32 Fla. 462 | Fla. | 1893
The jury found the plaintiff in error guilty of murder in the second degree, and the sentence prescribed by the law (sec. 2380 Rev. Stat.), imprisonment in the State prison for life, was pronounced by the court; and it is contended here that the testimony does not sustain the verdict. The stated section of the Revised Statutes has, as will appear by comparing it with sec. 2, p. 350, McClellan’s Digest, made a change in the law of murder as it stood at the time the revision became operative (June 13th, 1892). There are still three degrees of murder, but they are defined as follows: The unlawful killing of a human being when perpetrated from a premeditated design to effect the death of the person killed or any human being, or when committed in the perpetration of or in the attempt to perpetrate any arson, rape, robbery, or burglary, is murder in the first degree. Murder in the second degree is when the unlawful killing is perpetrated by any act imminently dangerous to another, and evincing a depraved mind regardless of human life, although without any premeditated design to effect the death of any particular individual. Murder in the third degree is when the unlawful killing is perpetrated without any design to effect death, by a person engaged in the commission of any felony other than those specified above.
Counsel for the prisoner invokes the decision of this court made at the January Term, 1888, in Johnson vs. State, 24 Fla., 162, 4 South. Rep., 535, in support of the contention referred to above.
It is to be observed of that cl ecision that its purport, as to the point relied on, is that if the effect of the testimony was to show in the accused an intent to kill any particular person, that such proof, as the statute then was, excluded the case from murder in the second degree. Putting the lives of many in jeopardy, or imminent danger to many, was an essential to the offense under the old statute; and though no deadly intent was necessary to the offense, and a general deadly intent, an intent to hurt many, did not exclude a case from it, yet a particular deadly intent, or intent to kill a particular individual did work an exclusion. This is clearly shown by the case of Darry vs. People, 10 N. Y., 120, decided in the year 1854 — fourteen years before we adopted the same statute there construed. Of the correctness of the-decision in Johnson’s case none of us feel any doubt. The change of language indicated above to have been made by the revision in substituting “another” for “others” is, however, material, and its effect is to remove the former exclusion of cases where danger to only one person is shown, and
II. Before proceeding to the consideration of any other question, there is a preliminary point to be considered, it being whether or not the bill of exceptions does not show upon its face that the entire material case presented to the jury is not before us. In the first place it states that one of the witnesses, William McNish, gave the dimensions of the wounds.1 These dimensions are not stated. Again it says that Marshall’s gun was exhibited to the jury, but it has not' been brought here; and then it says that Henry See explained to the jury the diagram made by him, still the explanation is not set forth.- Assuming, but not deciding, that the absence of the gun which was put-before the jury by the defendant’mog/ be immaterial in view of the fact that there is no conflict in the evidence as to the marks on it, and even making the same assumption as to the explanation of the diagram by See on the theory that his explanation was nothing more than the usual tracing of lines and pointing out the objects designated on the diagram — an assumption of a
III. On the trial the prisoner’s counsel requested the judge to give the following instruction to the jury: “If you find from the evidence that the deceased in going by the prisoner s house left the most direct road to .go by the prisoner’s house, and called the prisoner '-telling him he bad come to kill him or be killed, and
There are also exceptions to two instructions, given in the general charge. One is on the theory that heat of passion is not justified in the eyes of the law by mere words, and that the instruction to the effect that heat of passion thus generated may make a killing manslaughter, was erroneous. Certainly no injury could have resulted to the accused from the charge; and we will not consider it further. Sullivan vs. McMillan, 26 Fla., 543, 589, 8 South. Rep., 450, 460. The-other instruction, that the prisoner shot “from the inside of the house.” As the case has to go back, it may be sufficient to say that if on a new trial the testimony on this point should be the same as it is in the .record before us, it will be safer to omit the expression, as has been done in some of the instructions.
IY. The instructions given to the jury as to the statements of the accused which the State put in evidence require, in view of -a new trial, some notice, though they were not excepted to.
In Rex vs. Jones, 2 Car. & P., 628, it was held by Bosanquet, sitting at the assizes in the year 1827, that “if a prosecutor uses the declaration of a prisoner he-must take the whole of it together, and can not select one part and leave another; and if there be either no evidence in the case, or no other evidence incompatible with it the declaration so adduced in evidence-must be taken as true. But if after the whole of the-
Statements, confessions and admissions when given in evidence, says the Supreme Court of Missouri, must all be taken together, and the jury will attach such (•¡'edit to them as they deem them worthy of. They may believe everything the party says in his favor,'or they may reject the same. It all depends upon the circumstances surrounding the case, and the degree of probability there is in the troth of the statements, when viewed in the light of the whole transaction which they purport to narrate. Mr. Greenleaf, in his work on Evidence, sec. 218, observes that if what the prisoner has said in his own favor is not contradicted by evidence offered by the prosecutor, nor improbable in itself, it will naturally be believed by the jury, but they are not bound to give weight to ib on that account, but are at liberty to judge of it like other evidence by all the circumstances of the case. State vs. Hollenscheit, 61 Mo., 302. See also Blackburn vs. State 23 Ohio St., 146; 1 Greenleaf on Evidence (15th ed.), Section 201.
We think the rule to be well stated by the Alabama court,-and do not understand the other authorities cited to convey a different meaning.
The judgment is reversed and a new trial awarded.