139 Ark. 433 | Ark. | 1919
Pone Dean and Ms father, M. H. Dean, were indicted under separate indictments for the crime of murder in the second degree in the killing of Ford Robertson. The defendants moved to have the causes consolidated and tried at the same time. The motion set up “That both of said causes are of a like nature and relative to the same question and arose out of the same transaction and depend upon the same or substantially the same evidence. ’ ’ The motion was confessed by the State’s attorney and was granted by the court and the causes were consolidated. The trial resulted in the conviction of Pone Dean of the crime of murder in the second degree and in the conviction of M. H. Dean of the crime of manslaughter. From the convictions are these appeals.
On the 26th day of January, 1919, there was a fight between Pone Dean and M. H. Dean, on one side, and Curtis Robertson and Ford Robertson, on the other, which resulted in the death of Ford Robertson. M. H. Dean was seventy-four years of age, and Pone Dean was thirty-six years of age. Curtis Robertson was about twenty years of age and Ford and Robert Robertson were young men but elder brothers of Curtis. The Deans and the Robertsons were farmers and lived in the same neighborhood. Pone Dean manned a sister of the Robertson boys. Prior to his marriage Curtis Robertson had lived with Pone Dean and his wife and he also lived with them for a short while after his marriage but had moved to his own home a few months before the encounter. The Deans and the Robertsons were on intimate and friendly terms until a month or more prior to the killing, when an incident occurred that engendered the enmity between the Deans and the Robertsons which finally culminated in the killing. Pone Dean relates the incident as follows: “Curtis borrowed my shaving mug and brush, and one Sunday I went by the house and asked his wife for the shaving mug and brush, and asked her to kiss me, and she did, and I went home. As I started off I told her for her Mid Curtis to come over that evening and we would go to the schoolhouse. I went on home and was shaving, and Cnrtis came along and stopped and talked awhile, and then went on towards home. In an hour or two he came back and came on the gallery with a pistol in his hand and stepped in and got his lantern and as he turned to go out he told me he wanted to talk to me. He walked about sixty yards from the house and he said, ‘My woman said you asked her to kiss you.’ I said, ‘Yes, what are you going to do about it?’ He said, ‘He wasn’t going to do anything and would let it drop where it was. ’ I told him that satisfied me if it satisfied him. There wasn’t anything more said, and I went back to the house. ’ ’
Mrs. Curtis Robertson, who was sixteen years ap age, gives her version of the incident as follows: “Some month or more prior to the killing, Pone Dean came to our home, when my husband was gone. He came to the door and pushed the door open and said to me, ‘Reckon anybody will catch us?’ I says ‘I don’t know,’ and he grabbed at me and asked me to kiss him. I told him, ‘No, sir, I wouldn’t do it.’ He told me if I told it he would kill Curtis. Up to that time Pone Dean and his wife were very close friends of myself and husband. The day Pone Dean came up there and asked me to kiss him was Sunday. He came for his shaving mug and brush. I told my husband about it that evening. My husband told it to his brothers, Ford and Robert.”
It appears from the testimony in the record that neither Pone Dean nor his father, M. H. Dean, considered that Pone Dean, in the kissing of Mrs. Robertson, had been guilty of any act reasonably calculated to arouse the intense enmity of the Robertson brothers toward him; while, on the other hand, the testimony tends to show that the Robertsons were mortally offended. Ineffectual efforts were made to reconcile the families, and the above is the condition of mind that existed between them when they attended preaching services at a schoolhouse in the neighborhood-on the morning of the day of the fatal encounter, which was Sunday.
