Opinion op the Court by
Judge HobsonAffirming.
Charles M. Greenwell, Webb Greenwell, and Russell Greenwell were jointly indicted in the Nelson circuit court under section 1166, Ky. Stats., 1903, for *196maliciously -wounding Overton Newton, with intent to kill him. On a trial before the jury Eussell Green-well wás acquitted, but Charles M. and Webb Green-well were convicted; their punishment being fixed at three years in the penitentiary.
They ask a reversal of the judgment on the following grounds: (1) The court erred in overruling their demurrer to the indictment. (2) The court erred in the admission of evidence. (3) The court erred in instructing the jury. (4) Misconduct of the commonwealth attorney in the concluding argument. The objections will be disposed of in the order stated.
1. The indictment, was in four counts. In the first count it was charged that the three defendants willfully and maliciously shot at and wounded Overton Newton with a pistol, a deadly weapon, and struck and wounded him with a shotgun, a deadly weapon, and struck and stabbed him with a knife, a deadly weapon, with intention to kill him. In the second count it was charged that Webb Greenwell shot Newton with a pistol willfully and maliciously with intent to kill, and that Charles M. Greenwell and Eussell Greenwell were present, aiding, counseling, and assisting him in so doing. In the third count it was charged that Charles M. Greenwell willfully and maliciously struck and beat Newton with a shotgun with- intention of killing him, and that Webb Green-well and Eussell Greenwell were present, and willfully and maliciou'sly aided, counseled, and assisted him in so doing. In the fourth count it was charged that Eussell Greenwell willfully and maliciously cut and wounded Overton Newton with, a knife with intent to kill him, and that Charles M. Greenwell and Webb Greenwell were present, and willfully and maliciously aided, assisted, and abetted him in so *197doing. The indictment is not had for duplicity. It. only charges one offense, the malicious wounding of Overton Newton by the three defendants in one transaction. The offense is charged to be committed in different ways, but it is one offense. The offense is the malicious wounding of Overton Newton by the three defendants with intent to kill him; and whether, it was done with a knife, a pistol, or a gun, each being a deadly weapon, it falls within the statute. The thing the statute punishes is the malicious attempt to kill with a deadly weapon, and it does not follow that two offenses would be committed if more than one person joined in the assault, or if more than one weapon was used. There would not be several offenses if several shots were fired from the same pistol, or several cuts were made with the same knife, or several blows were struck with the same deadly weapon, all in the same assault or transaction. The The fact that two pistols were used instead of one would be immaterial, or that, instead of two pistols, a pistol and a knife were used. The transaction is the assault with intent to, kill, and the different forms in which the intent to kill may have been attempted to be carried into effect do not change the character of the act, or make it susceptible of being split up into several different offenses. The statutory offense is committed where the crime would have been minder if death had resulted. Rapp v. Commonwealth, 14 B. Mon. (Ky.) 614. There is no reason that an instruction in a form sufficient for the greater should not be sufficient for the inchoate offense. The ease falls within the rule laid down in Thompson v. Commonwealth, 1 Met. (Ky.) 13, and Commonwealth v. Lowe, 116 Ky. 335, 25 Ky. Law Rep. 534, 76 S. W. 119. The statute under which *198the case of Commonwealth v. Patrick, 80 Ky. 605, 4 Ky. Law Rep. 660, was decided, was materially different from the present statute. Under that statute the aider and abettor was not punished as the principal. Iiis offense was only a misdemeanor, but under the present statute he is punished as principal, and his offense is the same as the principal’s. The decision in that case is therefore not authority under the present statute, and is not now applicable. Benge v. Commonwealth, 92 Ky. 1, 13 Ky. Law Rep. 308, 17 S. W. 146; Howard v. Commonwealth, 110 Ky. 358, 24 Ky. Law Rep. 91, 612, 61 S. W. 756.
