40 So. 801 | Miss. | 1905
delivered the opinion of the court.
It was error to exclude the testimony of the appellant that Sue Pruette was very nearsighted — could not see more than ten feet from her. This testimony was vital. According to the testimony of Sue Pruette, the killing of both Jones and Bidwell was simply assassination. She testifies evidently with great animosity toward the appellant. It was distinctly shown that the blind behind which appellant hid himself was fifty feet from the. houseboat on which Sue Pruette was at the time she swears she saw appellant shoot Bidwell. She says she recognized appellant by the flash of the gun, and that she has never seen as well as she saw that morning. If it were true, as stated as a fact by the-appellant — and of this the jury were the exclusive judges— that she could not see ten feet from her, it is obvious that she
It was also vital error to exclude from the jury the testimony of the appellant as to why he was hid in the blind. Ilis statement is that he went there for the purpose of getting his little son from these people, who are shown beyond all controversy to be utterly unfit for his custody, as had been decided by the habeas corpus proceedings in which the custody of the son had been awarded to the father against the mother, because of her licentious life and conduct.' The testimony shows that after the court-had awarded the custody of the little boy — about five years of age at the time of the trial of this cause — to the father, for the reason stated, the father took the son with him to Louisiana, where ho went to work; that, finding it inconvenient to have his son traveling around with him, as he went from place to jfiace working, he left him with Mr. and Mrs. Chaney, in Natchez, with a strict charge never to let these people have him; that, nevertheless, on May 10, 1905, when Mr. Chaney was working in the field and Mrs. Chaney was sick, the woman, Sue Pruette, and her paramour, Bidwell, abducted the child from the house of Mr. Chaney and took it aboard the houseboat moored near the river bank; that appellant, desiring to observe the law, went down and demanded the possession of his child, but was driven off, with threats of injury should he ever return; that he then, still desiring to follow the law, went to the sheriff of the county and asked him to take action for him, and, under the advice of the sheriff, had Sue Pruette and Bidwell arrested on the charge of stealing his child; that, unfortunately, the justice of the peace discharged these parties; that then, driven to desperation
We also think the point is well taken that instructions Nos. 2 and 4 for the state, taken together, were erroneous. Those instructions are:
No. 2. “The court instructs the jury, for the state, that if you believe from the evidence in this case, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant willfully, deliberately, and of his malice aforethought, shot and killed Bidwell at a time when he,, the defendant, was not in .real or apparent danger of losing his
No. 4. “The court instructs the jury, for the state, that you have the power to find any one of the four following verdicts r (1) ‘We, the jury, find the defendant guilty as charged.’ Upon a return of this verdict the court will impose the death penalty. (2) ‘We, the jury, find the defendant guilty as charged, and fix his punishment at imprisonment in the penitentiary for life.’ If you find this verdict, the court will so sentence the defendant. (3) ‘We, the jury, find the defendant guilty of manslaughter.’ (4) ‘We, the jury, find the defendant not guilty.’ ”
The particular point made is that, taken together, the jury are charged that they should find a verdict in the form, if they believed appellant guilty of murder, “We, the jury, find the defendant guilty as charged,” and that the judge would impose the death penalty; in other words, the right of the jury, if they found him guilty, to sentence him to imprisonment in the penitentiary for life was taken away from them by these instructions, which tell them, in effect, that if they believe him guilty of murder, the form of the verdict should be, “We, the jury, find him guilty as charged.” The effect of the instructions is this: In the fourth instruction the jury are told that they have the power to sentence the prisoner to the penitentiary for life; but in the second instruction they are told, nevertheless, that they ought not to imprison him in the penitentiary for life, but should find him guilty as charged, leaving the court to sentence him to-death. We might not reverse for this error alone; but we point out the fact that it is error, that it may be avoided in future trials. If the jury beliéve one guilty of murder beyond a reasonable doubt, he should be so found; but the jury should be left to determine for themselves, without any hint or intimation from the court, what the punishment should be. See, as shedding light upon this principle, Spain v. State, 59 Miss., 19.
“The court instructs, for the defendant, that, even though the jury may believe from the evidence that the defendant was not acting in his necessary self-defense at the time he fired the first shot at Bidwell, yet, if the evidence has left a reasonable doubt in their minds as to whether Bidwell was killed by this shot or by a later one, then they will acquit, unless they further believe from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the shot which killed Bidwell was fired by the defendant at a time when he (the defendant) was not in real or apparent danger of death or great bodily harm at the hands of Bidwell.”
The learned assistant attorney-general insists that the eighth instruction for the appellant sufficiently set forth the idea embraced in the refused instruction, but in this case he is mistaken. The refused instruction was correct and stressed a specific proposition, vital to appellant’s cause. The idea of the court in refusing this instruction seems to have been that appellant was estopped to set up the plea of self-defense, because of the’doctrine that,, when one arms himself with a deadly weapon for the purpose of slaying his adversary, etc., he cannot plead self-defense; but on the testimony of the appellant — -which the jury alone had the right to pass upon — he had armed himself, not to provoke a difficulty, but simply to defend himself if attacked. It was shown that there was an interval between the first shot, which certainly did not kill Bidwell, and the second shot, which, according to appellant’s testimony, was fired when Bidwell was in the very act of reaching for the gun, which had just dropped from the hands of Jones. According to appellant’s testimony, he made no effort to shoot Bidwell the second time until Bidwell was reaching for the gun to shoot him.
We cannot close this opinion without directing the reporter to publish in full the brief filed for the appellant in this cause,
Reversed and remanded.