158 P. 637 | Okla. Crim. App. | 1916
The plaintiff in error in this case, who will be referred to as defendant, was convicted in the district court of Kay county of manslaughter in the first degree, and sentenced to four years in the penitentiary. The defendant, on February 28, 1910, shot one Ed Conrad, inflicting two wounds from which Conrad died on March 2, 1910. Defendant, Rogers, was subsequently tried and convicted, and appealed to this court; that judgment was reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial. Frank B. Rogers v. State,
There were errors of law committed in the first trial, which necessitated a reversal; but in the second trial these errors do not recur. There are also material differences between the record now before this court, and the record in the former trial.
The defendant filed a brief in this case of 358 pages, but we find it is of practically no assistance to the court, as it sheds but little, if any, light upon the question as to whether or not the defendant had a fair and legal trial. And in view of this situation, out of an abundance of caution, we have carefully read the voluminous record in this case twice, to satisfy ourselves upon this question. In reference, however, to the brief of the defendant, we perhaps should say it is by no means stale, but on the contrary is a remarkable display of pyrotechnics, and is extremely interesting when viewed from that standpoint. In criticizing county attorneys in general, for urging upon juries that "they owe a duty to the people that can only be honestly discharged by them in the conviction of the defendant," etc., the brief says:
"No more cowardly, vicious, contemptible, and damnable perversion of justice can be perpetrated than by means thus employed; and, unless such practices are stayed by the stern and inflexible interference of courts of appeals, the doctrine of self-defense will be one of the lost rights of humanity, and in time the sturdy, self-reliant and courageous manhood that characterizes the robust and splendid heroes of today will be supplanted by ewe-necked, hollow-chested, Sarah Bernhardt-hipped, spindle-shanked, low-browed, hungry-visaged, measly cadavers, whose progeny will be fit subjects for the experimental, wild-eyed advocates of modern eugenics to practice upon; and the end is not yet."
No one has a greater personal antipathy for the practical workings of the theories of the "wild-eyed advocates of modern eugenics" than the writer of this opinion. But that question, like many others discussed in the defendant's brief, is not involved in this case. The one question in which we are interested, and by which the right of the defendant to a new trial must be tested, is whether or not in the lower court he had a fair and legal trial.
The deceased was a township official. The defendant, as foreman of a cattle ranch, had fenced up certain public highways. *458 He had been ordered by the township officials to make gates, so that the traveling public would not be deprived of the use of these highways. He failed or neglected to do this. And, under the direction of deceased, the road overseer cut the fences obstructing a highway leading through the defendant's inclosure. As a result of this, bad blood was engendered; deceased constantly insisting that the order directing that gates be placed across the highways be obeyed, and the defendant, in apparent defiance of the order, replaced the fences when cut. There is evidence that deceased threatened the defendant's life, and that these threats were communicated to the defendant; and the defendant thereupon armed himself with a revolver. On the day of the tragedy the two men met upon a public highway, each on horseback, going in opposite directions. As they were about to pass each other, deceased reined his horse in close to the defendant, and struck him a blow with his fist upon his head or neck. The state's evidence is that both horses then sprang forward, and the two men were thus separated by some 25 or 30 feet. That defendant turned his horse and began shooting; that after the shooting began the deceased turned his horse, quartering toward the defendant. Four shots were fired, two taking effect; one shot seems to have entered the boy of the deceased about an inch and one-half to the right of the spine, and the other about the center of the left groin. The deceased was unarmed. There was evidence offered by defendant to the effect that, after the deceased struck the blow, he wheeled his horse around, and was coming toward the defendant at the time he began shooting. But the physical facts, and the location of the deceased's wounds, seem to bear out the state's theory that the first shot to take effect was fired while the back of the deceased was turned toward the defendant; and that he had turned, quartering toward defendant when the second shot that took effect was fired. Besides, the deceased was wholly unarmed, and this fact was clearly apparent to the defendant. It is true that a friend and witness for the defendant testified that he visited deceased while he languished in the hospital, and discovered a pair of brass knucks in his right-hand coat pocket. And it is also true that those knucks *459 were taken from this pocket of deceased, after his death, by the undertaker. But it was satisfactorily proven that the pockets of deceased had been examined shortly after the shooting, and immediately before he was placed upon the train which took him to the hospital, and no brass knucks were in his pockets at that time. And we presume the jury had no trouble in determining to their satisfaction when, and by whom, these knucks were placed in that pocket. But aside from this no one claims to have seen any knucks during the difficulty; and, while the shooting was going on, the deceased asked defendant to get down off his horse, which should have further assured defendant that he was unarmed and had only anticipated a fist fight, which defendant, with his revolver in hand, could have avoided without even firing a shot.
Do these facts indicate that the defendant was clothed with a right of self-defense? What imminent and immediate danger was he in? And how could he have believed he was in danger of great bodily harm, or his life was in imminent peril, when he, armed with a revolver, saw his adversary 25 or 30 feet away on horseback, unarmed, and inviting him to get down off of his horse, which was tantamount to insisting that they settle their difference by a fist fight? The law places too high an estimate upon human life to justify it being snuffed out by a mere whim of either cowardice or anger. And whether this shooting was done because the defendant, as intimated by his counsel, "was frightened," or whether it was because he was smarting under anger aroused by the blow he had just received from the fist of the deceased, is immaterial; since there was nothing in the circumstances and surroundings to justify his fear, and since homicide perpetrated in a heat of passion, by means of a dangerous weapon, is manslaughter in the first degree.
The instructions given by the court were fair, and fully covered every phase of the case; and there was no prejudicial error committed in the trial of the case.
The judgment is affirmed.
DOYLE, P.J., and ARMSTRONG, J., concur. *460