Source: https://guncite.com/court/state/70ky124.html
Timestamp: 2019-04-23 07:06:06+00:00

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Case 9--INDICTMENT FOR MURDER--June 15.
APPEAL FROM WASHINGTON CIRCUIT COURT.
1. Threats.--Self-defense.--Erroneous instructions.--The circuit judge instructed the jury in this case that whatever deductions the jury might make from the evidence, and however assured the accused may have felt that his life was in immediate and continual danger, nevertheless he had no right to shoot as and when he did unless there was then immediate danger of an immediate and violent assault on him by deceased. On the facts of this case, which is an episode to that of Phillips v. Commonwealth, 2 Duvall, 328 , which is still approved and reaffirmed by a majority of the court, the above instruction is held to be erroneous.
2. Assured and continual danger and self-defense.--Speaking of assured and continual danger to life, this court, in the case in (p.125)2 Duvall, defined the principle of self-defense as follows: "Like the sword of Damocles, the threatened danger is continually impending every moment and everywhere. The threatened man may be waylaid or otherwise attacked unawares without the possibility of defense or of escape, and may never, day or night, feel safe, or actually be so, while his enemy lives, who whenever he may see him or wherever he can find him may be anxious and able to kill him. And does either human or divine law require such prolonged agony and peril; or can the best and most prudent men suicidally forbear to strike for riddance, if they have the courage to defend themselves, in the only way of secure and lasting escape?"
3. The court further say in this case: "Now if a man feel sure that his life is in continual danger, and that to take the life of his menacing enemy is his only safe security, does not the rationale of the principle as thus defined allow him to kill that enemy whenever and wherever he gives him a chance and there is no sign of relenting. But before a jury should acquit they should be well satisfied that the killing was not the offspring of bad passion, but solely of a thorough and well-founded belief that it was necessary for security.
W. D. Harrison, / For Appellant, cited 2 Duvall, 328, Phillips v. Commonwealth .
John Rodman, Attorney-General, / For Appellee, cited 4 Iredell's North Carolina Reports, State v. Scott . 2 Starkin, side-page 523 .
The appellant, John W. Carico, a young physician, residing in the village of Fredericksburg, Washington County, Ky., (p.126)indicted for murder in killing his neighbor, David Smith, "by shooting him with a gun," was found guilty by a jury and sentenced to confinement in the penitentiary for six years. He urges a reversal of the judgment for alleged error in instructions, and in the exclusion of testimony by the circuit court on the trial. The appellant attempted to excuse the homicide by the proof of circumstances conducing to show that Smith without any reasonable cause became extremely hostile to him; assaulted him more than once with deadly weapons; frequently declared that he would kill him; and the evening before the catastrophe said that he would kill him before the next night. About four o'clock in the morning succeeding that last threat Smith, after passing the appellant's office on his way to his own stable, apparently for the purpose of feeding his horse, was shot in the back and killed by the appellant without any apparent demonstration of an immediate assault on the appellant, and without seeing him. The testimony marks Smith as a man of violent passions and inflexible will, and characterizes the appellant as a moral, quiet, and prudent gentleman in his antecedent behavior.
The shooting being before the dawn of day, the jury might possibly have inferred, from the unusual time and all the other facts, that Smith's purpose in being out so early was to reconnoiter for a secret chance to assassinate the accused before he was up in his office, and that the latter was so prematurely ready with his loaded musket only to meet such a night attack, and that seeing Smith he apprehended his speedy return to execute his threats.
On these facts the circuit judge by his rulings adjudged that whatever deductions the jury might make from the evidence, and however assured the appellant may have felt that his life was in immediate and continual danger, nevertheless he had no right to shoot as and when he did unless there was then imminent danger of an immediate and violent assault on (p.127)him by Smith. This insured the verdict and sealed the appellant's doom; and whether that decision was right or wrong is the ruling question on this appeal.
This case is an episode to that of Phillips v. The Commonwealth, 2 Duvall, 328 , in which this court adjudged the philosophy of the law of self-defense, which we still approve and now reaffirm. In that case we could not judicially extend the principle therein defined and recognized to a homicide exactly like this; and therefore we expressly forbear even an intimation of an opinion as to such extension. The application of the principle is a difficult task for a jury, and is peculiarly hazardous. But its liability to perversion or abuse by juries can not curtail the principle itself as a law for the court.
