36 S.E. 344 | N.C. | 1900
The deceased was floor manager in a cotton factory at Gaston, N.C.; the prisoner and his little daughter were employees there. On the evening before the homicide the prisoner and deceased had a quarrel over the number of days the girl had been employed, and opprobrious epithets were interchanged. The next day the prisoner, armed himself with a pistol and went to the factory — they exchanged shots at sight, the prisoner shooting first and repeating the fire, and killing Brown.
There was no exception to the evidence or the judge's charge as given. The only exception was to the refusal of his Honor to give a special instruction prayed for by the prisoner. There was a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree, followed by judgment of death. The prisoner appealed. The special instruction appears in the opinion, (1128) and so does a full detail of the circumstances of the case. This is an appeal on a conviction of murder in the first degree. There is but one exception, which is to the refusal of the court to give the following instruction: "If the jury find from the evidence that the prisoner willfully, deliberately and with premeditation, shot at the deceased with the intent to take his life, and the deceased shot at the prisoner in the tower in self-defense, and the prisoner after having made the first assault, as above set forth, turned and fled from the deceased *732 down the steps out of the tower, closing the door after him to prevent the deceased from shooting him, and further retreating from the tower some fifteen or twenty steps with the intent of wholly withdrawing from the conflict in good faith, and with no design to continue it, and the deceased knew that all danger from the prisoner had passed, and the deceased went to the window and shot at the prisoner, still holding his pistol drawn on the prisoner, and the prisoner turned and shot the deceased, killing him, such killing would be in self-defense, and excusable under the law, and the verdict should be not guilty, provided at the time of firing the fatal shot he reasonably apprehended his own life was in imminent peril, and that further retreat would be fatal to him."
We have given this case most careful consideration, as we try to do in all cases, and as we always do in those involving the life of (1129) a fellow-being. Whatever doubts we have are resolved in favor of the prisoner whose life is in our hands unless, upon mature reflection, it clearly appears that those doubts are purely the result of human sympathy, unsupported either by reason or precedent. In such cases we can not permit personal feelings to interfere with the proper execution of the law whose ultimate object in punishing the guilty is the protection of the innocent. In cases of murder, in our sympathy for the accused we can not entirely forget the victim or the living who may become the victims of unpunished crime. We do not think that the prisoner was entitled to the instruction asked under all the circumstances of his case. It is drawn with great skill and care, and appears to be correct as an abstract proposition of law; but it assumes, in favor of the prisoner, facts and evidence that do not appear to us. In the first place, it assumes, or might well have been understood by the jury as assuming, that the deceased was killed by the last shot fired by the prisoner. This entirely excludes the possible effect of the previous shots, which the jury might have believed from the evidence caused the death of the deceased. Therefore, even if the remainder of the prayer had been proper as to the last shot being fired in self-defense, it was not proper to say that, therefore, "the verdict should be not guilty," without some further qualification. It seems to us that even if the last shot had been admittedly fired in self-defense and had inflicted a mortal wound, the prisoner would still have been guilty if any of his previous shots had mortally wounded the deceased. Those shots were, by the very terms of the prayer, admittedly fired without excuse or palliation, and if either of them had produced a mortal wound the prisoner would have been guilty of a crime that would have ripened into murder upon the death of the deceased if they had ultimately contributed to his death. This rule would be different if it were (1130) shown that the last shot was the exclusive cause of death, or *733
by itself the proximate and immediate cause. S. v. Scates,
Aside from this, we do not think that the evidence justified the prayer. We see no evidence tending to show that "the deceased knew that all danger from the prisoner had passed," nor can we find, either in the citations furnished to us by the learned counsel for the prisoner, or in our own investigations, a single precedent holding that the prisoner, under circumstances similar to those of the case at bar, had so far "withdrawn from the conflict" as to relegate him to his right of self-defense. The counsel cited us to S. v. Hill,
Perhaps the best expression of the rule we have found applicable to the case at bar is in Stoffer v. State,
Can the case at bar in any aspect be brought within this rule? Let us take the prisoner's own testimony, which is contradicted by other witnesses, but which we will assume to be true for the purposes of the argument. He testifies that he had a dispute with the deceased (1134) about the time and pay of his daughter. Next morning he put his pistol in his pocket and again went to see the deceased. They had another dispute, in which both he and the deceased cursed each other and bandied opprobrious epithets. He then went home, and soon after returned to the office of the deceased. The following are his own words as they appear in the record:
