CAPERTON, Judge:
Clarence Arthur Hill appeals from his conviction for robbery in the first degree and corresponding sentence of ten years in the penitentiary. After a thorough review of the parties' arguments, the record, and the applicable law, we affirm Hill's conviction and sentence.
On the evening of June 26, 2008, Owensboro police officers arrived at the apartment of Walter White after receiving a phone call from White's neighbor, Larry Bickett, reporting a home invasion at White's residence. When White answered the door he informed the officers that he was being robbed by three people inside his apartment. The officers entered the apartment and found Hill feigning sleep and lying in vomit on White's bed and discovered Robert Stamper and Valada Layson hiding in the bathtub with the curtain drawn. Upon recovering $101.00 from Stamper's pocket, seeing cuts and marks on White's arms, wrists, and ankles, and discovering a pool cue in White's bedroom along with two knives and cut cables and cords, the officers arrested Hill, Stamper, and Layson. All three were indicted for kidnapping and first-degree robbery.
At trial Hill did not testify. Stamper's testimony of the evening in question was drastically different than White's. Stamper testified that White had given Stamper money to buy narcotics and asked Stamper to procure him a sexual tryst with a female. Stamper then left and returned to White's apartment with Layson. Stamper, a self-proclaimed "crackhead", testified that he stole White's cash since he needed more "dope". According to Stamper, Layson's boyfriend, Hill, arrived at the apartment and instigated a fight. Stamper testified that when Hill entered the apartment he "started raging out". At this time, according to Stamper, White found his money missing, confronted Stamper, and yelled profanities at Layson saying "you got my money". As White accosted Stamper, he also grabbed Layson at which time he was attacked by Hill. Stamper testified that he did not threaten White, did not tie him up, that no one hit White with a pool stick, pulled a knife on White, or pulled cable wire from the wall. Stamper's account of the evening at trial was substantially different from what he told the police the night of his arrest. According to Det. McClellan, Stamper admitted to holding a knife to White's throat and tying him up. Stamper admitted that Layson was there to distract White so they could rob him.
White testified that Stamper visited his apartment around 4:00 or 5:00 in the evening and requested that White cash a check for Stamper. The two had been acquaintances for a few weeks at this time. White noticed that the check was not drawn on Stamper's account and gave Stamper $20.00 in the hopes he would leave. Stamper left. Stamper returned later that night with Layson. Inside the apartment, Stamper and Layson shot pool and then began to act suspiciously. Stamper began closing the blinds on the windows and White immediately reopened them. Stamper then said he was getting sick and left for the bathroom. After Stamper returned, he and Layson began behaving suspiciously again and whispering. Stamper then went to the front door and admitted Hill to the apartment. White did not know Hill and asked everyone to leave. White went to his bedroom and Layson followed trying to persuade him to go to a bar. Stamper then entered the bedroom and hit White with a pool stick. White tackled Stamper and a struggle ensued. Hill joined the fray and the pair wrestled White to the floor. Stamper pulled a knife and held it to White's throat. Stamper then took White's wallet and told Hill to get some cord to tie up White.
Hill then tied White's hands and feet behind his back and pushed him down on the bed. Thereafter, White vomited on the bed. Stamper directed Layson to find White's cell phones and take them. Stamper then decided he wanted to take White's truck which contained all of White's construction tools and told White he would kill him if he did not turn over the keys.
The commotion in the apartment garnered the attention of White's neighbor, Bickett. Bickett testified that he and White share a common wall and he could hear yelling coming from the apartment. White and Bickett also illegally shared cable. When Hill began pulling the cable out of White's wall to get cord to bind White, Hill actually pulled Bickett's television off its stand. Bickett called 911 to report the incident.
The jury found both Stamper and Hill guilty of first-degree robbery and Hill was subsequently sentenced to 10 years in a penitentiary. It is from this verdict and sentence that Hill now appeals.
On appeal, Hill presents two alleged errors. First, that the trial court erred to Hill's substantial prejudice in failing to instruct the jury on the justification defense of protection of another when the facts demonstrated that he was protecting his girlfriend, Layson, from White. Second, Hill was denied state and federal due process of law by the Commonwealth's misconduct in the cross-examination of co-defendant Robert Stamper which adversely affected Hill's case, especially when Hill did not testify. We address these arguments respectively. .
First, Hill argues that the trial court erred to Hill's substantial prejudice in failing to instruct the jury on the justification defense of protection of another when the facts demonstrated that he was protecting his girlfriend, Layson, from White.
We review a trial court's decision not to give an instruction under the abuse of discretion standard. Harris v. Commonwealth, 313 S.W.3d 40, 50 (Ky. 2010). The test for abuse of discretion is whether the trial judge's decision was arbitrary, unreasonable, unfair, or unsupported by sound legal principles. Commonwealth v. English, 993 S.W.2d 941, 945 (Ky. 1999)
As noted by the Harris Court,
Id. at 50 (internal citations omitted).
At issue in the case sub judice is KRS 503.070 which states in relevant part:
In applying KRS 503.070, "the focus of the penal code is on the defendant's actual subjective belief in the need for self-protection and not on the objective reasonableness of that belief." Hilbert v. Commonwealth, 162 S.W.3d 921, 924 (Ky. 2005).
We now turn to Hill's second argument, namely, that he was denied state and federal due process of law by the Commonwealth's misconduct in the cross-examination of co-defendant Robert Stamper. Hill argues that this misconduct adversely affected his case and that this is especially so as Hill did not testify. This argument was not properly preserved for appeal. Accordingly, we shall review this claimed error under RCr 10.26, which states:
Thus, under RCr 10.26 we may grant relief for an unpreserved error only when the error is (1) palpable; (2) affects the substantial rights of a party; and (3) has caused a manifest injustice. Commonwealth v. Jones, 283 S.W.3d 665, 668 (Ky. 2009). "Manifest injustice" requires showing a probability of a different result or error so fundamental as to threaten a defendant's entitlement to due process of law, i.e., the error so seriously affected the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of the proceeding as to be `shocking or jurisprudentially intolerable.'. Martin v. Commonwealth, 207 S.W.3d 1, 3 (Ky. 2006).
Further refining the parameters of RCr 10.26, the Kentucky Supreme Court in Brewer v. Commonwealth, 206 S.W.3d 343 (Ky. 2006), undertook an analysis of what constitutes a palpable error:
Id. at 349.
At issue is whether the Commonwealth's line of questioning, which called upon Stamper to remark on the veracity of the other testifying witnesses, constitutes palpable error. The Kentucky Supreme Court addressed a similar situation in Ernst v. Commonwealth, 160 S.W.3d 744, 764 (Ky. 2005), wherein the Court held:
We agree with White that the questions to the witness were improper, they did not result in manifest injustice; thus it did not amount to palpable error. In the case sub judice, after our review of the record as a whole, there was substantial evidence from which a jury could find guilt and we do not believe that absent the improper questions the result would have been different. See Ernst at 764. Finding no reversible error, we affirm Hill's conviction and sentence.
ALL CONCUR.