The evidence fully warranted the verdict of guilty in this case, unless the jury believed the testimony in behalf of the defendant and his statement to the effect that he killed the deceased under the fears of a reasonable man that his own life was in immediate danger; and since the evidence is uncontradicted that he pursued the deceased for a considerable distance and assaulted him more than once with three different species of weapons, it is no marvel that this theory was not credited by the jury. There is no exception to the charge of the court, and so it must be presumed that the jury were correctly instructed on the law applicable to the case on trial.
The. only exception, aside from the three usual general grounds contained in the motion for a new trial, is set forth in an amendment to the motion. In this the movant complains that after the defendant had closed his testimony the court permitted