17 S.E. 166 | N.C. | 1893
The defendant, who, with two others, was charged with the murder of Josh Cannaday, obtained a severance, and was tried alone and convicted, and appealed. There were many special instructions asked for by the defendant, and many exceptions to the refusal of some and to the charge of the judge. It was deemed necessary to consider only one exception, made to an instruction to the jury, which, together with the salient points of the testimony upon which it bears, is (860) set out in the opinion of Shepherd, C. J. The prisoner, together with Dock Howard and Henderson Burnett, was indicted for the murder of one Josh Cannaday, but, upon motion, a severance was ordered, and he alone was put upon *558 trial. Several exceptions were taken to the rulings of his Honor, but only one need be considered by the Court in order to dispose of the appeal.
It appears from the testimony that the deceased and Dock Howard were engaged in a fight, apparently without deadly weapons, and that the prisoner (a brother of Dock Howard) and Henderson Burnett participated in the same for the purpose of assisting the said Howard. His Honor very properly assumed that there was no evidence that these parties acted by preconcert, and it was left in doubt as to which of the defendants used a deadly weapon and struck the fatal blow. While the testimony tended to show that the prisoner, as well as Henderson Burnett, inflicted wounds with a razor or other sharp instrument upon the deceased, it also presented an important phase, insisted upon by the prisoner, that he not only did not enter the fight by preconcert, but that he used no weapons himself and saw none in the hands of Henderson Burnett, or, indeed, of any one else.
This view of the evidence presents the following proposition: Two men are engaged in an affray, without deadly weapons or any other circumstances to indicate that their mutual assaults are of a felonious character. A (a brother of one of the combatants) and B are (861) bystanders, and, without preconcert or any connection with the original quarrel, each acting independently of the other, suddenly take part in the fight against one of the parties. B has a deadly weapon, which is unknown to A, and, without his consent or knowledge, inflicts the fatal wound. Is A guilty of murder?
In S. v. Simmons,
His Honor, in the seventh instruction, charged the jury as (862) follows:
"If you believe from the evidence that Henderson Burnett and the prisoner, Furman Howard, were standing in the store, by the fire, as detailed by the witnesses, and as soon as the difficulty between Dock Howard and the deceased (Josh Cannaday) commenced, they both rushed upon Josh, either of them having a deadly weapon in his hand (and the court charges you that a razor or knife, such as described, is a deadly weapon), and pressed him back upon the molasses barrel and then down the store 15 feet; and inflicted the wound upon him from which he died, the prisoner is guilty of murder, whether the deadly weapon was in his hand or that of Burnett."
The instruction ignores the phase of the testimony to which we have adverted, and without qualification is in itself erroneous.
NEW TRIAL.
Cited: S. v. Price,