17 So. 2d 215 | Miss. | 1944
Appellant was convicted of murder. The deceased was shot five times. Appellant claimed self-defense. A controversy had arisen over an account of $9.50 for which the deceased demanded payment from appellant. There was a conflict in the testimony as to whether the deceased was armed and as to who was the aggressor. There was evidence of threats made by deceased against appellant. The conflict in the testimony was for the jury's determination.
The giving of the following instruction is assigned as error: "The Court instructs the jury for the State that while malice aforethought is a necessary element of the crime of murder, still `malice aforethought' means the same as shooting a person or human being with the deliberate design to effect the death of the person shot; and this malice aforethought and deliberate design do not necessarily mean hatred or ill will and need not exist in the mind of the defendant for any definite time, not for days, or hours, or even minutes, but if the deliberate design to shoot and kill exists in the mind of the defendant but for an instant at the very time the shot was fired, this is sufficient premeditation and deliberation to constitute malice aforethought, unless the jury entertain a reasonable doubt as to whether or not the killing was justifiable or done in necessary or apparently necessary self defense, or was manslaughter." Attention is directed to the inclusion in the definition of "malice aforethought" of the fact that "if the deliberate design to shoot and kill exists in the mind of the defendant but for an instant at the very time the shot was fired this is sufficient premeditation and deliberation to constitute malice aforethought." *291
This instruction was approved in Huddleston v. State,
We need not pursue refinements of language or indulge in metaphysical niceties whether intent or malice may or may not arise simultaneously with the act. Both law and language agree that premeditation must precede action but from what we have said it is clear here that a purpose either to kill in malice or to slay in self-defense was present. It was such motive that prompted the drawing, aiming and firing of the gun. While a mere intent does not imply a deliberate design (Johnson v. State [Jackson v. State],
Moreover, the criticism of the instruction as employing the present tense "exists" rather than the past "existed" is not helpful for whether it must be said, as an abstraction, to exist at the very moment or that it then existed as a concrete fact here does not preclude an implication that it also existed prior thereto even for a fraction of time. Such criticism, to be in point, must imply a restriction of the time element to the exact moment of action and assumes that cause and effect may be contemporaneously created. It is true that in murder cases the deliberate *292 design must exist at the very time of the act but even lay reasoning would invariably place motive prior to its manifestation.
Johnson v. State (Jackson v. State),
Appellant relies upon Vance v. State,
The jury could not have been misled by the instructions which told them in effect that there must be a deliberate design, but that such design, there defined as malice aforethought, must have existed — not "have been created" — at the time the shot was fired. Compare Guest v. State,
Affirmed.