Lewis Richard KILLEN, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
Supreme Court of Florida, Special Division A.
*826 R.K. Bell and William L. Peters, Miami, for appellant.
Riсhard W. Ervin, Atty. Gen., and Reeves Bowen and John S. Lloyd, Asst. Attys. Gen., for appellee.
JONES, Associate Justice.
Appellant, Lewis Richard Killen, and one Charles William Lawrence were indicted jointly for the offеnse of murder in the first degree for the killing of one William Simpson by shooting him with a gun "in the perpetration of and in the attempt to perpetrate a robbery upon William Simpsоn". The Trial Jury returned a verdict finding appellant and his co-defendant guilty of manslaughter. This case is now before us on Killen's appeal from the judgment and sentence of the Trial Court.
The evidence clearly proved that appellant was engaged in the perpetration of, or in the attempt to perpetrate, a robbеry when the homicide occurred. Although the crime proved was murder in the first degree, the Court not only instructed the jury as to murder in the first degree, but, also, with reference to the lеsser degrees of unlawful homicide, including the offense of manslaughter of which appellant was convicted.
Appellant contends that manslaughter is not a lesser dеgree of homicide included in the charge of murder in the first degree when the murder is committed in the perpetration of, or the attempt to perpetrate, a rоbbery, and that he should have been found guilty of murder in the first degree or acquitted. We do not consider such to be the law of this State, as this Court consistently has held that where the *827 evidence is sufficient to sustain a charge of murder in the first degree, a verdict convicting a defendant of a lesser degree of unlawful homicide must stand, even though there is no evidence of the particular degree of the offense of which he is convicted. Riner v. State,
Appellant relies upon the per curiam opinion of this Cоurt and the record in the case of Ambrister v. State (Anderson v. State), Fla.,
We have considered the cases of Southworth v. State,
The rule in the Southworth and Henderson cases has been changed by statute. The Henderson case was decided December 16, 1938. In the next year, by Section 229, Chapter 19554, Acts of 1939, being the Criminal Procedure Act, the Legislature enacted what is now Section 919.14, F.S.A., which reads as follows:
"If the indictment or information charges an offense which is divided into degrees, without specifying the degree, the jurors may find the defendant guilty of any degreе of the offense charged; if the indictment or information charges a particular degree the jurors may find the defendant guilty of the degree charged or of any lesser degree. The court shall in all such cases charge the jury as to the degrees of the offense." (Emphasis supplied.)
The language of this statute, preceding the last sentence, is an affirmance *828 of the power of the jury as asserted by the old Section 8415, C.G.L., which it supplanted. The effect of this portion is to reaffirm the rule that where evidence is sufficiеnt to support a verdict of guilty of the degree of the offense charged, the jury has the power to find the defendant guilty of a lesser degree of the offense, irrespective of the evidence as to such lesser degree. Hodella v. State,
The Southworth and Henderson cases clearly, under the holding of Riner v. State, supra, were cases wherein the jury had the pоwer to return a verdict of guilty of a degree of murder less than the first degree murder charged. Thus the language of the statute requiring in such cases that the court charge the jury аs to the degrees of the offense operates to change the rule of those cases which had held it was not error under the circumstances to refuse a charge on the lesser degrees of the offense.
We, therefore, hold that in cases involving homicides committed in the perpetration of, or in the attempt to рerpetrate, any of the felonies named in our statute defining murder in the first degree it is necessary to charge the jury on all degrees of unlawful homicide. This rule is particulаrly applicable to murder in the first degree, which by statute in this State may be committed either from a premeditated design to effect death, or when committed in the perpetration of, or in the attempt to perpetrate, any one of the felonies named in said statute, or by a combination of both means.
While the form of indictmеnt charging the appellant, Lewis Richard Killen, with the offense of murder in the first degree "in the perpetration of and in the attempt to perpetrate a robbery" is nоt in itself open to attack, in the cases of Sloan v. State,
Finding no reversible error, the judgment appealed from should be, and is hereby,
Affirmed.
TERRELL, C.J., and THORNAL and DREW, JJ., concur.
