37 Fla. 382 | Fla. | 1896
The plaintiff in error was indicted and tried at the Pall term, 1895, of the Circuit Court of Gadsden county for the crime of murder, and was convicted of murder in the third degree, and sentenced to twenty years’ imprisonment in the penetentiary, and comes here for relief on writ of error.
The first, second, third and sixth assignments of error question the propriety of the admission in evidence of the dying declaration of the deceased. The defendant contends that the evidence adduced by the State as the groundwork for the admission of the ante mortem statement of the deceased did not sufficiently show that the deceased had lost all expectation or hope of recovery before making the statements admitted in evidence, as to make them legally admissible. This contention can not be sustained. Dying declarations in cases of homicide form an exception to the rule against the admissibility of hearsay evidence. The law regards the declarent, when in tlqe presence of imminent and inevitable death, as being under as solemn an inspiration to tell the truth as though he were pledged thereto by oath. To render such declaration admissible, however, the court must be satisfied that the deceased declarent, at the time of their utterance, knew that his death was imminent and inevitable, and that he entertained no hope whatever of recovery. This absence of all hope of recovery, and appreciation by the declarent of his speedy and inevitable death, is a preliminary foundation that must always be laid to
At.the trial, after the defendant had introduced testimony to the effect that the defendant had given the deceased the gun-shot wound of which he died while the deceased was making efforts, in the defendant’s 'yard, to shoot the latter with a pistol, the defendant introduced one Prank Baker who testified “that he heard the deceased say, on the Sunday before he was shot, that he and the defendant had in a sort of manner settled the fuss that they had in Mrs. Shepard’s oat field, before Justice Clark, but that it would not be decided until one of them was killed.” On the State Attorney’s motion the judge struck this testimony out, and refused to admit it, and this ruling constitutes the fourth assignment of error. In this ruling the court erred. It tended to show the deceased to be a man of desperate character, determined upon killing the defendant or being killed by him before their previous quarrel could be characterized as being settled. It tended to corroborate the evidence adduced prior thereto on behalf of the defendant to the effect that the deceased was shot by the defendant while he was in the act of endeavoring to carry out the threat implied in the excluded testimony. Garner vs. State, 28 Fla. 113; State vs. Evans, 33 W. Va. 417, 10 S. E. Rep. 792; Schoolcraft vs. People, 117 Ill. 271, 7 N. E. Rep. 649.
After the State had concluded the introduction of its evidence as to the state of the deceased’s mind when making his dying declarations, preliminary to the in
At the trial the defendant offered to make his statement under oath, but the judge-ruled that if he took the stand at all he must take it as a witness subject to cross-examination. To which ruling exception was taken, and it is assigned as the seventh error. The contention of the defendant is, that under section 2908 of the Revised Statutes he had the right to make a statement under oath of the matters of his defense, without being subjected to cross-examination. That Chapter 4400 laws of Florida, approved May 30th, 1895, entitled “an act to amend section 2908 of Revised Statutes of Florida, relating to sworn statement, of accused,” is unconstitutional, that provides that in all criminal* prosecutions the accused may at his option be sworn as a witness in his own behalf, and shall in such case be subject to examination as other witnesses, etc. That it violates section 16 of Article III of the State Constitution, requiring the sole subject of each law to be briefly expressed in its title. There is no merit in this contention. The subject of section 2908 of the Revised Statutes is the “sworn statement-of the accused.” The subject of the amendatory act, Chapter 4400 is also “the sworn statement of the ac
The refusal of the judge to give instructions numbered 1, 2, 3, 4 and 7 constitutes the eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh and twelfth assignments of error. The only attempt at any exception to the refusal of the j-udge to give these instructions was by making the ruling one of the grounds of the motion for new trial. In Shepard vs. State, 36 Fla. 374, 18 South. Rep. 773, we held that under the provisions of section 1092 Revised Statutes only such charges as were actually given and deemed to be erroneous could be excepted to through the medium of a motion for new trial. That refusals to give requested instructions could not be excepted to in this manner, but that exceptions to such refusals had to be taken and noted at the time of such refusals; otherwise, such exceptions could not be considered here on writ of error. That this is the correct interpretation of the statute, there is no room for doubt, and, adhering to it, we can not consider the last mentioned assignments of error.
The thirteenth and last assignment of error insisted
Por the errors found the judgment of the court below is reversed and a new trial ordered.