State v. Kennedy

52 N.E.2d 873, 72 Ohio App. 462, 40 Ohio Law. Abs. 224
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 3, 1943
Docket855
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 52 N.E.2d 873 (State v. Kennedy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Kennedy, 52 N.E.2d 873, 72 Ohio App. 462, 40 Ohio Law. Abs. 224 (Ohio Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

OPINION

By MATTHEWS, J.

The defendant-appellant was convicted of murder in the second degree, and sentenced to the penitentiary for life. This appeal is from that judgment of conviction.

The homicide took place in the defendant’s place of business in the City of Hamilton, where he conducted a restaurant and beer saloon.

The defendant admitted that he fired the shot that killed •Dillard Peters, the decedent, and defended on the ground that he acted in self-defense.

The defendant took the witness stand and testified to circumstances, which, if believed, would have, justified the jury in concluding that he acted in self-defense. He testified that no other witness was present at the time, and no witness took the stand to contradict that statement.

The homicide took place at about 9:30 o’clock at night. The defendant and decedent had spent most of that day together on a trip to Cincinnati. They got back to defendant’s cafe around 6:00, P. M., and were in or near .the cafe from that time until the killing occurred.

There was evidence that both had been drinking beer during the day and that each was in a quarrelsome mood and had quarreled with others, but not with one another, until a dispute arose over a suit of clothes which the defendant had purchased in Cincinnati that day. About the only thing that is clear on that point is that the decedent wanted the suit and the defendant didn’t want him to have it unless he paid in cash for it. It doesn’t appear that the decedent had any right to claim the suit unless it be that the defendant had *226 said that he had bought the suit for him, to which one witness testified.

Between 7:00, P. M., and 9:00, P. M., the defendant with the assistance of others ejected the decedent from the cafe twice for violent conduct toward the defendant and others.

' According to the defendant the decedent returned for a third time just as he was about to close his place for the night or until early in the morning, when employees in a neighboring manufacturing plant would patronize his place. The decedent entered walking toward the defendant rapidly with one hand behind his back. The defendant was behind the bar behind which was the defendant at the time of the shooting. Defendant claims self-defense and that the deceased he did so was uttering obscene and threatening, language of and toward the defendant.- When the decedent reached the end of the bar and was apparently going behind it where defendant was, the defendant took a pistol from a drawer and shot him in the chest. The decedent turned and walked about ten feet and fell. He died almost immediately.

We think the trial court accurately summarized the evidence in overruling the motion for a new trial. The Court said:

“The shooting occurred in the cafe of defendant and the evidence of the state showed that the deceased was found lying on the floor a considerable distance from the front of the bar behind which was defendant at the time of the shooting. Defendant claims self-defense and that the deceased was coming around the end of the bar toward him when he shot.”

• “Therefore, there were the circumstances of the location of the deceased’s body and the fact that he had no weapon on him to indicate that deceased was making a direct attack on defendant at the time of the shooting. Against this was the testimony of the defendant heretofore referred to. Thus it became a question of fact for the jury to decide in what manner the shooting actually took place.”

There were, of course, many circumstances which were, or could have been, the subject of legitimate argument as to inferences that should be drawn.

*227 *226 In view of the law placing the burden upon the defendant of proving self-defense (12 O. Jur. 306) we are of the opinion that it could not be said as a matter of law that the defendant had established that defense, and as he admitted firing the *227 shot that caused the death the issue of whether the circumstances showed beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was guilty of either murder in the second degree or of the included offense of manslaughter was for the jury to determine. If the shooting was not excusable on the ground that the shot was fired in self-defense, the defendant was guilty of one or the other. No verdict of guilty of a lesser offense would be justified and no charge thereon should have been given. State v. Vancak, 90 Oh St 211; Lyon v State, 116 Oh St 265; Zarbo v State, 18 Abs. 145.

The issues were submitted to the jury which resolved them against the defendant, but it is urged that errors were committed at the trial that make it necessary to set the verdict aside.

The most serious — -and as we find fatal — error results from the latitude allowed in cross-examination of the defendant. Anticipating that it was the purpose of the prosecuting attorney to pursue this course in cross-examination, counsel for defendant called the court’s attention to it at the beginning of the trial, and, when, notwithstanding the warning, the prosecutor pursued it, defendant’s counsel made his objection known at each successive stage. It was.not inadvertent. The trial court permitted the cross-examination on the theory that it was competent on the issue of defendant’s credibility as a witness and instructed the jury that it should consider it for that purpose only.

This cross-examination consisted in an effort to prove certain incidents in the defendant’s life over a period of more than twenty years. He was asked if he had not had a quarrel with Joe Long in which he had shot him, and he answered that it was in self-defense. He was asked whether he had not been indicted for receiving stolen property in 1913, and on another occasion and had pleaded guilty. He denied it. He was asked whether he had quarreled with Louis Seberting in 1913 and had cut him across the abdomen. He answered that he had acted in self-defense. Finally, he was asked whether he had had an altercation in 1937 with his brother-in-law in which he had shot to death his sister and shot his brother-in-law. He denied that he had shot his sister and admitted that he had shot and killed her husband and stated that he had done this in defending his sister from a murderous attack by her husband.

There was no effort' made by the prosecutor to prove defendant’s conviction of any crime, and when counsel for de *228 fendant produced the court records, it was admitted that there had never been any conviction of any offense excepting in 1915 for receiving stolen property, when he was fined $1.00 and the costs.

The prosecuting attorney used this cross-examination in his argument not only to weaken the defendant’s credibility as a witness, but also to indicate the likelihood that he would commit an unjustifiable act of violence.

It should be noted here that the defendant did not place either his character or reputation in issue, either for truth or veracity, or as a peaceable or law-rabiding person.

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Related

State v. Tharp
361 N.E.2d 469 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1976)
State v. Watson
252 N.E.2d 305 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1969)
State v. Porter
235 N.E.2d 520 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1968)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 N.E.2d 873, 72 Ohio App. 462, 40 Ohio Law. Abs. 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kennedy-ohioctapp-1943.