32 So. 2d 197 | Miss. | 1947
Appellant and another were jointly indicted by the grand jury of Chickasaw County for the murder of W.D. *415 Grist. Appellant was granted a severance, tried and convicted of manslaughter, and sentenced to the penitentiary for a term of five years. From this conviction and judgment he appealed here, and has assigned two errors, viz., the court erred in granting a manslaughter charge for the State; and in refusing appellant an instruction requested by him.
The evidence introduced by the State was clearly sufficient to sustain a verdict of guilty as charged, that is, murder. The appellant denied that he shot deceased, denied he had any pistol with which to do the shooting. In other words, he denied that he was the slayer of deceased. He had witnesses to corroborate his denial, thus presenting a sharp conflict in the evidence. But the jury, by its verdict of manslaughter, convicted him of the slaying.
He contends here, under his first assignment of error, that this was a compromise verdict, induced by the granting to the State of an instruction on manslaughter, since there was no evidence in the record to sustain a manslaughter verdict.
Appellant, in his able and interesting brief, cites the cases of Calicoat v. State,
Appellant lists twenty-one cases decided by this Court (all of them after the Virgil case), wherein we have approved manslaughter instructions granted the State where the evidence disclosed no elements of manslaughter, but did sustain the charge of murder. Of these, he points out that in eleven of them the killings were admitted by the defendants, whose defenses were justification, self-defense, accident or insanity. In four of them the opinions of the Court do not reveal the defenses interposed. *416
In the remaining six cases, the defendants denied doing the killing, as here. Those cases are: Huston v. State,
In the Calicoat case it was said [
The State contends that the more recent decisions of this Court have firmly imbedded in our jurisprudence the rule that a defendant cannot complain of the granting of manslaughter instruction, even though the facts established that the killing was murder or nothing, or where the defense was an alibi, or where the defendant denied doing the killing, as here. Alexander v. State,
In the case of Alexander v. State,
As conceded by counsel for appellant in his brief, the State's evidence amply sustains the charge of murder. It contains no elements of manslaughter. This, it is contended, made the granting of the instruction on manslaughter a reversible error, since appellant denied that he did the slaying of deceased. However, since we have, in the twenty-one cases listed in the brief, decided definitely and positively to the contrary whether the defense was justification, self-defense, accident, alibi, insanity, or denial of the actual killing, in order to approve this assignment of error, we would have to overrule the six cases which reject the argument made here on behalf of appellant, and announce a different rule, as an exception to the general rule, by holding that granting a manslaughter charge to the state on an indictment for murder, sustained by the State's proof, and the evidence disclosed no elements of manslaughter, would be prejudicial error where *418 defendant denied that he did the killing. We cannot agree the we should do so.
As to the instruction refused appellant, we have considered it most carefully, and find no error of the trial court in denying it. An indictment is not evidence, in a criminal prosecution, yet the basis for this refused instruction was the use therein of the indictment in this case as evidence of the joint indictment of appellant with another in the case, wherein appellant had been granted a severance.
For the reasons stated, we must and, therefore, do affirm the judgment of the circuit court.
Affirmed.