Affirming.
Andrew Brummett shot and killed Tom Coffey, a colored man, and was condemned to serve in the penitentiary a life sentence for the crime. He seeks reversal of the judgment of conviction upon several grounds which will be discussed and disposed of in the course of the opinion.
Brummett's wife had caused a warrant to be issued for his arrest, and, as two officers approached to execute the warrant, they saw Tom Coffey with a butcher knife attempt to assault Brummett. Brummett dropped from a fence on which he was sitting and entered his shoe repair shop. The officers took Coffey in charge, Brummett reappeared with a shotgun, and shot Coffey in the back. His claim was that he shot in defense of one of the officers. It appears from the evidence that Coffey and Brummett had been in an altercation a few minutes before the fatal one. Both men were shown to bear bad reputations, and both at the time were under the influence of intoxicating liquors.
The complaint of the instructions is limited to a failure to define "sudden affray," as used in one of them. The criticism is without merit. The court advised the jury that, if the killing was "in sudden affray, or in sudden heat or passion, upon provocation reasonably calculated to excite the passions beyond his power of self control, without previous malice," the offense committed would be voluntary manslaughter, and the appropriate punishment would be confinement in the penitentiary for a period of not less than two, nor more than twenty-two years, in the discretion of the jury.
The evidence in the case was so simple, and the instruction so easily understood, that no need was apparent *Page 324
for a definition of the words "sudden affray." Thurman v. Commonwealth,
Argument is advanced to the effect that the verdict is palpably against the evidence, but the abridged statement of the facts already made illustrates that the contention is lacking in plausibility. Wright v. Commonwealth,
It is insisted that appellant, although not himself in danger, was justified in shooting Coffey in defense of one of the officers. There was some evidence, although slight and improbable, that Brummett acted in defense of the officer. It is true that a killing may be excused on the ground that it was done in the necessary defense of another (Wheat v. Commonwealth, (Ky.)
Appellant complains of certain rulings respecting the admission of evidence, but we find no merit in any of them. The court was careful to confine the evidence within legal limits, and the record manifests that the appellant had a fair trial free from any substantial error.
The judgment is affirmed. *Page 325