Opinion by
Appellant was indicted and tried for the murder of his brother, Daniel Gwyn, on September 23,1967. After a quarrel, defendant pulled out a knife, stabbed his brother and killed him. The jury found the appellant guilty of murder in the first degree and fixed the penalty at life imprisonment.
After the lower Court denied defendant’s motions for a new trial and for arrest of judgment, the defend *548 ant took the present appeal from the judgment of sentence.
Appellant makes five contentions: (1) prejudicial error in denying the motion for withdrawal of a juror; (2) the Court’s charge on reasonable doubt constituted basic error; (3) he was sufficiently intoxicated to reduce the killing to murder in the second degree; and (4-5) that adequate legal provocation existed to reduce the killing to voluntary manslaughter and/or self-defense.
During the course of the trial, the Commonwealth called Barbara Burnett as a witness and during her direct examination she testified (in an unsolicited response) that the appellant said to her, “I killed my cousin.” Appellant’s counsel moved for withdrawal of a juror and although this motion was denied, the trial Judge specifically instructed the jury that this statement was to be completely disregarded.
Appellant contends that the unsolicited statement attributed to him by Barbara Burnett was so prejudicial that it was error to refuse to withdraw a juror. We disagree.
Appellant bases his assertion that the lower Court erred in refusing to withdraw a juror on
Commonwealth v. Gibson,
Appellant next contends that the lower Court’s charge on reasonable doubt was erroneous. We have carefully reviewed the charge and find no basis for this contention. See
Commonwealth v. Williams,
Appellant next contends that the first degree murder verdict could not be sustained because of his state of intoxication. Defendant and the victim and several witnesses had been drinking together but there was no evidence how much vodka or gin or beer defendant had drunk, and all the witnesses testified that defendant was not drunk. Appellant is correct in his contention that intoxication can reduce a killing from first degree murder to second degree murder where the intoxication is so great as to render the accused incapable of forming a willful, deliberate, and premeditated design to kill.
Commonwealth v. Ingram,
Appellant’s final contention is that there was sufficient “legal provocation” to reduce the killing to voluntary manslaughter. In order to properly evaluate this contention, it is important to note the events preceding defendant’s act of stabbing his brother to death. Appellant and decedent were drinldng at Ralph’s Bar and had an argument which culminated in the decedent slapping the appellant across the face. Decedent left *550 the bar, and approximately one hour later appellant left. Appellant first went to his home and then to the home of the decedent. After entering decedent’s home, defendant confronted the decedent in his kitchen. Decedent was seated at the kitchen table with a bottle of whiskey in front of him. After exchanging words— the exact interchange does not appear in the record— decedent got up from his chair and proceeded toward the appellant. The decedent was unarmed. Appellant then pulled a knife from his jacket and stabbed the decedent, killing him. We cannot agree that these facts and circumstances established legal provocation or self-defense.
This Court, in
Commonwealth v. Ingram,
440 Pa., supra, said (page 244): “In Commonwealth v. Walters,
In
Commonwealth v. Dews,
In Commonwealth v. Walters, 431 Pa., supra, this Court said (page 82): “The mere fact that he had been arguing with the deceased and that she had cursed at Mm, will not, by itself, be sufficient to show that passion motivated the crime, or that there was no time to cool.”
A review of the evidence clearly shows that the appellant failed to establish that the stabbing resulted from legal provocation or that it was committed in self-defense.
We find no merit in any of appellant’s contentions.
Judgment of sentence affirmed.
Notes
Italics in Commonwealth v. Ingram opinion.
