99 So. 270 | Miss. | 1924
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellant was indicted for assault and battery with intent to kill and murder one Prent Odom. The facts surrounding the transaction are that, some two hours before the last fight in which appellant severely cut Odom, Odom was engaged in spanking a boy, in which Herring interfered. It does not appear clearly from Odom’s testimony whether he was fighting the boy, or just playing with him, but it does appear from appellant’s testimony and from the boy’s testimony that he was fighting him. At this time appellant came upon the scene and ordered Odom to. desist, telling him that if he wanted to fight to fight a man. Odom struck the appellant, and cut him in the leg with a knife which he' had in his hand during the first fight. Appellant thereupon ran into a house, and Odom obtained a gun and came out of the house and threatened the appellant, but the gun was finally taken from Odom by some of the women, either the boy’s mother or Odom’s mother, and carried into Odom’s house. About two hours after this transaction one of the women, either the boy’s mother or the appellant’s wife went to Odom and asked him to make friends with the appellant; that the appellant was not
The court instructed the jury for the state generally that, if they believed “from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that Dan Herring did willfully, unlawfully, feloniously, and of malice aforethought upon the body of Prent Odom, a human being, an assault make with a deadly weapon; to-wit, a pocket knife, with the intent then and there the said Prent Odom to kill and murder as charged in the indictment, then it is your sworn' duty to find the defendant guilty as charged.” A second instruction reads as follows:
“You are further instructed for the state that if you believe from the evidence in this case beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant and the prosecuting witness, Prent Odom, had a difficulty in which Prent Odom cut and
Appellant insists that this instruction is reversible error, while, the state contends that it must be read in connection with the first instruction, and that when so read it is not reversible error.
In our opinion the last instruction set out is reversible error because it fails to embrace the hypothesis that the appellant intended to kill Odom. It also omits the qualification that the wound was inflicted with a deadly weapon. Before the appellant can be convicted of the offense charged predicated entirely upon the second fight, the jury must be told that the appellant must have intended at the time to kill. The gist of the offense here charged is the felonious intent to kill. It is this intent to kill that raises the grade of the offense from a misdemeanor to a felony. It may have been the appellant was not justified in the cutting, but that he did not intend to kill. It is not sufficient to say that the appellant had a difficulty with Odom and cut Odom, in the difficulty while not acting in necessary self-defense. It is possible for a man to cut another with a knife while not acting in self-defense and still not be guilty of intention to kill. See annotation to section 771, Hemingway’s Code (section 1043, Code of 1906).
Reversed and remanded.