97 Tenn. 452 | Tenn. | 1896
The defendant was indicted for. the murder of Walter Hansard. He was found guilty of murder in the first degree and sentenced to death,
The defendant’s version of the case, supported to a considerable extent by Butcher, is, that when the deceased came down to the fence, the defendant said to him: “Walter, did you mean to call me a' son of a bitch last night?” that deceased replied, with an oath, “Yes, and you are,” and started to cross the fence; and, as he did so, placed his hand upon his pocket as if to draw a weapon, and he, thereupon deeming himself in great danger, fired, and shot him while on the fence, and with his left side turned towards him. Defendant states that he had no intention when he called him of killing him or of having a difficulty, but for the purpose of coming to an amicable settlement between them, and that he shot in self-defense, and while deceased was on the fence, and not when he was running away up the hill. These were the two theories presented, each sustained by some evidence. In this condition of the record the Court charged the jury, among other things, as follows: “If the jury should be satisfied, beyond a reasonable doubt, that in the quarrel at the church the deceased had denounced defendant as a son of a bitch, and had invited him
It is apparent that the learned trial Judge was submitting to the jury the very theory and hypothesis upon which defendant has based his defense, and his statement of the law was correct and unobjectionable except in one particular, which was clearly a mere oversight in the learned Judge, who is uniformly so accurate in his instructions to the jury. This error consisted in the statement that the jury, in order to give the defendant the benefit of his theory, as outlined by him, must be satisfied of its truth ‘‘ beyond a reasonable doubt. ’ ’ This is so clearly erroneous that we are convinced that it was a mere oversight or lapsus linguce of the learned Juds’e. but nevertheless it is a fatal error in this
It is further assigned as error that the District Attorney used improper statements in his closing argument. According to defendant’s affidavit, he stated “that he had been raised in that part of the county where the difficulty occurred, and he knew every hog-path in and about the church referred to in the evidence; that he had been over the ground when a boy, and he knew there was a road turning off the main road at the Lannine place, which ran down to Henry Hamilton’s; that this latter road was a quarter of a mile nearer than to go around the public road; that defendant and Butcher had gone by Hartley’s in the hope of seeing deceased; that they had seen him and called him to the road, and then defendant began the fire and shot him while he was fleeing for his life. ’ ’
The fact that such statement was made by the District Attorney appears from the affidavit of the defendant, and two witnesses swear they heard substantially the language imputed to him by defendant — that is to say, “A pathway leads from the main road at the Lannine place to Henry Hamilton’s house.” There is no denial bjr the District Attorney that such statements were made. It is the duty
For the error in the charge referred to, the case must be reversed and remanded for a new trial.