving at a verdict. If there-were any facts or circumstances in the case, although quite meager, to which the instructions might, upon any view, be pertinent, provided they were correct in the statement of the law, it would not be -error for- the-court to give them, although they were so given to the-jury over the protest and disclaimer of appellant’s counsel. A judge, in his instructions to a jury, has a duty* to perform, in the discharge of which he can not. be circumscribed or controlled by the protest or disclaimer of a litigant.” (Page 122.)

In the Morris case it was said:

“From the testimony in this record Philpot’s assault upon Bundy w;as without excuse or justification.. From the testimony of the appellant and his witnesses-the defendant had a right to shoot Philpot in his own necessary defense.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 P. 689, 81 Kan. 168, 1909 Kan. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jackett-kan-1909.