72 Fla. 464 | Fla. | 1916
—Sallie Furlow was convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to serve ten years in the State prison.
Several assignments of error are presented upon the refusal to permit various questions to be answered. We see' no possible harm to the defense in the court’s refusal to go into the marriage vel non of Tom and Kate Wells; the information sought had no possible relevancy to the issues here involved. Some of the questions were subsequently answered in full.
It is not shown that error was committed in rejecting testimony as to a supposed exclamation of Kate Wells just after she was shot. Assuming the exclamation came within the rule of res gestae, we are not advised what she is supposed to have said.
We think the defense was entitled to cross-éxamine the witness J. T. Wilson more fully than was permitted for the purpose of establishing, if it could, his bias or animus against Sallie or her husband. This witness was
The serious error committed, and upon which we plant this reversal, is in the court’s charge on self defense. Justifiable homicide under Section 3203 of the General Statutes, “When committed in lawful defense, * * * when there shall be a reasonable ground to apprehend a design to commit a felony or to do some great personal injury and there shall be imminent danger of such design being accomplished.” It will be noted that the statute uses the word imminent. The judge, however, has amended this by addition to “imminent, immediate and then present danger.”
In the instant case there was evidence that Kate Wells inflamed with anger was approaching Sallie, who shot when she was in ten or twelve feet of her. The danger may have been imminent, but it was not immediate and then present. Imminent means near at hand, mediate rather than immediate, close rather than touching. Under the definition as given by the court there could have been no self defense unless Kate was in striking distance.
An objection to another charge suggests that a line was dropped from a stereotyped instruction. We are not clear whether the omission is due to an oversight of the judge or to a clerical misprision in copying the transcript.
The judgment is reversed.
Taylor, C. J., and Shackleford, Whitfield and Ellis, JJ., concur.