70 So. 694 | Miss. | 1915
delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellant, Will Echols, was charged with murder-in the circuit court of Marshall county, and convicted of manslaughter, from which he appeals. The two errors assigned by appellant which deserve consideration are: (1) That the court erred in admitting the testimony of Drs. MeAuley and Barnett as to the alleged dying declarations of the deceased, Jim Alexander; and (2) that the court erred in granting the state an instruction on manslaughter, and that the verdict of manslaughter is not supported by the evidence in the case. '
' The record shows that shortly after the deceased, Alexander, was shot in the bowels with a shotgun, and while he was lying upon the ground where he fell, Dr. MeAuley arrived on the scene, and, after an examination of the wounded man, informed him that “there was no chance for him.”. The deceased then stated to Dr.. MeAuley ‘‘ that he knew he was going to die, ’ ’ and then told Dr. MeAuley that, he (deceased) was coming from a picnic in a •buggy with another negro man, Louis Dean, when they stopped near appellant’s house, and-Dean went into the ■house to get'a drink of water while he (deceased) -waited 'bio.'the'outside in his buggy; that appellant came to him and said he wanted to talk to him about “him interfering with his wife.;” that deceased said to appellant, “If I were to tell what I know on you, there would be trouble
We think the testimony of both Drs. McAuley and Barnett was properly submitted to the jury as the dying declaration of the deceased, Alexander, as it clearly appears here that the declarations made by 'the deceased to’ both doctors were made at a time when he (the deceased) was in extremis and fully conscious of his impending dissolution. Lipscomb v. State, 75 Miss. 559, 23 So. 210, 230; Guest v. State, 96 Miss. 880, 881, 52 So. 211.
According to the record, there was no specific objection made by appellant in the lower court to the testimony of Dr. Barnett; and such objection cannot be made here for the first time.
The contention of appellant that the instruction on manslaughter was error, and that he was guilty of murder or nothing,'and that the jury was not warranted in finding him guilty of manslaughter under the proof in this case, we think is untenable, as the testimony submitted to the jury, viewed from different angles and considered from different viewpoints as a whole and separately, was sufficient to justify the jury in coming to the conclusion that the killing was unlawful and was not in self-defense, •but that it was not done “with malice aforethought” but in the heat of passion or upon sudden provocation. The jury may have entertained a reasonable doubt as to whether or not the appellant acted with malice aforethought, and at the same time believed beyond a reasonable doubt that the shooting was unlawful and not in necessary self-defense.
We shall not attempt to invade the province of a jury in passing upon the facts in any case, and we are not prepared to say in this case that the facts here did not warrant the jury in convicting the appellant of manslaughter.
We have not overlooked the fact that the rule announced in Huston v. State, 105 Miss. 413, 62 So. 421, can be applied in the case here; but we think it is unnecesary to rely upon the Huston Case in order to affirm the case now before us.
Affirmed.