The defendant was adjudged guilty of murder in the second degree. The victim was Ed Carbon, alias Hickey. The sentence imposed is imprisonment for 25 years. There was evidence tending to make a case of self-defense for defendant.
Able, and diligent counsel conducted the defense below and appear on this review. The only possible ground for an argument for error on this record is the court’s refusal of the following charge requested for the defendant: “The court charges the jury that, if the defendant shot under a bona fide belief that his life was in danger, and had, under all the circumstances, a reasonable cause to' believe that he was in imminent danger at the moment the shot was fired, then, the defendant cannot be convicted.”
This charge is a copy of the instruction numbered 2 approved by the majority of this court in Beasley v. State, 181 Ala. 28, 34, 35, 661 South. 259. The ruling there made needs restatement.
Except in the character of case to be defined, the charge set out above is faulty in two particulars, viz.: (a) For pretermitting in the hypothesis the defendant’s freedom from all fault in provoking the difficulty and the negation of his entrance into the fight willingly; and (b) for omitting appropriately expressed inclusion therein of the duty of retreat where that duty, as our law requires, was due to be observed.
The exception mentioned is where the party slain by the defendant made a sudden, entirely unprovoked, murderous attack upon the defendant; the assailant being then armed with a deadly weapon, and in the very act of effecting upon the defendant such murderous purpose. In such case, where the evidence is clear and without conflict or adverse inference, the laAV concludes that no duty to retreat rests on the defendant — its
Tn the Beasley Case, the majority concluded, as upon the evidence, that the evidence was, without conflict or adverse inference, to the effect that no act or word on the part of Beasley tended in any degree to bring on or to provoke a difficulty, and that White, the person slain, was, when Beasley fired the fatal shot, in the menacing act of pointing his already “cocked” rifle at Beasley. Under these circumstances, the proof being clear that Beasley was free from all fault in provoking the difficulty, and thus suddenly confronted with such murderous menace by White, it was ruled by the majority of the court that charge numbered 2 was not objectionable in that case; and this upon the sole ground that the menacing situation stated exonerated Beasley, who was entirely without fault in the premises, from any duty to retreat. The three dissenting members of the court entertained the opinion that the issue of imminence vel non of Beasley’s peril, with reference to the duty and practicability of retreat, Avas a question for the jury under the evidence, and, in consequence, that charge 2 Avas Avell refused, for that in this state of the evidence it improperly pretermitted appropriate declaration of the duty to retreat.
Taken literally and abstractly, the statement of the requested instruction is that one who slays another at a time when that other’s action justifies the slayer’s bona fide belief that the life of the slayer is then in imminent peril cannot be convicted.- So taken, the instruction is manifestly faulty in the two- particulars before stated, except Avhen requested in a case plainly
If the requested instruction was ruled to be generally complete and sound, an accused would be entitled to be discharged notAvithstanding the evidence showed beyond cavil that he was at fault in bringing-on the difficulty or entered it willingly, and that avenue of even obviously safe retreat was open to him: since, obviously, one may be the object of a most murderous assault, entailing the greatest immediate peril, and yet have provoked or invited it, or have available and apparent to him a good avenue of escape from the danger threatening him.
The established, unimpaired doctrine of the duty of retreat is thus set forth in Jones v. State, 76 Ala. 17, as upon the authority of Storey’s Case, and by the author of the opinion in that case: “The apparent necessity which will excuse the taking of human life under the doctrine of self-defense, in cases of homicide, involves two considerations: (1) The defendant himself must have entertained an honest belief in the existence of such necessity; and (2) the circumstances surrounding him must have been such as to impress a reasonable man, under the same state of facts, with the belief of his imminent peril, and of the existence of an urgent necessity to take the life of his assailant, as the only apparent alternative of saving his own life, or else of preventing the infliction of grievous bodily harm.”
No error appearing, the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.