37 Ind. App. 691 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1906
Upon an indictment charging appellant with assault and battery with intent to commit murder, appellant was tried, found guilty of assault and battery and fined.
The indictment charges that “Jasper Guy, late of said county, on May 6, 1905, at said county and State aforesaid, did then and there feloniously, purposely and with premeditated malice, in a rude, insolent and angry manner unlawfully touch, bruise, lacerate, and wound the body and person of William Kenyon, by then and there feloniously, purposely and with premeditated shooting off and discharging at and against the body and person of said Willian Kenyon a certain revolver, then and there loaded with gunpowder and leaden shot, with the intent then and there and thereby feloniously and with premeditated malice to kill and murder the said William' Kenyon, contrary to the form of the statute in such cases made and provided against'the peace and dignity of the State of Indiana.”
Giving appellant the benefit of the most favorable construction of his own testimony that can be given it, there is no proof of any overt act of attack upon him by Kenyon. There is no proof that appellant was in any imminent danger of losing his life or of suffering great bodily injury. Erom his own testimony he could not at that time have thought he was in any immediate danger, as he says his sole object in shooting “was to scare him, to keep me from a beating.”
In Wharton, Crim. Ev. (9th ed.), §757, it is said: “For the purpose, therefore, in cases of doubt, of showing that the deceased made the attack, and if so with what motive, his prior declarations, uncommunicated to the defendant, that he intended to attack the defendant, are proper evidence. And so it has been frequently held. They are, however, inadmissible, unless proof be first given that there was an overt act of attack, and that the defendant, at the time of the. collision, was in apparent imminent danger.” Leverich v. State, supra.
In the case at bar, the evidence fails to show that the prosecuting witness made any attack on the appellant, or that he was in any imminent danger of great bodily harm. Moreover, testimony of threats made direct to appellant, and of threats made to others and communicated to appellant, were introduced, and as this offered evidence was only corroborative and went largely to the question of appellant’s intent, which the jury found in his favor, we can not say that the action of the court in not admitting it was reversible error.
Judgment affirmed.