Will Brown was indicted for the offense of murder, and was convicted without recommendation. According to the evidence offered by the State, the relation between the accused and deceased before the homicide was friendly. The accused had recently received a wound in his side at the hands of another person, and during the illness that ensued occupied the bed of the deceased by invitation. On the night of the homicide a dance was in progress in the neighborhood, which the deceased attended. He was seated in a chair, talking to another man, when the accused entered the room, drew a pistol from the pocket of his overalls, and shot the deceased while he was so seated and talking, and unarmed. The accused did not introduce any evidence, but made a statement to the following effect: On the night of the homicide he was standing near a house talking to a woman, she having both hahds on his shoulders. The deceased, coming from behind the house, said, “What you doing here, got my woman barred up like this?” At the same time the deceased “grabbed” and “slammed” the accused against the house two or three times. The accused said, “Don’t do that; you are liable to break some of the stitches in my side; ” whereupon the deceased slammed the accused on the ground and said, “If you cross my path any more to-night, I am going to kill you.” The accused then “went on up where the game was going on,” and, at the request of another person, loaned fifty cents on a “gun,” and upon receiving the “gun” put it in his pocket. About that time some one proposed, “Let’s go to the dance;” to which the accused assented. What followed after reaching the dance was described by the accused thus: “When I walked in the door, this fellow Sweet [the deceased] he jumped up with a knife in his hand like that [indicating], and come at me like that [indicating], and says, cWhat did I tell you?’ Just as he come at me I shot him and backed out the door. Sweet throwed his hands up
Judgment affirmed.
