259 Pa. 249 | Pa. | 1918
Opinion by
The appellant was convicted in the court below of voluntary manslaughter on an indictment charging him with murder. His plea was that he was acting in self-defense, under circumstances which made him believe that his life was in danger, or that he was about to suffer great bodily harm, and that to save his life or avoid such harm he shot the deceased. While he was being examined as a witness in his own behalf, he was asked the following question: “At the time you fired this shot will you state to the court and jury whether or not you thought you were in peril of your life, or of great bodily harm?” This was disallowed, and its disallowance is the subject of the first assignment of error.
The appellant was a competent witness for himself, and the question which he was not permitted to answer bore directly upon the defense he was making. He alone, of áll'the witnesses called by him, could testify as to whether he really thought he was in peril of his life or of great bodily harm, and no testimony could have
The defendant testified that, when he took the gun in his hands, he was under the impression it was not loaded, and that his intention was to use it to frighten the deceased away. In commenting upon this testimony the following instruction was given to the jury and is the basis of the second assignment: “Now we will say right here, for fear we may forget it, if, under all the circumstances of this case, if you find in the testimony that this defendant honestly and in good faith believed this gun was empty, and he took it- out there simply for the purpose of frightening this man away by its appearance, and had no intention in his mind at the time, of shooting