83 Miss. 691 | Miss. | 1903
delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellant was indicted for the murder of one Mills, was convicted of manslaughter, and appealed to this court, and the case was reversed and remanded for a new trial. See Powers v. State, 74 Miss., 777; s. c., 21 So. Rep., 657. On the second trial, upon the same indictment, he was again convicted of manslaughter and again appeals. While the assignment of error sets out many causes, five alone aro urged in the brief for appellant. They are as follows: First. The action of the court in permitting an order overruling a special plea of appellant, filed and disposed of at a previous term of the court, to be entered upon the minutes nunc pro tunc during progress of the trial. Second. The placing of the appellant on trial for manslaughter on the indictment charging him with murder, and upon which he had previously been acquitted of murder. Third. Error in the instructions for the state. Fourth. The remarks of the district attorney and assistant prosecuting attorney during the argument of the case. Fifth. The power of the special judge, and his right to preside at the trial, is challenged.
As to the first assignment of error, the facts are that, after the case had been remanded by this court, appellant filed what is termed a “special plea,” in which he set up the fact that he had been tried once upon the indictment presented against him, and which charged him with murder, and acquitted of the charge preferred by the indictment, and therefore could not again be placed on trial or required again to answer to the same indict
We are asked, by the second assignment of error, to vary the long and well-established rule of criminal procedure in this state, whereby one convicted of a constituent offense to the charge preferred by the indictment may, upon a second trial after the annulment of the first conviction, be again tried upon the same indictment for such lesser crime. In support of this assignment it is urged that it works a hardship upon the parties
The instructions for the state are not subject to the criticism to which they are subjected. The jury are told that they could not convict of murder because of the previous acquittal. Manslaughter is accurately defined, and the elementary principle is announced that threats, unaccompanied by an overt act, do not justify the commission of a homicide, and that it was for the jury to decide whether any overt act had been committed. It needs no citation of authority to show that appellant has here no ground of complaint.
The fourth assignment of error is based upon alleged improper remarks made by the district attorney and the lawyer who was engaged to assist him at the trial. The use of the lan
The fifth assignment of error challenges the right of the special judge to preside at the trial, and is based on the following state of facts: The regular circuit judge of that district, having
In deference to tbe earnestness with which tbe views of-the counsel for appellant are pressed, we have given each and every assignment of error careful and painstaking consideration, and find no error. If tbe testimony for tbe state be true, appellant has upon him “tbe guilt of premeditated and contrived murder,” and we think has no cause to complain of the mercy shown him by tbe jury.
Affirmed^