There was testimony introduced by the State tending to prove that the defendants provoked and were the aggressors in the fig’ht; while the testimony introduced for the defendants tended to prove the contrary. The testimony introduced by the State proved that Pone Dean killed Ford Eobertson with a pocket-knife of a large size called a “granddaddy” barlow; that he drew this knife and rushed toward Curtis Eobertson, who fled around the house with Dean pursuing him for a short distance, when he immediately returned; the testimony further tending to prove that in the meantime old man Dean was hitting Ford Eobertson with a club; that he hit Ford Eobertson three or four times, when Ford Eobertson knocked him down with his fist, and by that time Pone Dean ran up and stabbed Ford Eobertson in the back. On the other hand, the testimony introduced by the defendants tended to prove that Curtis Eobertson was armed with a pistol and that Ford Eobertson was armed with knucks and also had a pocket-knife; that words passed between Ford and Curtis Eobertson and Pone Dean; that Curtis and Ford Eobertson were approaching Pone Dean; that Curtis said, “If you want to fight, you son-of-a-bitch, get on me;” that Pone' Dean saw Curtis’ gun and started toward him, his purpose being to get close enough to keep Curtis from shooting him; that as he started for Curtis his father hit Ford and checked him; that after running Curtis around the house Pone Dean turned back, saw Ford knock his father down twice, whereupon he (Pone Dean) started on to Ford but before he got to him Ford turned, came about six feet toward him (Pone); that Ford had knucks and a knife in one hand and a club in the other and hit Pone Dean one lick with his knife and the next lick hit him on the head with the knucks and knocked him down, during which time Ford received at the hands of Pone Dean the fatal stabs with the knife.
It is the contention of the appellants that under the testimony adduced by them they acted in self-defense and in the defense of each other. It is the contention of the State, on the other hand, that the appellants brought on the fight and were the aggressors and that the killing of Ford Eobertson by appellant Pone Dean was the result of malice on his part, but without the deliberation and premeditation necessary to constitute murder in the first degree. In other words, that the appellants, under the evidence, were guilty of murder in the second degree.
The principles of law governing the right of self-defense and the right of near relatives, such as father and son, to defend each other from assaults made with a deadly weapon with the intent to kill or inflict great bodily injury, are familiar and have been so often announced by this court that it could serve no useful purpose to reiterate them here. We find in the bill of exceptions the following:
“After the court had examined and given or refused all the instructions which were marked either given or refused on the margin thereof by the court, and the instructions had been read to the jury, counsel for defendants tendered to the court the instructions in the record which are neither marked given or refused. Thereupon, the court made the following statement: ‘Gentlemen, you have three attorneys in this case for the defendants. When I asked that your instructions be submitted so I could examine them, you tendered me a set of instructions, and I examined them in connection with the set of instructions requested by the State and passed upon all your instructions and have given the instructions to the jury. Now you have tendered two other sets of instructions, which I cannot pass upon. You gentlemen should agree upon your instructions and submit them to the court and not submit three different sets of instructions.”
When the charge is taken as a whole, we do not regard it as calculated to mislead the jury and prejudice the rights of the appellants. In view of a new trial, however, which must be had on account of the error of the court in excluding certain evidence from the jury, the trial court will be under the necessity of again instructing the jury, when it will doubtless make corrections in the mere verbiage of some of the present prayers for instructions, if again offered, and will reduce their number so as to make a more concise and connected charge.
Those of appellants’ prayers for instructions which announce correct principles of law and which were refused by the court we find were covered by other prayers which the court gave, either at the instance of the appellants or at the instance of the State.
A few of the cases in this court announcing the principles of law applicable to the facts of this record, to which the charge of the trial court as a whole conformed, are as follows: Smith v. State, 59 Ark. 132; Carpenter v. State, 62 Ark. 286; Elder v. State, 69 Ark. 648; Lee v. State, 72 Ark. 426, 436; Pratt v. State, 75 Ark. 350; Mabry v. State, 80 Ark. 345; Wheatley v. State, 93 Ark. 409; McDonald v. State, 104 Ark. 317.
