59 So. 350 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1912
The principal contention made and insisted upon by appellant’s counsel in brief as constituting error is the refusal of the trial court to include in its charge to the jury, defining the degrees of unlawful homicide, the law of manslaughter. The indictment on which the defendant was tried charged murder in the first degree; the conviction was for murder in the second degree. The state’s evidence tended to show that, while one Crutchfield and the deceased were- engaged in a fisticuff fight, and the deceased Avas getting the advantage, the defendant, Avho Avas only a feAV feet aAvay, shot and killed the deceased with a single-barrel shotgun, loaded with No. 6 shot. The weapon used belonged to the deceased, and had been taken from him at the time when he and Crutchfield met and started to engage in a fight. During the progress of the fight between the deceased and Crutchfield, in Avliich no Aveapons were used by either party, and after Crutch-field was down and the deceased Avas on his all fours, or in a stooping position, striking Crutchfield Avith his fist, the defendant shot and killed the deceased. The shot entered the left side just beloAv the ribs, ranged downward, and penetrated the abdominal cavity. At the time of the shooting, the deceased was making no demonstration against the defendant of any kind, and was not using a weapon in the assault being made upon Crutchfield. Almost immediately preceding this assault, and just before the shooting, either the defendant, or some one Avith him, had taken from the deceased the shotgun with which the defendant killed the deceased. There was no evidence going to show that, at the time the defendant shot and killed the deceased, the deceased
It is well settled, and has been often stated as a correct proposition of law, that if a man kill another by intentionally shooting him with a gun the slayer is guilty of murder, unless the evidence shows a justifying reason for doing the act, or that it was done under circumstances which mitigate its criminality and reduce the offense to a lower grade of homicide. — Kirby v.
There is no question in this case but that the gun which produced the death was such a weapon as that death would be the natural, reasonable, or probable result from its use. Malice, then, would be presumed from the use of the weapon,' unless the evidence which proves the killing rebuts the presumption.
This leads us to an analysis of the evidence to see what it contains to rebut the presumption of malice. The state’s evidence has no reasonable tendency in this direction. It does not show who was at fault in bringing on the difficulty between deceased and Crutchfield, or that the defendant, in killing the deceased was acting in defense of Crutchfield. The evidence, showing a fisticuff between the deceased and Crutchfield, in which the defendant, without any reason therefor being shown, intermeddles and slays one of the parties, cannot be said to have any tendencies to rebut the presumption of malice arising from the use of a deadly weapon. Crutchfield and the defendant were not shown to occupy a relation to one another of kinship or friendship that would justify or authorize a conclusion, under the evidence in this case, that the defendant was acting in Cutchfield’s defense. The mere unexplained fact that the defendant shot the deceased, while engaged in a fight with a third party, would not be sufficient of itself and by itself, to show that he was acting in defence of the third party. There was evidence having a tendency to show ill will existing between the deceased and the defendant a short time before the killing, and that an hour and a half or two hours before the fatal shooting the defendant had been seen shooting at the deceased,
Appellant’s counsel challenge the truth of the evidence in brief; but the court was not charged with the duty of deciding controverted issues of fact. The evidence was properly before the jury and became a matter for their determination. We see nothing, from an examination of the entire evidence, that would lead us to the conclusion that this testimony should be discarded as untrue. The defendant, when testifying afterwards as a witness in his own behalf, admitted having fired the shots, but denied seeing the deceased at the time, or having fired them at him. Several witnesses testified to having heard the shots. The evidence introduced on behalf of the defendant showed that the deceased was at fault in bringing on the difficulty with Crutchfield; but it does not show, or have any tendency to show, that the defendant was acting in the defense of Crutchfield. On the contrary, it is all to the effect that the defendant did not do the shooting, and the defendant himself denies having fired the shot. . The state’s evidence not only fails to show that the defendant was acting in the defense of Crutchfield, but its tendencies are rather to prove that the defendant, acting through a motive growing out of former ill will toward the deceased, intermeddled in the fisticuff fight as a wrongdoer for his own unlawful purpose, and shot the deceased. The defendant’s evidence in effect denied the act of shooting and entirely repudiates the idea of the defendant having acted in defense of, or to prevent the continuation of the assault upon, Crutchfield.
The defense interposed, then, is not that the defendant fired the fatal shot to prevent death or great bodily harm being done an assaulted party for whom he had the right to act in defense, and the authorities cited by
It is unquestioned that the killing was done with a deadly weapon. The defendant does not set up self-defense, but denies the act and offers, of course, no evidence in palliation or mitigation; and, the proof of the homicide not showing circumstances mitigating the criminality of the offense, there was therefore no occasion for the trial court to give the law of manslaughter in charge to the jury, as the facts going to prove the homicide also showed that it was either murder in the first or second degree, and the defendant must have been not guilty .of the homicide, and therefore entitled to his acquittal, or must have been guilty of one or the other of the degrees of murder. There is no duty resting upon the court to charge ex mero mo tu, or give charges requested, on manslaughter, when that crime is not involved. — Gafford v. State, 125 Ala. 1, 28 South. 406; Rogers v. State, 117 Ala. 9, 22 South. 666.
Counsel in brief discuss no other question than the refusal of the court to give the law of manslaughter in charge to the jury. In this there was no error, under the evidence in this case.
There is no merit in the motion made to quash the venire.
We find no reversible error in the rulings of the trial court, and the case will be affirmed.
Affirmed.