76 Tenn. 376 | Tenn. | 1881
delivered the opinion of the court.
The prisoner appeals to this court from a judgment of death pronounced against him by the circuit court of Macon county, for the murder of Hugh Sanders.
One witness proves that a week or ten days before the killing, they met at a spring in Lafayette, when -the deceased made some hostile demonstration, and, as
The killing occurred on.the 13th of October, 1880, in the town of Lafayette. An hour or two . before the killing, several young men, including the prisoner- and deceased, were in front of Johnson’s hotel. They were engaged in playful conversation. The .prisoner had a gun, and in the language of the witnesses, “was drinking,” or had been drinking. One of the young men asked him “ if carrying a gun made him drunk, if it did he Avould get him one,” and deceased Said, “if it makes you drunk, pass it around and we will all take a spree.” The prisoner did not seem to-take offense at the language.
The company separated, the prisoner and deceased going in different directions. Within an hour or two deceased and two other young men returned, and with Johnson, the proprietor of the house, were on the pavement in front of the hotel, the deceased sitting in a chair leaning back against the house. The prisoner was seen coming towards them, still carrying the gun. Johnson asked deceased if he was not uneasy for fear the prisoner would attack him; he said, “No, we have-been at outs, but we have agreed to drop it, and we speak when we pass.” This remark was brought out without objection. Prisoner came up — when near where-the parties were sitting, turned a little off the pavement and came around directly in front of the deceased, brought down his gun, and said, “ G — d d — n you, I suppose you have got something against me,” and instantly fired and shot the deceased through the body,
His father says he was wild and very drunk and out of his mind on the day of the killing — worse than he had seen him for months. The mother says he at times seemed very much depressed, and said deceased “charging him with stealing the wine, had put him below the respect of decent people.” The witnesses-pretty much all agree that the prisoner “was drinking” the day of the homicide, but to what extent he was under the influence of liquor their testimony differs somewhat. The witnesses for the State pretty generally say that he was “drinking but not drunk”; but that he was to some extent under the influence of liquor fully appears.
Prisoner’s father, who was postmaster, proves that
This is a sufficient outline of the case for a proper understanding of the questions presented for our decision.
Upon the subject of drunkenness the court charged the jury as follows: “Voluntary drunkenness is no excuse for the commission of a crime, but it may be looked to, to ascertain whether the offense has been committed or not. We have seen to commit murder in the first degree the killing must be done willfully, deliberately, premeditatedly, and with malice aforethought. This requires certain. states of the mind, and the question of the intoxication of the prisoner may be looked to, to see whether at the time of the killing he had these states of mind. Was he so intoxicated that he was incapable of giving the consent of his will to the killing, or of deliberating and premeditating the deed; if he was, then he cannot be guilty of murder in the first degree. But if he was capable of willing, deliberating and premeditating the deed, then
Again, the judge says: “ If you believe, beyond a reasonable doubt, he (the prisoner) shot Sanders in malice, not’ intending to kill him but did do it, or if you find he was so intoxicated that he was not capable of that deliberation or premeditation necessary to make murder in the first .degree, or you have a reasonable doubt how this is, you should find him guilty of murder in the second degree.” This is the entire charge upon this subject.
• In the case of Haile v. The State, 11 Hum., 154, the charge was as follows: “Voluntary drunkenness is no excuse for the commission of crime, on the contrary it is considered by our law as rather an. aggravation; yet if the defendant was so deeply intoxicated by spirituous liquors at the time of the killing as to-be incapable of forming in his mind a design deliberately and premeditately to do the act, the killing under such a state of intoxication wmrld only be murder in the second degree.”
Upon a conviction for murder in the first degree the above charge was held to be erroneous. Judge Green, in delivering the opinion of the court, quotes from Judge Reese, in Swan v. The State, 4 Hum., 136,
Judge Green says: “ In these remarks the court intended to be understood as distinctly indicating that a degree of drunkenness by which the party was greatly excited and which produced a state of mind unfavorable to deliberation and premeditation, although not so excessive as to render the party absolutely incapable of forming a deliberate purpose, might be taken into
Judge Green also quotes from Judge Turley, in Pirtle v. The State, 9 Hum., to the effect that it will often be a question whether the killing has been the result of sudden passion excited by a cause inadequate to reduce it to manslaughter, but still sufficient to mitigate it to murder in the second degree, * * * in such cases, whatever will throw light upon the mental status of the offender is legitimate, and among other things the fact that he was drunk; not that this will excuse or mitigate the offense, if it were done willfully, deliberately, maliciously and premedi-tatedly (which it might well be though the perpetrator was drunk), but to show that the killing did not spring from a premeditated purpose, but sudden passion excited by inadequate provocation such as might reasonably be expected to arouse sudden passion and heat to the point .of taking life without premeditation and . deliberation.”
Judge Green, in commenting on the above extract, in substance and effect says: “ The degree of drunkenness which will shed light on the mental status of the offender, is not alone that excessive state of intoxication which deprives the party of the capacity to frame in his mind a design deliberately and premeditatedly to do an act, but in addition any degree of intoxication that may exist, in order that the jury may judge in view.' of such intoxication, in connection with all the facts and circumstances, whether- the- act was pre-meditatedly and deliberately done.”,
The rule to be extracted from these cases is about this: If drunkenness exists to such an extent as to render the defendant incapable of forming a premeditated and deliberate design to kill, then of course he cannot be guilty of murder in the first degree; still, if the drunkenness be not of this extent, nevertheless the jury may consider the drunkenness in connection with all the facts, to see whether the purpose to kill was formed in passion produced by a cause operating upon a mind excited with liquor — not such adequate provocation as would reduce the killing to manslaughter — but nevertheless such as produced passion in fact,
The conviction for murder in the first degree was affirmed in Swan’s case, 4 Hum., 136, although he was intoxicated when the crime was committed.
We are constrained to hold, upon the rule as thus established by these authorities, that the portion of his Honor’s charge above set forth is erroneous. The jury were correctly told that if the prisoner was so intoxicated as to be incapable of deliberating and premeditating the deed, he could not be guilty of murder in the first degree; on the other hand, if notwithstanding his intoxication he was capable of deliberation and premeditation, then he might be found guilty of murder in the first degree. This was all well enough; but the error is in making the whole effect of the prisoner’s intoxication in reducing the killing to murder in the second degree depend upon whether the drunkenness was to such an extent as to render the prisoner incapable of deliberation and premeditation; whereas, as we have seen, a degree of intoxication sho'rt of this may, when taken in connection with the other facts, show that the killing resulted from a purpose formed in passion, and' not deliberately and premeditatedly; and although there be no adequate provocation to reduce the offense to manslaughter, yet if in this mode
In a cáse involving life, we do not feel ourselves at liberty to overlook this error, whatever we might think of the facts. The prisoner is entitled to a correct exposition of the law.
The judgment must, therefore, be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.