Thе defendant appeals from a judgment rendered against him upon conviction of the crime of manslaughter.
Appellant claims that the court erred in refusing the following instructions requested by him:
1. “You are instructed that the law presumes that the defendant hаs a good reputation for truth, honesty, and integrity.”
2. “The defendant would be entitled to act upon the appearances as they presented themselves to him аs a reasonable man, although it might subsequently turn out that Warn was unarmed and in fact there was no danger to the defendant.”
3. “You are instructed that declarations are vеry weak and unsatisfactory in their nature as evidence and you are instructed that it is your duty to scrutinize closely any evidence of declarations owing to such fact. The extrajudicial statements of a prisoner unaccompanied with other facts or circumstances are not sufficient and will not justify a conviction.”
4. “Evidencе of the bad character of the deceased for peace and quiet can be considered by you as having a tendency to show the purpose and intent at the time of the affray that actuated the deceased and can be considered further by you for the purpose of arriving at the condition *502 of the dеfendant’s mind at the time of firing the fatal shot if the defendant is shown by the evidence to have known the reputation of the deceased for peace and quiet.”
5. “You are instructed that it is the duty of the prosecution to prove every material fact necessary to constitute the charge against the defendant beyond all reasonable doubt and to a moral certainty, and in this ease among the material facts to be proven, are,—First: That the deceased was killed by the defendant. Second: That the killing was done with malice aforethought and with premeditation. And if you have a reasonable doubt upon any one of these material facts, it is your duty to acquit the defendant of murder in the first degree.”
The court did not err in refusing any of these requested instructions.
The second point is sufficiently met by the fact that the court did give to the jury the following instruction: “The jury are instruсted that the defendant as a reasonable man, knowing what he knew and seeing what he saw, had a right to act upon the appearances as they presеnted themselves to him as a reasonable man, even if you find that Warn at the time was actually unarmed, and if the defendant as such reasonable man, knowing what he knew and seeing what he saw, had a right to believe and did believe from such appearances that he was about to suffer great bodily harm at the hands of Warn, and that if acting alone upon such belief he fired the shot at Warn, then I instruct you that the defendant is entitled to an acquittal at your hands.”
In connection with point 3, it should be noted that the court instructed the jury that “if there is any testimony *503 as to the oral admissions alleged to have been made by the defendant, you are instructed that you are to receive the same and consider them with caution”; and also fully charged thе jury as to the necessity for proof of defendant’s guilt beyond all reasonable doubt. Prom the defendant’s own testimony it' appears that he fired the shot by which Warn, the deceased, was killed. Aside from the extrajudicial admissions shown by the testimony, the evidence against the defendant is abundant and clear as to all matters connected with such extrajudicial statements or admissions by the defendant.
Under point 4, we note that the court instructed the jury as follows: “You are instructed that the defendant had a right at the time of firing the fatal shot to consider fully all acts of violence that he had seen the deceased commit; all threats that he had heard the deceased make, together with the disposition of the deceased as the defendant knew it in order that the defendant might know or believe what the deceased meant оr intended at the time that the fatal shot was fired.” There was no evidence of bad “reputation” of the deceased for peace and quiet, but the defendant testified concerning a quarrel which he had recently witnessed between the deceased and another person in which the deceased used threatening language toward that other person. The subject matter of the instruction refused by the court was sufficiently covered by the instruction given as above stated.
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9. The last point insistеd upon refers to an instruction concerning the right of self-defense. That the instruction correctly stated the law is not denied, but appellant claims that there was nо evidence to which it could apply, and, therefore, that the instruction was confusing and misleading. There was evidence of circumstances to which the instruction reasonably might be applied.
Our examination of the case convinces us that the defendant had a fair trial, free from prejudicial error, and that "he was fortunate to escape with a conviction which reduced his offense to manslaughter.
The judgment is affirmed.
Shaw, J., and James, J., concurred.
