125 Tenn. 420 | Tenn. | 1911
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff in error was convicted of voluntary manslaughter at the April term, 1911, of the circuit court of Williamson county, and sentenced to a term of five years’ confinement in the State penitentiary. He has appealed and assigned errors.
The judgment must be reversed because of the following error committed on the trial: During the argument before the jury one of the attorneys representing the State made the point that the witnesses for the State were more likely to remember the transaction correctly, because they had testified before the grand jury, and had thereby gotten the facts impressed upon their minds more deeply than had the witnesses for the plaintiff in
• The point was very material, because, owing to thé absence of the plaintiff in error from the State, the first trial of the case at the April term, 1906, had not occurred until a period of more than eight years had elapsed from the date of the homicide. Hence the argument on the part of the plaintiff in error’s attorney that the memory of the witnesses on both sides was likely to be dim and unreliable, when the second trial occurred at the April term, 1911, and the reply of the attorney for the State before referred to, showing why the memory of the State’s witnesses was more likely to be accurate than that of the plaintiff in error’s witnesses.
The memorandum on the back of the indictment was not evidence, and should not'have been referred to at all. We have no doubt the plaintiff in error’s defense.
In view of this great conflict in the evidence, and the fact that the witnesses were examined on the last trial some fourteen years after the homicide, the point made by the use of the memorandum on the back of the indictment was very important.
Objection was made to the charge of the court as a whole because too meager. We think the requests which the trial judge gave in charge added enough to save the charge from this objection, although it would have been much better if his honor had indicated more clearly the legal rules applicable to the different phases of the case.
It is said the charge was inaccurate upon the subject of involuntary manslaughter. If there was any inaccuracy, it was such as the plaintiff in error could not' complain of. Moreover, there was no evidence indicating involuntary mansMughter. All of the witnesses, plaintiff in error included, testified, that plaintiff in er
It is insisted the court below erred in giving in the charge to the jury the following instruction offered by the State:
“I further charge you that if you find from the proof beyond a reasonable doubt that, at the time the defendant shot Mike Copeland, the latter was not advancing upon him with a knife, but was only interceding as a peacemaker, and had thrown himself between the defendant and Marse Copeland to prevent a difficulty, having nothing in his hands, and that the defendant could see that he had no knife in his hands, and had no reasonable ground on which to base an honest belief that he was in danger of death or great bodily harm at the hands o'f Mike Copeland, then he would not have the right to shoot Mike Copeland, and the plea of self-defense would not avail him; and this is so, even if he believed that Marse Copeland was putting him in danger of death or great bodily harm, provided he shot Mike purposely.”
We think this instruction was properly given.
It is insisted the trial judge committed error in re
“I charge you that if you find from the evidence that the defendant was sitting peaceably and quietly, and did nothing to bring on the difficulty in this case, and if you find that Marse Copeland approached the place where the defendant was thus sitting, and menaced him in such language and tones and by such acts as caused the defendant to be apprehensive for his life, or apprehensive of great bodily harm, and if you find that the deceased undertook to intervene and disarm the defendant when the defendant was faultless, and thus commit an assault upon the defendant which the defendant had apprehended put his life in jeopardy, either from Marse Copeland or from the deceased, then the defendant, if he, as I instructed you, was apprehensive for his life or great bodily harm, would have the right to act upon such apparent danger, and, if he acted in good faith, he could slay his adversaries in order to save himself from death or great bodily harm.”
We think this instruction should have been given.
This instruction was based on the case as exhibited by the witnesses for the plaintiff in error, while the instruction set out supra exhibited the case from the standpoint of the S-tate’s witnesses. The two, if they had been given, would have instructed the jury upon the two theories, as to each of which there was quite a good deal of evidence.
Under the instruction offered by" the State the jury were told that if Mike Copeland was interceding purely
In the instruction offered by the plaintiff in error it was asked by the attorney for the latter that the jury be instructed that if, while the plaintiff in error was without fault, and was being assailed by Marse Copeland in such a manner as to cause him to be apprehensive of death or great bodily harm at the hands of the latter, the said Mike Copeland intervened for the purpose of disarming the plaintiff in error, and the latter was at this moment apprehensive for his life or great bodily harm at the hands of Marse Copeland, by reason of the language, tones, and acts of said Marse Copeland, at the time, he would have the right to act upon such apparent danger, and, if acting in good faith, he could slay Mike Copeland, as well as Marse Copeland, in order to save himself from death or great bodily harm. On the hypothesis put in this instruction, Mike Copeland was intervening, not as a peacemaker, but for the purpose of disarming a combatant, who was at the time without fault, and whose life was being put in immediate
The next instruction offered by plaintiff in error (the seventh) is practically covered by the one which we have just held should have been granted, and, if given in connection therewith, would probably have misled the jury.
