50 Fla. 94 | Fla. | 1905
The plaintiff in error was indicted in the Circuit Court for Walton county for an assault with intent to commit murder on one Will Williams. He was convicted of an “assault with intent to murder in the second degree,” and from a judgment sentencing him to the State Prison for four years brings this writ'of error.
At the trial M. M. Reeves a witness for the State testified: “I know Meredith Jordan. * * * I remember the circumstances of the shooting of Will Williams. It was a bright moonlight night. I heard the report of a gun. I saw a man come by my house two or three minutes after the shooting. He was probably thirty steps from me. This man I saw was going northward, coming from the direction of the report of the gun.- * * * The man I saw was running in the direction of Jordan’s house. He had on a cap and a blue jumper. * * * I could not swear exactly who it was. The first sight I glimpsed of him I thought it was Eugene Crosby, as soon as I saw him, I saw it was not Eugene Crosby. * * * I had seen Meredith Jordan in the morning part of the day. He then had on a blue jumper and cap. The man I saw was about the size of Meredith Jordan and dressed
The following charge given by the court was' excepted to in the motion for new trial and is assigned as error: “If the defendant unlawfully attempted to shoot Williams
The prosecuting witness testified that as he was passing along a road the defendant “was squatting down in some bushes on the outside of the road; the moon was shining bright. I saw that he was going to shoot and I threw up my arm. He shot the gun at me and hit me in the arm.”
It is contended that the charge above quoted is “misleading, irrelevant and not based upon the charge laid in the indictment, nor any of the minor offences of which the defendant might have been found guilty thereunder.” The charge that “if the defendant unlawfully attempted to shoot Williams with a gun, loaded as charged, with intent to kill him,” taken in connection with the testimony, included the idea of an assault. ■ The language of the charge
The third assignment of error relates to a charge as to assault with intent to commit manslaughter and the fourth and fifth assignments of error relate to charges as to aggravated assault. There is nothing in the charges which could have influenced the jury to misinterpret them, or to misapply the evidence as to higher offenses included in the indictment, and the jury having found the defendant guilty of an assault with intent to commit murder in the second degree, which verdict is sustained by the evidence, and there being no evidence to warrant a verdict of guilty of an offense of a lower degree, it is not material to consider whether the charges were legally accurate as applied to the offenses therein. Marlow v. State, 49 Fla. 7, 38 South. Rep. 653.
The court charged the jury as follows : “One of the defenses interposed in this case is what is known as an alibi, that is, that the defendant was at another place at
The court also gave the following charge: “You are the sole judges of the weight of the evidence before you, and the credit to be given the witnesses who have testified in the case. If there is any conflict in the testimony you must reconcile it if you can. If not, you may believe or disbelieve any witness or witnesses as you may or may not think they entitled to credit. In determining the
The refusal of the court to give three special charges at the request of the defendant was not error since even if the requested charges are conceded to be correct propositions of law as applicable to the facts of this case they were substantially covered by charges already given by the court.
The verdict is sustained, by the evidence.
The judgment is affirmed.