Speaking of assured and continual danger to life, this court, in the case in 2 Duvall, defined the principle of self-defense as follows: "Like the sword of Damocles, the threatened danger is continually impending every moment and everywhere. The threatened man may be waylaid or otherwise attacked unawares without the possibility of defense or of escape, and may never, day or night, feel safe, or actually be so, while his enemy lives, who whenever he may see him or wherever he may find him may be anxious and able to kill him. And does either human or divine law require such prolonged agony and peril; or can the best and most prudent men suicidably forbear to strike for riddance, if they have the courage to defend themselves, in the only way of secure and lasting escape?"
Now if a man feels sure that his life is in continual danger, and that to take the life of his menacing enemy is his only safe security, does not the rationale of the principle as thus defined allow him to kill that enemy whenever and wherever he gives him a chance and there is no sign of relenting? But before a jury should acquit they should be well satisfied that the killing was not the offspring of bad passion, but solely of a thorough and well-founded belief that it was necessary for security. And here (p.128)lies the danger of misapplication. It is difficult to be assured that the act was thus necessary and done in good faith. Of that, however, the jury and not the court must judge; and in that judgment they can not be too self-poised and careful before they conclude that the peril of the accused was imminent and incessant, and that he, well assured of it, honestly believed that his only safe remedy was to destroy the power to execute the threats. And if he was authorized to believe and did considerately apprehend that his own exile or the death of his persevering enemy, watching to kill him, was, like the tabula in naufragio, the only safe mode of rescue, might he not lawfully choose his remedy and throw his enemy overboard? Why should he be required still to wait an assault and to endure longer haunting and hazard when he might at any moment become the victim of his own forbearance, and when self-defense might be impossible or unavailing? Why let the sword still hang over him? Why not remove it out of sight when he may, and not passively linger until it unexpectedly falls and strikes his heart unresisted? The recognition of the perfect right to do so in such a crisis appears to us consistent with both principle and policy. It seems to us conservative. It might afford more security and prevent more assassinations than the lame law of punishment ever could, and the manly and opportune assertion of this universal birthright may teach the reckless who thus maliciously beset the pathway of the peaceable that they will be likely to bring destruction on their own heads. This preventive principle will go hand in hand with civilization and philosophical jurisprudence as a palladium of personal security and social order and peace. Properly guarded, it may do more good than harm.
Whether this case comes within the range of that principle we have no right to say. But assuming, as the circuit court ought to have done, everything which the facts conduced to prove, that court ought not to have denied their right, on their (p.129)own peculiar responsibility, to acquit the appellant on their own construction of the evidence and rational deductions, as hypothetically assumed in some of the overruled instructions. Consequently, if we are right, the circuit court was wrong, and erred in rendering judgment on the verdict.
But there is a minor error which might alone justify a reversal. The appellant offered to prove that a man named Offert, then dead, had but a short time before the homicide told him that Smith had armed himself with a shot-gun to kill him.
For the foregoing causes the judgment of conviction is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial conformable with the principles of this opinion.
Judge Hardin entertains views of the case of Phillips v. The Commonwealth, 2 Duvall, 328 , which would lead him to concur in overruling it to some extent; but as it is adhered to by the majority of the court, and can not therefore be overruled, he recognizes it as authority, as he does other adjudications of this court which have not been overruled; and he regards at least one of the instructions which were given in this case for the commonwealth, and the action of the court in refusing others, as conflicting with the controlling principles and reasons of said case of Phillips. But without elaborating his own views on this branch of the case, or fully concurring in the foregoing opinion of Judge Robertson, he is satisfied that (p.130)the court below erred to the prejudice of the defendant in refusing to permit him to prove the fact that shortly before the shooting he was informed by a person since dead of threats of Smith to take his life. The question of the admissibility of this evidence did not depend on the truth of the statement made to the defendant, but on the effect which it might produce upon his mind as an inducing cause for more prompt action on his part to prevent the apprehended danger. ( 1 Greenleaf on Evidence, sections 100 and 101 .) He therefore concurs in the reversal of the judgment.
Believing as I do that the facts of this case do not bring it within the principle decided in the case of Phillips v. Commonwealth, I can not concur with my brothers, either in their reasoning or conclusions, in condemning the instructions given by the circuit judge in this case; but as the case is reversed by concurrence of a majority of the court, and a new trial will be the result, I will forbear entering upon an analysis of the evidence, and a comparison of the facts in this case with those in the Phillips case, as such a course of argument might be prejudicial to a fair trial.
On the question of the competency of the evidence offered on the trial and rejected by the court, which is fully stated in the separate opinion of Judge Hardin, I think, according to the weight of authority, the evidence was competent and should have been admitted, and to that extent only I concur with the other members of the court.

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