78 Fla. 459 | Fla. | 1919
— The indictment herein for murder in the first degree alleges that Eddie Riggins in Lafayette County, Florida, on November 30, 1917, “with force and arms, and with a deadly weapon, to-wit, a shotgun loaded and charged with gunpowder and leaden bullets, and
On write of error to a judgment of conviction of murder in the second degree it is urged that the court erred in sustaining the indictment on a, motion in arrest of judgment. .
As an indictment for murder in the first degree, in legal contemplation, includes a charge of the lesser degree of unlawful homicide, it is not necessary or proper that the indictment should expressly charge murder in any degree below that alleged. The statutory definitions of murder do not make malice an element of the offense. It is not essential that an indictment for murder shall charge a felonious homicide.
At common law indictments for felonies should allege the acts constituting the crime to have been feloniously
The main contention on the evidence is that the homicide was an accident, but there is ample evidence to support a finding of murder in., the second degree, and errors, if any, in rulings on testimony or in the charges were manifestly harmless.
A judgment of conviction will not be reversed on writ of error even if technical errors were committed in rulings on the admissibility of evidence or in charges given or refused or in other matters of procedure, where the evidence of .guilt is clear and ample and no fundamental rights of the defendants were violated, and it appears from the whole record that such technical errors, if any, were not prejudicial to.the defendants. Seymour v. State, 66 Fla. 133, 63 South. Rep. 7; Kersey v. State, 73 Fla. 832, 74 South. Rep. 983.
No material errors of law or of procedure appearing, the judgment is affirmed.