Reversing.
At about 7:30 p. m., October 16, 1943, appellant shot and killed Ethel Buck. A true bill charged her with wilful murder. Upon trial the jury returned a verdict of guilty, fixing punishment at confinement for life in the reformatory, and from a judgment in conformity she prosecutes appeal. As the case comes to us, counsel insists that the judgment should be reversed because the trial court erred to appellant's prejudice in (1) failing to give an instruction on voluntary manslaughter; (2) in permitting incompetent and prejudicial evidence to go to the jury over objections.
Appellant, pleading not guilty, admitted that she shot and killed Ethel Buck, and undertook to show that at the time she was mentally irresponsible. The evidence as adduced presents rather a sordid picture, involving the lives of parties connected with the story of the killing and the background. There is no doubt from a perusal of the record that the tragedy was the out-growth of continuing intimacies existing between appellant's husband and Ethel Buck.
Appellant was about fifty years of age at the time of the killing, and had been married twice prior to her marriage with Hall. She had been divorced from her first husband, and thereafter married one Smith, and they conducted a rooming house in Ashland. They finally separated and she later obtained a divorce. Without going into details, the proof shows her life, or at least after she grew up, was one of frustration, disappointments and griefs.
Some time in 1941 she met Fred Hall, a gambler, without legitimate gainful occupation. About two years later Hall began illicit relations with Ethel Buck. They made frequent trips together for the purpose of illicit relations, some to distant places. Following his return *Page 301 from these trips the husband would confess his derelictions and receive forgiveness, and make promises not to again offend. On October 14th Ethel Buck had returned from a trip, and registered at a local hotel. She communicated with Hall, who repaired to the hotel and resumed relations. When he returned home he told his wife that he had been with his "woman." At this time appellant was operating a hotel, which according to the proof was of unsavory reputation. The homicide occurred on October 16. Appellant's testimony is to the effect that she left her home about 7:30, as she says to go to some place and get a coca-cola, and with no other intention. She went directly to the P.K. Grill. When she got into the room Ethel Buck was at the counter, and "kind of snarled at me." Appellant proceeded to the rear of the room, and then came back toward the front, and Ethel "made a face" at her. She then says she got to thinking about the relations between her husband and deceased; the trip to Baltimore, and the meeting at the local hotel, "and my mind went blank and I don't know how I got my gun or nothing. It all just went blank to me." After that time her mind "just came and went." She did not recall anything she said to any one while in the grill, or for some time thereafter. She said that she carried the pistol for protection since she had a "right smart of money" with her at times.
Two doctors testified. One had examined appellant in November 1943. He described her physical condition and found it to be such as would lead to a neurotic condition. Given a hypothetical question, which dealt with appellant's past history, the facts and circumstances under which she and her husband had lived, and such as related to the shooting, the doctor expressed the opinion that at the time of the homicide she was of unsound mind; was temporarily incapable of resisting the impulse to do the act. Another physician substantially corroborated him. Dr. Lyon, especially qualified in psychiatry, who had heard the evidence throughout the trial, and the technical question, expressed the opinion that at the time of the homicide she had sufficient mind to know right from wrong, and was not acting under a temporary impulse. This phase of the case need not be discussed at length, since we observe that the court gave instructions upon the insanity issue in form and substance frequently approved by the court, and about which no complaint is made. *Page 302
At the time of the shooting Ethel Buck was in a telephone booth. The first shot fired entered her back; she fell on the floor and appellant fired five more shots into her body between the waist line and head. Before the last shot was fired she was heard to say: "I don't guess you will tear up any more homes." Of this remark, and others charged to have been made, she said she had no recollection. It is unnecessary to detail other proof or circumstances which tended to evidence premeditation.
The court gave an instruction on murder, and as noted above, on the question of insanity. Coming now to the vigorous contention that appellant was entitled to an instruction on voluntary manslaughter, we have been pointed to no case which is specific on this point; appellant relies on Shepherd v. Com.,
We reversed judgment in Vaughn v. Com.
In Cottrell v. Com.,
From a reading of these cases, and others, it may be concluded that in cases where it may appear "under facts disclosed," that the homicide may have been committed under the influence of sudden passion, arising from adequate provocation which may render the mind incapable of cool reflection, the court should give the jury the right to determine the question under appropriate instructions.
It may be admitted that there was here presented testimony as would justify a reasonable mind in concluding that there was premeditation and malice; on the other hand the court must realize that appellant here denied many if not all of the specific charges, not remembering others, indicating the existence of those factors; the claim that she left her home for an innocent purpose, and became much frustrated by the presence and actions of Ethel Buck, and the previous conduct, and unable to control her emotions or resist an irresistible impulse, presented a situation which authorized an instruction on voluntary manslaughter.
During her cross-examination appellant was asked, over repeated objections, and permitted to answer, without admonition, the following questions: "Have you ever been indicted for operating a disorderly house there?" "Have you been convicted of that?" "Have you ever been charged with contributing to juvenile delinquency by permitting girls 14 or 15 years of age to go to rooms with men?" She said that it had happened on two occasions, and undertook to explain that her clerk was responsible, and was asked, "You dope time on both occasions, didn't you?" "Wasn't you charged with some sort of crime in Judge Bell's court, charged with contributing to juvenile delinquency?" "Did you ever live with a man named Elmer Stallard?" and other questions of similar character and import. Many of these were answered in the affirmative; some with accompanying *Page 305 explanations, but it is apparent to us that this line of testimony was indulged for the purpose of prejudicing the minds of the jury. This course cannot be sanctioned, though it may be in fact that the jury was not actually prejudiced.
Counsel for appellee insists that this line of evidence was competent because appellant had, in answer to her counsel's question, asked for the purpose of showing her varied and continued troubles, resulting in her claimed disturbed mental condition, said that in the spring of 1943 she had gotten into some trouble and Judge Rose had given her a jail sentence on a delinquency count. It is insisted that this course by appellant's counsel opened the door wide enough to justify the line of questioning indulged by the Commonwealth's attorney, and was allowable under the authority of Voice v. Com.,
Section 597, Civil Code of Practice, applicable in criminal cases, provides that a witness "may be impeached by evidence that his general reputation for untruthfulness or immorality renders him unworthy of belief, but not by evidence of particular wrongful acts, except that it may be shown by the examination of a witness or record of a judgment that he has been convicted of a felony." Sessmer v. Com.,
Over objection the Commonwealth introduced two or three witnesses who, under questioning, said that the reputation of the hotel operated by appellant was bad, the question embodying the query as to whether or not it was known as a disorderly house, a house of ill-fame, a bawdy house. These questions were irrelevant, and *Page 306 like the others incompetent, and should not have been asked, nor allowed to go to the jury, and without admonition, even had they been relevant. They were not made competent by the testimony of Dr. Reaser on the theory that his testimony, based on past history or matter embraced in the hypothetical question propounded to him and other doctors, opened the door for the course pursued.
Judgment reversed with directions to grant appellant a new trial consistent herewith.