Kenney v. State
Kenney v. State
Opinion of the Court
One Thomas McCarty was shot and billed on tbe evening of tbe 26th of March, 1904, at a saloon in tbe town of Mason, Bayfield county. Tbe plaintiffs in error (hereinafter called tbe defendants) were charged with bis murder, and upon trial tbe jury returned a verdict against both defendants of manslaughter in tbe third degree, and tbe case comes to this court upon writ of error.
There are no claims of error, in tbe rulings upon evidence or in tbe charge of tbe court, but tbe broad claim is made that there was no evidence upon which a verdict of manslaughter in tbe third degree could be properly based, especially as to tbe defendant McComb. There are many facts which were undisputed. It appears that the defendants were employed in the woods, and came to the village of Mason on the morning of March 26th to attend a caucus held there on that day, and that they were together most of the day. One Prank Taylor, an acquaintance of both defendants, was also in town that day, and met the defendants several times. There had previously been personal difficulties between Kenney and Taylor, and McComb knew the fact. Kenney procured a loaded revolver early in the day, and carried it with him, and this fact McComb also knew. The defendants spent most of the day gravitating from saloon to saloon, and as evening approached they were both considerably intoxicated. Taylor had been pursuing zealously the same line of conduct and with like results. At about 9 o’clock in the evening all three went to the saloon of one Hogan, which had been closed for the night, and woke up the
The theory of the state was that Kenney and McComb had prepared themselves for the affray during the day, and that it was their intention to provoke a row and kill Taylor, and there was considerable testimony which would justify such a finding, but, as the jury found otherwise, the only question is whether, on any reasonable theory of the evidence, a finding of manslaughter in the third degree can be justified.
“Any person who shall kill another in thedieat of passion without a design to effect death, by a dangerous weapon, in any case except such wherein the killing of another is herein declared to he justifiable or excusable, shall he deemed guilty of manslaughter in the third degree.”
Sec. 4355 provides that:
“The involuntary killing of a human being by the act, procurement or culpable negligence of another, while such other person is engaged in the commission of a trespass or other injury to private rights or property or engaged in an attempt to commit such injury, shall be deemed manslaughter in the third degree.”
As to the defendant Kenney there would seem to be no serious question but that the jury might reasonably find a verdict of manslaughter in the third degree under either section. If they believed (as they were entitled to believe) Kenney’s own story of the brutal and unprovoked attack made upon him by Taylor, there was certainly ample ground for concluding that when he drew his pistol he was in the heat of passion; and if they further believed (as he testified) that he had no design to effect death, but still believed, as they might, that he intended to shoot, and that the shooting was not justifiable or excusable, all the elements of the crime required by the first of the above-quoted sections would be present. On the other hand, if they believed (as they might) that Kenney was unlawfully assaulting Taylor, and, while using his pistol for that purpose, it was negligently and involuntarily discharged, the crime would be complete under the second of said sections.
As to the defendant McGomb, it may be conceded that it would be difficult to find any reasonable theory on which he could be convicted as a principal under sec. 4354, but there is no serious difficulty under sec. 4355. There was considerable evidence tending to show that Kenney and McComb had ar
We conclude that the judgment was right as to both defendants. •
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Kenney and another, in error v. The State, in error
- Status
- Published