Robert Toland, a witness for the State, on his direct examination, testified that Pone Dean ran up and stabbed Ford Robertson in the back. On cross-examination he was asked the following questions: “Q. Did you undertake to tell him, F. W. Short, and Mr. Coleman thereat the time (at the. Short house the night after the fatal encounter) about how this fight went off?” The witness answered, “Yes, I told them just how it occurred.” “Q. You told them just like it occurred here?” “A. Yes, sir. ’ ’
Later the witness Short was called and was asked these questions concerning the conversation between him and witness Robert Toland: “Q. Did he, in making his statement to you that night, say that Pone Dean stabbed Ford Robertson in the back?” The witness answered, “No, sir; he didn’t say that. He said, ‘Went to fighting with their knives.’ ”
The court refused to allow the witness to answer these questions on the ground that the witness had not qualified himself as an expert about knuck wounds. The court also refused to allow this witness to testify to the effect that in his opinion the wounds on Pone Dean’s head were made by the metal knucks. Now, the. testimony of the witnesses for the State who were eye-witnesses to the fight tended to prove that Ford Eobertson was not using metal knucks in the fight. Curtis Eobertson stated that he met his brother coming around the corner of the house after the fight holding his side, walking along by the side of the house, and “He did not have any weapons, such as a knife or knucks at the time.” Robert Robertson testified: “I did not at any time during the difficulty see Ford with a knife or pair of knucks. * * * Ford struck the old man and knocked him down; he hit him with his fist was all I saw. I did not notice any knife, weapon or knucks about Ford at that time.” Robert Toland testified: “He (old man Dean) hit him (Ford) some three or four times, and then Ford Robertson knocked the old man down with his fist. I couldn’t tell whether Ford had anything" in his hand. ’ ’
The witness, Yettetow, the preacher, testified that he did not see any part of the fight; after he got out of the house he saw the Deans and Curtis and Ford Robertson. Pone was standing at one corner of the house with his knife in his hand, a “granddaddy” barlow, and the old man, who was close to his son, had a stick in his hand. Curtis and Ford Robertson were fifteen or twenty feet from the Deans. He did not see anything in their hands. Another witness, who said he saw Pone Dean draw his hand with a knife and make a stroke and start at, or toward Ford Robertson, also testified that he “did not see either one of the Robertsons with a knife or pistol that day.” M. H. Dean testified: “I saw Ford Robertson with knucks in the house. He had them after he went to the door. Ford Robertson hit me with knucks, one lick was on the side of the head at the edge of the ear, and the other lick was on the cheek. The wound was swollen ten days. Pone was injured on the side of the head with cuts and his wounds made him mighty weak, and he fainted there on the ground.” Pone Dean testified: “I came back to protect my father, and before I got there Ford came toward me with his knife and knucks and a club. * * * He had his knucks in one hand and a knife in the same hand and a club in the other hand, and he hit me one lick with his knife, and I dodged the next lick, and the next lick he hit me on the head with his knucks, and that was the winding up of the fight.”
The undisputed evidence proved that metal knucks were found on the dead body of Ford Robertson. But it was exceedingly important to the rights of the appellants to prove, if it could be done, that Ford Robertson had metal knucks just before and while he was engaged in the fight and that he was using the knucks in the fight. Now the testimony of Doctor McClure, if admitted, would have tended to prove that Ford Robertson used metal knucks during the fight, and in this way would have tended to corroborate the testimony of the Deans, and to discredit the testimony of the witnesses for the State that tended to prove that he did not use knucks. If it were a fact that Ford Robertson had metal knucks and was using them, this might justify or excuse the Deans in the use of force which otherwise they would not have been justified or excused in using. So the issue as to whether or not Ford Robertson was using metal knucks at the time he received the fatal wounds would be absolutely essential to the rights of the appellants, not only on the question of justification, but also on the question of the degree of guilt and the measure of punishment. The exclusion of the testimony, therefore, if competent, was highly prejudicial. Was it competent?
The witness qualified as an expert physician and surgeon. He had personal observation, not only of the wounds on Pone Dean, but also of the knucks that were found upon Ford Robertson’s dead body. While he did not make a comparison by fitting the knucks over the wounds, yet, from his knowledge of the looks of each, he was able to make the comparison in his mind, and was of the opinion, from the character of the weapon found and the nature of the wounds produced, that the latter were caused by the former. In Brown v. State, 55 Ark. 593, 598, speaking of the testimony of an expert physician and surgeon, we said: “He may also give his opinion as to the nature of the instrument which produced a particular wound, the force required to produce it, and whether a given injury could have been inflicted by a weapon of a particular description.” While the witness had only observed a metal knack wound one time this was sufficient to show that he had some experience with such wounds, and the results from wounds and the treatment of same were in the line of his profession and qualified him to give his opinion, both as to the nature and result of the wounds as well as the kind of weapon that produced them. See also Miller v. State, 94 Ark. 536.
For the errors indicated the judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded for new trial.