Plaintiff in error was indicted for murder in the first degree at the Fall term, 1894, of the Circuit Court for Bradford county. During a subsequent term held in March, 1899, he was arraigned and pleaded not guilty. Upon the trial had at the same term he was found guilty of murder in the second degree, and from the sentence imposed sued out this writ of error.
1. The first assignment of error relates to the ruling of the Circuit Court whereby it refused defendant’s motion to compel the State Attorney to call as witnesses for the State, all the persons whose names were endorsed upon the indictment and who' were shown by the
2. The second assignment of error reads as follows: “The court erred in giving the charges numbered five and ten as appears on pages 37 and 38 of the record.” This assignment is general, embracing more than one instruction given by the court. These instructions, assert distinct propositons of law, and under our rulings we will examine no further than to' ascertain that one of them was properly given. Shiver v. State, decided at the present term, and authorities therein cited. The instruction numbered 5 complained of was substantially in the language of our statute defining murder in the' second degree, and it was preceded by others defining justifiable and excusable homicide and murder in the first degree, and succeeded by others defining manslaughter, premeditated design and the right of self-defense, and the jury were told that if the evidence warranted it, they might convict the defendant of murder in one of its degrees, or manslaughter. The instruction was as follows: “The unlawful killing, when perpetrated by an act eminently dangerous to another and evincing a depraved mind, regardless of human life, although without any premeditated design to effect the > death of any particular individual, is murder in the sec-f ond degree.” The objection urged is, not that it asserts an incorrect proposition of law, but that it was not applicable to any phase of the evidence. Inasmuch as we hold that the evidence was sufficient to sustain the verdict for murder in the second degree, it is quite evident that this instruction was applicable to the evidence and that the court committed no error in giving it.
3. The third assignment of error reads as follows:
4. The remaining assignments of error, based upon the order overruling defendant’s motion for a new trial, question the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict found. The State examined four witnesses, two only of whom claimed any knowledge of the facts attending the homicide. The defendant offered no testimony. It appears from the State’s evidence that at the
Plaintiff in error contends that under the facts he was justified in killing the deceased on the ground of self-defense; that if the homicide was unlawful, it was not perpetrated by an act “imminently dangerous to another, evincing a depraved mind regardless of human life,” so as to bring it within-the definition of murder in the second degree.
2nd. If the defendant perpetrated the unlawful homicide from a premeditated design to effect the death of the deceased or any human being, he would have been guilty of murder in the first degree; but if he perpetrated it by an act imminently dangerous to another, evincing
The foregoing statement of the facts attending the homicide we have taken from the testimony of John Whitehead, one of the State’s witnesses, but another witness for the State, Henry Philips, testified that deceased had no knife on that occasion, and did not curse the defendant. If his version of the affair is correct, there can be no doubt that a verdict for murder in the second degree is fully sustained by the evidence.
From what has been said in this opinion we do- not wish it to be inferred that we intend to hold that danger to many or others is, under our present statute (Section 2380, Revised Statutes), an essential to- murder in the second degree, .or that proof of an intent to kill a particular individual will exclude a conviction for murder in that degree, for we are in thorough accord with our previous decisions in Marshall v. State, supra, and McCoy v. State, 40 Fla. 494, 24 South. Rep. 485, announcing
This disposes of all the questions raised by the assignments' of error, and, finding no error, the judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.