Knight v. State

182 P. 734 | Okla. Crim. App. | 1919

The plaintiff in error, Jesse Knight, hereinafter called defendant, was informed against jointly with his brother for the murder of George E. Long, a severance was granted, and the defendant tried and convicted of manslaughter in the first degree, and sentenced to imprisonment at McAlester for a term of 20 years. To reverse the judgment rendered, he prosecutes this appeal.

The defendant in his brief does not abstract the evidence as required by the rules of this court, and does not seriously contend that the evidence is insufficient to sustain *293 the conviction of manslaughter in the first degree, had in this case. We therefore feel it is unnecessary to recite the voluminous evidence in this case, except in so far as it may be necessary to an intelligent consideration of the fundamental errors alleged to have intervened in the trial of the case. The said evidence is that the defendant, Jesse Knight, and John Knight were brothers, and that a very commendable brotherly affection existed between them, especially on the part of the defendant to John; that the defendant resided in Texas and John in this state; that the deceased was fire chief of the S. S. Company, located at Packingtown, Okla., and had authority to employ all help needed in the fire department of said company, and that John Knight was employed by him in the said fire department, and that while so employed he contracted syphilis and was discharged, and at the time of being discharged he was abused and kicked by the deceased, and bad blood thereby engendered; that of this and of his physical condition, John fully advised the defendant by letter, and informed him that his having contracted syphilis was due to the evil advice of the deceased; that subsequently John's physical condition improved, and the unfriendly relations between him and the deceased were adjusted, and John was again employed by the deceased in his former position; that it was while the unkindly feelings existed between them that the letters put in evidence, to which the defendant duly excepted, were written by the defendant to John, which said letters expressed great malice toward the deceased, and a determination on the part of the defendant to avenge the wrongs done John by the deceased, saying "that he (defendant) still had his automatic oiled and in good shape." The defendant visited his brother in Packingtown, where for a short time he was employed, and *294 returned to Texas. Subsequently he returned to Packingtown, and some months thereafter he and John visited their parents in Tennessee, where they remained about 60 days, and then returned to Packingtown, and John found that his former place in the fire department, in which he desired re-employment, had been filled by another, and John frequently asked others connected with the deceased as to whether or not the deceased intended to employ him again, and as to what he intended to do about it; that on the night of the homicide the defendant and his brother visited the fire hall of the S. S. Company, in which hall the deceased had his bed, and on which he was then lying partly undressed, with his shoes off; that the defendant and his brother John engaged with others in a game of cards; that while they were so engaged the deceased got up, and in his stocking feet went into the toilet which adjoined said fire hall, and John, having gotten another to take his place in the card game, immediately followed the deceased into said toilet; that in about a minute the deceased called "Tom," who was an employe of said fire department, and who was also engaged in the said game of cards, several times, and immediately thereafter the deceased and John returned to the fire hall, and John had hold of deceased and was striking at him; that the deceased was severely cut about the face, and bleeding very profusely, and apparently in a very weak condition; that the deceased seized a fire nozzle and held it in a position to strike, and the deceased was then seized and pulled back by the defendant, who immediately drew his pistol and shot the deceased through the head, and deceased fell and immediately expired; that the defendant immediately said, in explanation as to why he shot the deceased, "that the deceased was trying to knock his head off with the nozzle, *295 that he could not stand for that, that he could not stand for a thing like that," and shortly thereafter left the fire hall, went to Texas, and thence to his parents' home in Tennessee, returned to Oklahoma, and surrendered.

The defendant testified that he killed the deceased in order to protect his brother from being killed or receiving great bodily harm; that at the time he shot the deceased he entertained no unkindly feelings toward him, and that when he wrote the said letters to his brother, which were in evidence, he was mad and worried, and did not intend to advise his brother to kill the deceased, nor did he intend to threaten the deceased; that his object in writing his brother said letters was to cause him to be careful and to keep him out of trouble; and that at the time said letters were written he had never seen and did not know the deceased.

The defendant excepted to the giving of paragraph 15 of the instructions given the jury, which paragraph reads:

"Threats made by the defendant, if any, and all declarations of personal hostility of the defendant, if any, against the deceased, are proper for your consideration, to determine the question of malice or criminal intent of the defendant, if any, at time of the fatal difficulty; but if you find from the facts and circumstances in evidence in the case that the defendant and deceased, after any such threats or declarations of hostility, if any, made up good friends, and each forgave the other, all past differences and animosities, and no new threats or hostilities could be considered, by the jury as evidence of malice; but if the jury believes from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant had not in good faith forgiven deceased, and made up good friends, prior to the fatal difficulty, then the jury has the right to consider the past threats or expressions of hostility of the defendant, if any there were, *296 for the purpose, with the other evidence in the cause, of determining the question of malice."

The defendant complains of the action of the court in refusing to give requested instruction No. ___, which said refusal was excepted to. The instruction is as follows:

"What is or is not an overt action — that is, what act upon the part of the person slain will justify the person taking his life — varies with the circumstances of each particular case. Under some circumstances the slightest movement may justify instant action on the part of the person threatened with danger, under other circumstances that might not be true, and it is for the jury, viewing the facts and circumstances in evidence from the defendant's standpoint, to determine how this may be in each case."

A motion for a new trial was filed and overruled, and exceptions saved.

The most insistent contention of the defendant is that the court committed fundamental error in admitting in evidence the letters written by the defendant to his brother John, prior to the homicide, and with this contention we are not in accord.

The offense of which the defendant was convicted, manslaughter in the first degree, is defined by subsection 2 of section 2320, Rev. Laws 1910, as follows:

"When perpetrated without a design to effect death, and in a heat of passion, but in a cruel and unusual manner, or by means of a dangerous weapon, unless it is committed under such circumstances as constitute excusable or justifiable homicide."

Hence, where the killing is done, as in the instant case, "in a heat of passion by means of a deadly weapon," it is not necessary to show previous malice and premeditation to sustain a conviction of manslaughter in the first *297 degree, and as the only office of the letters of the defendant to his brother was to show expressed malice toward the deceased and premeditation to kill him, if it was error to admit such letters in evidence, which we do not hold, such error was not such as to entitle the defendant to a reversal in this case. Section 6005, Rev. Laws 1910.

We do not think that the letters put the character of the defendant in issue, nor that the fact that the letters were obtained by unlawful search of John's trunk, in violation of provisions of the Constitution of this state, rendered said letters inadmissible in evidence.

We think requested instruction No. ___ was properly refused, as the phase of the case therein stated was fully covered by general instructions of the court, in which the court fairly presented both sides of the case, and that Green v. UnitedStates, 2 Okla. Crim. 55, 101 P. 112, cited by defendant, does not support his claim of fundamental error in refusing to give said requested instruction. In Green v. United States, supra, it is shown that the trial judge "did not correctly and sufficiently cover the said phase of the case," the condition in which the defendant might act in defense of himself or of his brother, while in the instant case the court by its instruction did "correctly and sufficiently cover said phase of the case." The motion for a new trial was properly overruled.

Finding no reversible error in the record, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.

DOYLE, P.J., and MATSON, J., concur. *298

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