The succeeding instruction (No. 8) offered by plaintiff in error was as follows:
“I instruct you that a person Avho is without fault, when menaced by threatening words and gestures, or by acts calculated to cause him to become apprehensive of his safety, and apprehensive of death or great bodily harm, is not compelled to wait until his adversary strike him, or fell him, or even get in a position to slay or strike him; but if the danger is. so apparent or imminent, or if he, in good faith, believes such danger is apparent, then he may strike, and even take the life of his adversary or antagonist, and he is not compelled to retreat when a retreat might, on account of the violence of the assault, result in death or great bodily harm to. such defendant.”
This instruction is correct in the main, but is defective in one respect. In the clause “or if he, in good faith, believe such danger is apparent,” to be strictly accurate should read, “or if he, in good faith, believe such danger is apparent” and “imminent.”, The word “calculated”
The trial judge refused to give in charge to the jury plaintiff in error’s instruction No. 1, which was as follows :
“If you find from the proof that Marse Copeland came to the crap game and said to the defendant, ‘Jim, I want my money you owe me,’ and that the defendant told him to come back later, and that an hour and a half or some time later Marse Copeland returned to the card game and asked Jim for his money, and that Jim, the defendant, said he didn’t have it, and that Marse then stepped upon the rug or blanket upon which the card game was being played, and said, ‘By G-, ■there shan’t he another card game played here until I get my money,’ Marse saving his right hand in his coat pocket upon his pistol, and that the defendant, Jim . Johnson, heard this remark and saw that Marse had his hand upon the pistol, then this act of Marse in stepping upon the blanket with his hand upon'the pistol, together' with the words, ‘By G-, there shan’t he another game of cards played here until I get my money,’ constituted an overt act upon his (Marse’s ) part, made Marse Cope*433 land the aggressor, and authorized Jim Johnson in believing that he was in danger of great bodily harm or death. Row, gentlemen, if you find the above to be the facts, and if you further find that the deceased, Mike Copeland, a brother of Marse Copeland, rose to his feet, passed in front- of his brother, Marse Copeland, and followed Jim Johnson (who had gotten up- and gone backward), and if you believe that Mike Copeland, the deceased, lunged at the defendant, or gripped his hand, and if you further believe that the defendant said to the deceased, ‘G-d-you, stand back,’ or ‘Stop, stand back,’ and jerked loose from the deceased, and shot, then, in that event, I charge you that your verdict should be not guilty, for the reason that, if the above facts are found by you to be true, that the deceased, Mike, intervening in behalf of his brother, Marse, stands in the shoes of his brother, Marse, and can claim no more protection at the hands of the laiv than Marse.”
As previously stated, an instruction offered must be correct in form and substance in order to put the trial judge in error in refusing it. This instruction is defective. It undertakes to tell the jury what is an overt act. This is a question of fact, which must be left to the jury in every case. Jackson v. State, 6 Baxt., 452; Allison v. United States, 160 U. S., 203, 16 Sup. Ct., 252, 40 L. Ed., 395. “Overt” simply means “open.” In homicide cases an overt act is an open act, indicating a present purpose to do immediate great bodily harm. What this overt act is can be shown in a given case only by the evidence, and the jury must judge of it in the light
As to the residue of the instruction, as a proposition of law, if, indeed, the plaintiff in error was at the moment in danger of death or great bodily harm at the hands of Marse Copeland, or honestly believed himself to he so on reasonable grounds, and at that time Mike Copeland intervened in the manner stated, the plaintiff in error had a right to defend against him the same as •against Marse Copeland. This falls within the principle Which we have stated in disposing of the sixth instruction offered by the plaintiff in error. This would be true, even though Mike was intervening in behalf of his brother, because under the facts assumed he would stand in the shoes of his brother, and could claim no more protection at the hands- of the law than could his brother.
The rule upon this subject is plain and clear. It is so held in our own cases.
A very interesting case upon this subject is Tom and Robert Smith v. State, 105 Tenn., 305, 60 S. W., 145. In that case, before the difficulty was over the two Smith brothers and the two Fowler brothers were engaged in a combat, which resulted in the death of the two Fowlers. The original difficulty was between Tom Smith and Bud Fowler. Tom Smith was the aggressor. He brought on the difficulty between "himself and Bud Fowler. While he was shooting at Bud Fowler, the latter’s brother, Henry Fowler, intervened. Then Bob Smith, the brother of Tom, shot Henry Fowler, who was killed
There is an elaborate discussion of the subject in the opinion of Shields, J., in the case of Cooper v. State, 123 Tenn., at pages 129 to 143, inclusive, 138 S. W., 826, which we regard as a sound exposition of the law. We can add nothing to what is there said, except that the principles there laid down are supported, not only by the cases and text-books referred to, but by the great weight of authority elsewhere. In addition to the cases there cited, we refer to the following as in entire accord therewith: State v. Greer, 22 W. Va., 800; State v. Brittain, 89 N. C., 481; State v. Cox, 153 N. C., 638, 69 S. E., 419; Mitchell v. State, 129 Ala., 23, 30 South., 348; Wheat v.
We deem it necessary to refer to this and other points appearing in the instructions offered because these questions will arise in the next trial.
For the error indicated, the judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.