2. The proper understanding of the second objection requires a brief statement of the facts in the case. Some time previous to September, 1905, Webb Greenwell had killed John Burns. Overton Newton, Miles Plead, and others were members of a sheriff’s posse which hunted for him to arrest him for the homicide. Greenwell was acquitted of killing Burns. After this, on September 23, 1905, the three Green-wells, Overton Newton and his brother, Miles Head, and others, were at Balltown, a small town in Nelson county,' where there were two saloons. While there that day Webb Greenwell used very ugly language about the men who had assisted the sheriff in arresting him, cursing them, and saying he would get even with them. He had some words with Miles Head, and choked Head, making threats about what he would do.- Later he cursed Overton Newton, and said to him that he (Newton) had come out to help arrest him when he killed Johnny Burns, and he intended to have his day with every one who assisted in that arrest. There is some conflict in the evidence as to what followed. The evidence for the commonwealth is to the effect that'Newton told him he had nothing *199against Mm, and that, as Greenwell advanced on him, Newton called upon him to stand back. He continued to advance, and Newton drew his pistol. Monroe Bartley, a brother-in-law of Newton’s, struck the pistol down, causing it to go off, and it wounded Green-well in the ankle: At this Newton backed out of the front door of the saloon, held by Bartley, and, as soon as he could get Bartley to let him go, ran down the pike toward the other saloon. In the meantime Webb Greenwell, who had gone out of the back door, had taken a pistol from a bystander and pursued Newton down the pike with it; Newton being by this time some yards away. His attention was attracted by some friend calling to him to look out. He turned, and, as he turned, Greenwell .shot him with the pistol, inflicting a flesh wound in the leg. He tried to shoot then with Ms pistol, but, finding that it had been broken when Bartley knocked it down, turned and ran down to the other saloon, and when he reached it went in the door and fastened the door behind Mm. When- he fastened the door and turned around, he saw Charles M'. Greenwell, the brother of Webb, standing at the counter with a gun in Ms hand. Charles Greenwell had left the other saloon when the difficulty arose, and had run down to this saloon to get a pistol, but, not being able to find any, had gotten the gun, which was not loaded, and the proprietor’s wife would not let him get the cartridges for it. As soon as Newton saw Charles Greenwell, he said to him not to hurt him, and not to let the others hurt him, as his pistol was broken. Charles Greenwell made Mm give up the pistol, which he did. About this time Tom Newton, the brother of Overton Newton, who was staggering drunk, and had been out in the yard, came in at the back door. Just after he *200got in the room Webb Greenwell came around to the back door and shot Tom' Newton, wounding him. At this Overton Newton took out his pocketknife and cut Webb Greenwell, and he gave back. Charles Greenwell then knocked Newton down with the gun and beat up his head dreadfully. The woman interceded for him to stop, but he did not stop' until Newton was insensible. The defendants objected on the trial to the evidence as to Webb Greenwell choking Head, and also objected to the evidence as to his shooting Tom Newton. But it was all in effect one transaction. The way he had acted toward Head illustrated his animus, and. showed what he wanted to do to the other members of the posse who had assisted in arresting him. The gist of the prosecution is malice. Pie had the same cause of complaint against Overton Newton that he had against Head, and the whole transaction could be given in evidence on the question of malice. The shooting, of Tom Newton was, of course, a distinct offense from the wounding of Overton Newton, and was not included in the indictment; but it was all done in one transaction, and proof of the entire transaction was properly admitted to explain the motives actuating the parties. It was in fact one difficulty from the time it opened in the first saloon until Overton Newton was beaten into insensibility in the second saloon, and all the facts and circumstances occurring in the transaction, or as part of it, or leading up to it, were properly admitted in evidence.
3. The court gave six instructions — the first instruction covering the offense of malicious wounding; the second being similar to it, but covering the offense of wounding in sudden heat and passion; the third being the hard labor instruction in case a fine was *201imposed; the fourth and fifth relating to reasonable doubt, and the sixth to self-defense. The first and sixth instructions, which are those complained of, are as follows:
“(1) The court instructs the jury: If you believe from the evidence, to the exclusion of a reasonable doubt, that in Nelson county, before the finding; of the indictment herein, the defendants, "Webb Green-well, Charles Mack Greenwell, and Russell Greenwell, acting together and in concert with each other, or that one or more of said defendants, willfully and maliciously shot and wounded Overton Newton with a pistol with intention to kill said Newton, or willfully and maliciously cut said Newton with a knife with mention to kill him, or willfully and maliciously struck said Newton with a shotgun with intention to kill him (if yon believe from the evidence, to the exclusion of a reasonable doubt, said shotgun was a weapon reasonably calculated to produce death when used by a person of the physical strength of and in the manner in which it was used by one of the defendants on said occasion, if either of them did strike Newton with a shotgun), you should find the defendants or defendant who so shot or cut or struck said Newton, if any of the defendants did, guilty of malicious wounding, and fix the punishment of such defendant or defendants at confinement in the penitentiary for any time not less than one nor more than five years, and if you further believe from the evidence, to the exclusion of a reasonable doubt, that at the time said Newton was so shot, cut, and struck, or a.t the time he was either so shot, cut, or struck, if he was so shot, cut, or struck by defendants, or any of them, the other defendant or defendants were present or near enough to aid and assist said shoot*202ing, cutting,' or striking, and that the defendant or defendants thus present or thus near did wilfully and maliciously aid, assist, abet, or counsel any one or more of their codefendants to so shoot, cut, or strike said Newton with intention to kill him, you should find said defendant or- defendants who thus aided, assisted, abetted, or counseled said shooting, cutting, or striking, if any of them did, guilty of malicious wounding, and fix their punishment at confinement in the penitentiary for any time not less than one nor more than five years.”
