87 Neb. 390 | Neb. | 1910
In the district court for Chase county the county attorney filed an information against James Jones, Jr., defendant, charging him with murder in the first degree. A jury found him guilty of manslaughter, and the district court sentenced him to serve a term of six years in the penitentiary. As plaintiff"in error he now presents for review the .record of his conviction.
Defendant shot and killed Joseph B. Rowley, March 25, 1909, and at the trial for murder resisted conviction on the ground of self-defense. Rowley and defendant had
On the morning of March 25, 1909, without notice to defendant, Rowley hitched a team to a wagon and drove in his own field to the west end of the division fence south of defendant’s pasture. He took with him two shotguns, a Winchester rifle and a revolver. He was accompanied by two sons, one named Richard, age 23, and the
Was defendant fired upon in his own field, when lawfully engaged in farm work? Was the deceased Rowley the agressor? Was self-defense a justification for the homicide? Who told the truth? The determination of these questions imposed upon the jury a perplexing duty. Pour persons who witnessed the tragedy testified at the trial. Two were sons of the deceased person and one of them participated in the shooting. While admitting their father fired the first shot, they said defendant, when 350 yards away, first raised his gun to shoot. The other eyewitnesses were defendant and his brother, and each testified to having been shot before the fire was returned and before any threatening move had been made by defendant. The four eyewitnesses would naturally feel a keen interest in the result of the prosecution. The testimony is voluminous, and in the brief outline here given no attempt has been made to determine any question of fact or the weight of any item of evidence. Some facts of which there is proof, however, have been narrated for the purpose of determining whether errors apparent on the face of the record were prejudicial.
The following letter was admitted in evidence over the objection of defendant, and the ruling is vehemently assailed as erroneous : “Blanche, Neb., Oct. 20, 1909. Mrs. Rowley: Please keep your boys off my place and away from my haystacks and out of my pasture. I saw them there and I will put up with it no longer. Yours truly, James Jones, Jr.” The state of course makes no attempt to justify the admission of this letter as evidence of defendant’s guilt, but the attorney general argues that it is
Defendant also complains of the manner in which the instructions requested by him were given to the jury by the trial court. For an acquittal defendant relied on self-defense and most of the instructions requested by him related to the law on that.subject. He requested 14 instructions, and all of them were given, but the trial court in
For instructions the jury properly look to the court. Did the instructions on the law of self-defense emanate from the court or from defendant who was urging self-defense as a justification for the homicide? Should the instructions given at the request of defendant on that subject be considered? Why should the jury debate these questions among themselves? It is proper to indicate by the record the instructions given at the request of each party, but the better practice forbids the mentioning of such matters to the jury. It is improper for the trial court to emphasize the fact that some of the instructions given were requested by defendant and that others were given by the court on its own motion. The practice followed in this case has often been condemned by reviewing courts. In discussing this question, the supreme court of Illinois said: “The instructions should go to the jury as the instructions of the court, and the better practice is to have nothing appearing on the instructions showing at whose instance they are given.” Aneals v. People, 134 Ill. 401.
The instructions requested by defendant were in some measure at least discredited by the manner in which they were submitted to the jury, and in the other instructions
For the reasons given, the judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed.