Miller v. Commonwealth
Miller v. Commonwealth
Opinion of the Court
OpinioN by
This is an appeal from a sentence to the penitentiary for thirteen years, on a conviction of manslaughter. The principal objection is that the lower court did not properly instruct the jury as to what kind of participation in the crime on the part of appellant would constitute guilt in case the jury should find that another did the killing.
The court told the jury that if they found appellant was present at the time of the killing and “advised, aided or incited” the crime, appellant was guilty of manslaughter, or if the killing occurred during a sudden quarrel between the deceased, the accused and the person doing the killing; but if they found the killing was the “result of premeditation or previous agreement or understanding” between the accused and the person doing the killing, they should find appellant guilty of murder.
This, we think, is a correct and explicit presentation of the law. Appellant’s counsel insist that the law was properly presented in an instruction which was refused by the court. • In that instruction,
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.