The defendants, jointly indicted for murder in the first degree, were convicted of murder in the second degree, and their punishment was by the jury fixed at 25 years’ servitude in the penitentiary. The sentence of the court was pursuant to the judgment.
The tendency of the state’s evidence was to show that the defendants had threatened to kill deceased, and that, in pursuance of such threats, they went in search of him, and, meeting Mm in the public road, shot him to death. There was a further tendency of the evidence to show that the defendant Ky Hendley fired the fatal shot, and that the defendant Robert Hendley cut the throat of the deceased. That there had been a previous difficulty between these parties was indicated by a further tendency of the evidence.
Under-their plea of not guilty defendants deny an unlawful and willful killing of the deceased, and say they acted only in self-defense.
We have been unable to find that this court has ever passed upon the question involved in the insistence of appellants’ counsel that the judgment entry does not affirmatively show that the jury did hear the evidence in the case. The reporter will set out the judgment entry.
As will he noted, the judgment entry positively recites that a jury for the trial of the defendants was selected; that the indictment was read to that jury; that the defendants pleaded “not guilty” to the indictment; and that thereupon “came a jury of good and lawful men,” “who, being first'duly sworn, on oath say,” etc. This court has held this'recital to be a sufficient averment that the jury were properly sworn. Storey v. State,
In the case of Davis v. State,
The recitals in the judgment entry in the instant case were as specific as, if not more so than, those held sufficient in' the Davis Case, supra.
“The defense objected, and moved to exclude what Bethune had said to them. The court overruled the objection, and the defendants excepted.”
What a third party said to the defendant during the quasi confession is admissible for the purpose of connecting and rendering intelligible the defendant’s statement, if necessary to- that end, and also what was said in the presence of two or more defendants, if the statement involves such an accusation against one of them as calls for a denial by him. Poe v. State,
The court properly refused to allow the witness Robinson to go into details of the former difficulty between the defendants and the deceased.
Defendants’ refused charges 1, 2, 5, 9, 12, and 14, whether good or not, were substantially covered by given charges 3, 15,16, 20, and 21. Moreover, refused charges 1 and 2 were bad, as pretermitting the defendants’ duty to retreat.
Refused charges 8 and 10 were covered by given charges 7 and 13. Refused charges 18 and 19 are covered likewise by given charge 17.
The law of the case was properly given the jury in the court’s oral charge.
No error having been committed on the trial, the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
