48 Fla. 9 | Fla. | 1904
At the spring term, A. D. 1903, of the Circuit Court of Hillsborough county, Lafayette Clemons
There are twenty-four assignments of error. Those argued here are 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23 and 24.
As the first assignment is based on the refusal of the court to grant a new trial and involves a consideration of the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict, we will first consider the other assignments.
The third assignment is based on the following language used by the judge in his own instructions to the jury, viz: “The instructions here given you numbered from 1 to 13 inclusive, embrace the law of the case, which you are to apply to the facts and circumstances as testified to by the witnesses and thus determine the question of the guilt or innocence of the defendants, or either of them.” It is contended that this language had the effect of impressing the jury with the notion that the charges asked for by defendants and given by the court after his own instructions were given, were not to be considered by them as being any part of the law of the case. The words “embrace the
The fourth assignment of error is based on án instruction as to murder in the second degree. Inasmuch as the defendant was acquitted of that degree, it is unnecessary to consider this assignment. McCoy v. State, 40 Fla. 494, 24 South. Rep. 485; Richard v. State, 42 Fla. 528, 29 South. Rep. 413. Moreover, the only attack made on this instruction is made upon and applies to the fifth issignment.
Fifth assignment. The court erred in charging the jury as follows: “If you believe from the evidence that Lafayette Clemons began the difficulty with Smith and beat him, either with metallic knucks or a similar weapon, until Smith’s death resulted, that the killing of Smith was not murder in any of the degrees as herein before defined and was not justifiable or excusable homicide as explained 'in these instructions, you should convict him of manslaughter.” It is contended that this instruction is faulty in two respects : first, that it assumes that metallic knucks or a similar weapon, were deadly weapons, and, second, that the court did not in this instruction define justifiable or excusable homicide. A careful reading of this instruction' does not, in our opinion, reveal the first objection. Metallic knucks are not named as per se dangerous or deadly weapons. The defendant is only to be convicted if death resulted from
Sixth assignment of error. What has been said as to the fifth assignment applies to the sixth.
Seventh assignment of error. This assignment is based on an instruction in these words: “If you find the defendant guilty you must state in your verdict the distinct degree of offense, whether of murder in the second degree, or of manslaughter, -of which you convict them, or you may convict one of them of one degree and the other of a lower degree, or you may convict one and acquit the other.”
The eighth assignment of error is based on the following instruction: “Should you convict both defendants, the form of your verdict should be: ‘We, the jury, find the defendants, Lafayette Clemons and Samuel Clemons, guilty of (here state the offense). So say we all/ and let one of
The ninth assignment of error is based on the following charge of the judge: “The court further charges you that it is a presumption of law that every sane person intends the natural and reasonable consequences of his own free voluntary acts, and if the sane person unlawfully, wilfully and intentionally strikes another person with a deadly weapon, it is an inference of law that he intends to cause great bodily harm or death.” The contention seems to be that inasmuch as the judge had already assumed that metalic knucks or any similar weapon was a deadly weapon, this charge was erroneous. The assumption, however, that metallic knucks or any similar weapon was a deadly weapon, was made by the defendants and not by the judge, and as this charge is taken from Adams v. State, 28 Fla. 511, text 552, 553, 10 South. Rep. 106, where it is approved, and is
The tenth assignment is based on the following charge: “The court charges you as a matter of law that a deadly weapon is any weapon which is likely, from the use made of it at the time, to produce death or do great bodily harm.” The definition of a deadly weapon given in Pittman v. State, 25 Fla. 648, 6 South.. Rep. 437, is relied upon to show the charge to be erroneous. The court there says that a “deadly weapon is one 'likely’ to produce death,” and does not add, or “great bodily harm.” The court in that case was dealing with a charge which defined a deadly weapon as one which is “capable” of producing death. Between the meaning of “capable” and “likely” the court draws a distinction. It had no occasion to go further. Our statute law does not use the word “deadly” in connection with excusable or other homicide. The phrase used is “dangerous weapon.” Sec. 2379, Rev. Stats, of 1892. In Bishop on Statutory Crimes (3rd ed.) section 320, the phrases “deadly weapon” and “dangerous weapon” are discussed. It is said that the latter is a milder term than the former, yet otherwise of the same meaning. The definition given in the charge is taken from 2 Bishop’s New. Crim. Law, section 680, and is also given in Bishop on Statutory Crimes, section 320. We find no error in the charge of which the defendants can complain, though it would be more correct to say “a dangerous weapon is one likely to produce death, or do great bodily harm.”
The eighteenth and nineteenth assignments of error. The defendants requested the court to give the following instruction: “The court further instructs the jury that metallic knucks are not deadly weapons as a matter of law, but whether they are deadly weapons or not must be determined by the jury from all the facts of the case; the mere fact that death in a particular case has resulted from the use of a certain weapon does not in itself prove that the weapon was deadly, and only such weapons are deadly as are likely to produce death.” The court gave this instruc
The twentieth assignment is based on the action of the judge allowing the State Attorney, over the objection of the defendants, to ask a physician the following question: “Doctor, in your opinion as a physician, could that wound have been produced by a man’s naked fist?” The physician had testified that there was a comminuted fracture of the left cheek bone of the deceased Smith, or, in plain English, that the bone was broken to pieces and that the flesh of the cheek was very much bruised. There were also a number of wounds and fractures of the inner table of the skull described by the physician. It is contended that the physician could not be called on for the opinion which he gave in answer to the question that the wound could not have been produced by a man’s naked fist, as that was a question for the jury to determine from the evidence. In support of this contention Rogers on Expert Testimony, pp. 128 and 129, is referred to. We have examined this authority and find that the statement of the law as given in the section (section 53) which embraces that referred to is not entirely harmonious as to the dividing line between matters of common knowledge and those in which a physician may give his professional opinion. In the case at bar we are of opinion that a physician who is by virtue of his profession better acquainted with the human anatomy and with the resisting power of the bones and tissues, should be allowed under the circumstances of this case, to answer the question whether in his opinion the wound or wounds described by him involving comminuted fractures of the cheek bone and of the inner table of the skull, could, have been produced by a man’s naked fist. Rogers on Expert Testimony, sec-'
Our discussion of the twentieth assignment disposes of the twenty-first, twenty-second and twenty-third assignments, as similar questions are therein presented.
The twenty-fourth assignment is based on the refusal of the judge to allow defendants to ask a witness on cross-examination the following question: “Was there anything said or done by either one or both of these parties that lead you to believe or suppose that in going up the street they were going to hunt Thomas J. Smith?” It seems to us that the trial judge was clearly right in his action. The question called for the belief or supposition of the witness. Camp v. Hall, 39 Fla. 535, text 571, 22 South. Rep. 792.
We how revert to the first assignment of error based on the refusal of the trial judge to grant a new trial: In the argument no specific ground of the motion is mentioned, but we take it that the contention is that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence, is contrary to the charge of the court, and that the jury did not give the defendant the benefit of every reasonable doubt as to the use, or non use of a deadly weapon, and the cause of the death of Smith. We do not deem it necessary to detail the testimony in this opinion. We have examined it carefully, and we discover nothing in it which inclines us to think the assignments, or any of them, well taken. The record, in our opinion, shows that the trial judge was eminently fair in all his rulings, and if any errors were committed they were on the side of the defendant, of which he has no right to complain.
The judgment is affirmed.
Taylor, C. J., and Cockrell, J., concur.
Carter, P. J., and Shackleford and Whitfield, JJ., concur in the opinion.