Appellants were charged in an affidavit. with the crime of robbery, upon a trial of which the jury returned a verdict against them of the crime of grand larceny, and from the judgment upon the verdict appellants appeal, and assign as error the overruling of their motion for a new trial, based upon the alleged errors committed by the court, by the giving of each of two instructions, and that the verdict of the jury is contrary to law, and that it is not sustained by sufficient evidence.
One of the instructions relates to the evidence of and who are accomplices, and the other to reasonable doubt. Objection is made to the first instruction, that it was an unwarranted invasion of the province of the jury, based upon the following sentence taken from the instruction, to wit: “John Pon and Walter McIntosh have testified as witnesses in this case, and, under their testimony, they are what is known in law as accomplices.” Appellants insist that by the language used in this sentence in the instruction, the court in-,, structed the jury that Pon and McIntosh “were what is known in law as accomplices,” and suggest by way of argument that this part of the instruction should have been worded:
“That Pon and McIntosh have testified as witnesses, and if you find from the evidence that such testimony is true, then they are known in law as accomplices.”
That part of the instruction complained of concerning reasonable doubt, is: “A reasonable doubt is one that arises naturally and spontaneously in the mind after a fair and impartial consideration and weighing of all of the evidence in the case and a determination arid application of the law of the case, and leaves the mind in such condition that you do not feel an abiding satisfaction to a moral certainty of the truth of the charge, but there remains in the mind an uncertainty, which, if interposed in the graver transactions of life, would check your final judgment and cause you to pause and hesitate;” and particularly to that part of the quotation in italics. If the part of the instruction quoted refers to evidence only, and had not been directed especially to reasonable doubt, it would not be subject to the criticism made by appellants. But that part of the instruction complained of pointedly relates to and attempts to define a reasonable doubt. A reasonable doubt in guiding a jury to its verdict in the trial of a criminal case, is not limited to a doubt which if interposed in the graver transactions of life would check the final judgment of the juror and cause him to pause and hesitate, but, to the contrary, might be such a doubt as one might have in the minor transactions of life. The instruction is subject to the interpretation that a reasonable doubt, in the mind of a juror that would forbid acquittal, must be a doubt which, if interposed in the graver transactions of life, would check the final judg
The assignments of error that the verdict of the jury is contrary to law, and not sustained by sufficient evi-. dence, are not argued in-the brief; neither is the deficiency in the evidence pointed out, nor' citations given, for which reason these errors will be considered as waived.
The judgment is therefore reversed, with instructions to sustain appellant’s motion for a new trial.