(6) If you believe from the evidence that, at the time defendants or any of them shot Overton Newton with a pistol or cut him with a knife or struck him with a shotgun, if any of the defendants did so shoot or cut or strike him, the defendants believed and'had reasonable grounds for believing any one or more of said defendants was then in immediate. danger of loss of life or of receiving great bodily injury at the' hands of said Newton, and believed, and had reasonable grounds to believe, they had no apparent and safe means of averting said danger except by shooting, cutting, or striking said Newton, they are excusable on the ground of self-defense and apparent necessity, and you should find them not guilty, unless you further believe from the evidence, to the exclusion of a reasonable doubt, that the defendant or defendants so in danger from said Newton, if any of them were in danger from him, sought and provoked the difficulty with said Newton, in which they or any of them shot, out, or struck Newton, if any of them' did shoot, cut, or strike him, and made the danger, if any, to said defendant or defendants from Newton necessary or apparently necessary to said Newton to defend himself from said defendants or *203defendant, in which, event said defendants cannot excuse themselves on the plea of self-defense and apparent necessity, unless said defendant or defendants who sought and provoked the difficulty, if any of defendants did so, in good faith withdrew or attempted to withdraw from said difficulty before Newton was shot, cut, or struck, if he w'as shot, cut, or struck by defendant. ’ ’
The first instruction is not subject to objection on the ground that it authorizes the jury to find the defendants guilty of one of several offenses. The offense with which they stood charged was malicious wounding, and it was charged' that this offense had been committed in several different ways. If they had committed the offense in any of the ways, thej were guilty. The sixth instruction is not liable to' objection on the ground that it required all of the defendants to believe and have reasonable grounds to believe that one or more of their number were then in danger in order for one of them to act: Taking the instruction as a whole, no jury could have understood that one of them had not the right to act in his self-defense, if he believed and had reasonable grounds to believe that he or either of his brothers was in danger. The sense of the instruction is so evident, taking it all together, that no jury could-have misunderstood it, especially when it is read in connection with instruction No. 5, on reasonable doubt. As applied to the facts of the case, the instruction, though, not well drawn, could not have misled the jury, and under the Code a judgment of conviction cannot be reversed unless upon the whole record it appears that the defendant’s substantial rights were prejudiced.
4. In the argument of the case to the jury neither *204of the attorneys should have said anything to the jury about the grand jury, or reflected in any way on the conduct of the grand jury. This had nothing to do with, the case. The court properly sustained the defendants’ objection to what the commonwealth attorney proposed to say about the grand jury. We deem it unnecessary to go into detail as to the ether matters complained of in the concluding argument of the commonwealth attorney. He had a right to refer to the fact that Webb Greenwell bad killed John Burns, as this had come out in the evidence relating to the words used by Greenwell to Newton when he began the assault on him. The commonwealth attorney also had a right to refer to the choking of Head, as that had been brought out in the evidence,' and to the actions of the defendant on the trial, as this was in the presence of the jury. The court, when the defendants’ attorney objected to certain statements made by the commonwealth attorney as being outside of the record, should not simply have admonished the .jury that it was the duty of counsel to keep within the record' — that is, the evidence admitted by the court, and the instructions of the court to the jury— and that, if counsel said anything outside of the record, it was the duty of the jury to disregard it. The court should not have thus left the jury to determine whether the counsel was going out of the record or not. If he was out of the record, the court should have sustained the objection, and stopped the argument; or, if he was not out of the record, he should have overruled the objection. If the court did not remember the evidence, he should have refreshed his recollection. The jury should not be allowed to hear an improper argument, with an admonition that they are to disregard it if it is outside of the record, for *205this leaves to the jury a matter which the court should determine. The jury should not hear the improper argument But in the case at bar there was no substantial going’ out of the record by the commonwealth attorney; and, on the whole case, the judgment of conviction cannot be disturbed.
Judgment affirmed.