Opinion by
Thе victim of this homicide was a woman with whom the prisoner had lived in illicit relations. He admitted the killing, but attempted tо justify it as an act of self-defense. His story on the trial was that they had quarrelled a number of times; that on the evening of the killing they went to a lonely spot in the city of Reading, where they again quarrelled; that she there drew a revolver upon him, which he took from her and threw away; that she then grabbed him and struck him with some object; that bеfore he started with her to the place of the killing, he had put a razor in his pocket for his protection, thinking she would attempt to do him bodily harm, and that when she grabbed him a second time, believing his life was in danger, he threw his arm around her neck and, holding her head back, cut her throat; that without releasing him she sank down, and he then, sitting uрon her stomach, cut her throat a second time. The uncontradicted evidence was that there were five cuts upon her body.
On this appeal two errors are alleged to have been committed by the court below, the first in the following instruction to the jury: “As to whether a reasonable doubt shall establish the existence of a plea of self-defense, the law is this: If there be a reasonable doubt that any offense hаs been committed by the prisoner, it operates to acquit, but if the evidence clearly establishes the killing by the prisoner purposely, with a deadly weapon, an illegal homicide of some kind is established, and thе burden then falls upon the prisoner, and not the commonwealth, to show that it was excusable as an act of self-defense. If, then, his evidence leaves his extenuation in doubt, he cannot be acquitted of all crime, but must be convicted of homicide in some of its grades, of manslaughter at least.” These are the exаct words of Agnew, J., in his charge to the jury when specially presiding in Com. v. Drum,
When the commonwealth clearly establishes an intentional killing by the use of a deadly weapon, an illegal homicide is presumed. If the defense be insanity, the burden of sustaining it is upon those having charge of the defense, for the accused is presumed to be sane and his insanity must be established by a fair preponderance of the testimony: Ortwein v. Com.,
There was nothing in the case justifying the presentation of the prisoner’s sixth point, and it was therеfore properly declined and not read to the jury. :
Both assignments of error are overruled, the judgment is affirmed and the record remitted for the purpose of execution.
