Lead Opinion
It is familiar law that to justify the reversal of a trial court for refusing a special written instruction requested by a party to the suit or prosecution, such instruction must be couched “in the correct and appropriate terms of the law.” Hudson v. State,
The Court of Appeals reversed in the instant case because the trial court refused defendant’s written instruction, to-wit: “The court charges the jury that the evidence in this case is circumstantial and that before you can convict the defendant on such testimony the proof must be very strong and cogent, so much so as to exclude every reasonable doubt and probability of his innocence.” [Italics supplied.]
In Pickens v. State,
We note parenthetically the caution in the above quoted excerpt that instructions must be construed in reference to the evidence to which they refer. The tendencies of the evidence for the state were that
two persons
acting in concert were present at the time of the killing and that one or the other fired the fatal shot. Pickens v. State,
The language of charge 14 in Gilmore’s case,
With all due apology to the great Chief Justice, it seems clear that he overlooked the ellipsis in charge 1 refused in Pickens v. State, supra,—the omission of words above emphasized. This omission is made more manifest by the statement in the opinion of the court in Gilmore’s case, supra,
Moreover, the charge for the refusal of which the judgment of the circuit court was reversed was condemned by this Court in McDowell v. State,
Our judgment and conclusion is that the charge on which the reversal was based was not couched in “the exact and appropriate” language of the law and that its refusal by the trial court should not be made the basis of reversible error.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed and the cause is remanded to the Court of Appeals for further consideration.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring specially)-
I am of the opinion that the trial court did not err in refusing the defendant’s refused charge No. 14. In my opinion the trial court’s action in this regard was fully justified under the decision of this court in the case of McDowell v. State,