"I went on to the mill with my little girl behind me. When I got to the tower door Mr. Sherrill was standing in the door with his back against the south door facing, with his face towards me. He says to me `Mr. Medlin if I was you I wouldn't have any fuss with Brown.' I said `Oh hell, I didn't come here to have any fuss.' I walked into the door and turned to the right and stepped on a platform about one step high, and then I stepped two or three steps up the steps. When I got up two or three steps I could see Mr. Brown getting up out of a chair. I could not see the chair. He was raising up when I first saw him, looking right at me. I stepped one step after I saw him and Brown was getting up with both hands in his pockets, and when he got up I saw that he was drawing *736 his pistol out of his right pants pocket. I saw the white metal piece on the butt of the pistol between his fingers. When I saw that I stepped one step down and reached for my pistol, and says to Brown, `Don't.' Then I jerked my pistol out as quick as I could get it out. When I jerked it out of my pocket I nearly let it fall out of my hand, and I grabbed it with both hands. I throwed it up with both hands in front of my body. But that time Brown was coming over with his pistol, and throwing it right down in my face. I shot them. I saw that he was going to shoot, and I shot, and then Brown shot. I kept going backwards down the steps. I saw that Brown was making an effort to shoot again, and I shot again as quick as I could. When I shot the second time (1135) I was near the bottom of the steps — I think on the platform. I wheeled. As I turned round to run out the door somebody shot at me. I don't know who it was. I ran out the door and jerked the door shut behind me. When I got on the outside I thought of my daughter, and turned round to find her. She jerked the door open behind me, and jumped out of the door, and hallooed `Lord have mercy, what is the matter, pa?' While I was standing there I heard somebody coming down the steps — running. I looked inside the door, and Mr. Brown by that time had got to the last step, stepping on to the platform and turned to come in the door. Just as he came in front of the door I told him to stop, and he didn't stop, but was raising his pistol to shoot again, and I shot at him. When I shot he jumped back and slammed the door to. My little girl was down about the corner of the tower then. I said to her `get out of the way,' and started for home. She followed me. I was going in a sort of a run. When I got 20 or 25 steps from the tower I heard somebody say `Yonder he goes, shoot him.' I turned my head, and just as I turned my head somebody shot at me again. As I turned round I saw George Ballard leaning out of the window up stairs. While I was looking I dropped my eyes, and saw Mr. Brown standing in the window down stairs with his pistol in both hands. The smoke was boiling out of the window as if he had just shot. I threw my pistol back and shot at Brown, and ran on. I looked back again but did not see Brown any more. As I shot the last shot I saw him throw his hand on his left breast and stagger back. That's the last I saw of Brown."
It thus appears from the prisoner's own testimony that he took no chances, but anticipated every action of the deceased. He went (1136) around to the office of the deceased, Brown, with whom he had recently quarreled. He drew his pistol because Brown looked as if he intended to draw his pistol. He fired because Brown looked as if he were going to fire. As he was going down the steps backwards he shot again because Brown looked as if he were making an effort to shoot. After getting out of the factory he turned around and shot again because *737 Brown would not stop when he told him to stop. After getting 20 or 25 steps from the factory (but how far from the place where he fired the last shot, is not stated) he turned again because he heard some one say: "Yonder he goes, shoot him." After he turned his head around somebody shot at him, and then he again shot at Brown. We rarely find a more perfect specimen of Parthian tactics. Two things here are worthy of note: he turned around before the shot was fired, and he does not say that it was fired by Brown. He says Brown was "standing in the window with his pistol in both hands," and that "the smoke was boiling out of the window as if he had just shot." It is common knowledge that if Brown had shot in such a position the smoke from his pistol would have been carried out of the window with the discharge. The prisoner certainly had not "succeeded in wholly withdrawing himself from the contest," if indeed he had made any effort to do so, as he was constantly turning and shooting as he retreated. We are at a loss for any evidence whatever that he had done anything to "remove any just apprehension from his adversary." The last word he addressed to him but a few seconds before was a peremptory order to stop, followed by a pistol shot. He is not certain that Brown himself fired but one shot at him, while he admits he fired four shots at Brown. None of the shots hit him or came anywhere near him, as far as we can see. If he was in any danger when the last shot was fired at him, he would have been in less danger if he had kept on running instead (1137) of stopping and turning around to await and return the shot. He had not retreated to the wall, or a ditch, or anything that could stop him, and if he had continued running he would soon have been out of any effective range of the ordinary pistol. In any event a man in the open would be safer running, than stopping and exchanging shots with a man in a building, who by stepping aside could have fired out of the window with perfect aim and but little exposure of his own person. We must remember that the prayer itself is based upon the assumption that the prisoner had been the aggressor, and therefore the duty rested upon him not simply of retreating but of wholly withdrawing from the contest as far as possible before he could resume his right of self-defense, of which he had voluntarily divested himself by his original assault.
Of all the cases cited by the defendant that of Ingold goes farthest in his direction, but even that falls far short of sustaining his contention. In that case this Court says: "There is manifest error in the first proposition of law laid down by his Honor. `If the prisoner willingly entered into the fight, and during its progress, however sorely he might bepressed, stabbed the deceased as described by the witnesses, his offense, at least would be manslaughter. By sorely pressed we understand being *738 put to the wall, or placed in a situation where he must be killed or suffer great bodily harm, or take the life of his adversary. Supposing there was evidence to raise this point, the offense according to all the authorities, was excusable homicide, which Foster calls self-defense culpable, but through the benignity of the law, excusable (citing Foster's C. L., 273-4; 1 East Cr. L., 279: 4 Bl. Com., 184; 1 Hale, 482). Indeed, as the deceased made the first assault with a deadly weapon, i. e., `a stone about the size of a goose egg' — thrown with violence, at a short distance, and following it up by pushing the prisoner against the (1138) jamb of the fence, gave him two blows, and then caught him with his hand about the mouth, having him against the fence, bent over on the side, before the prisoner struck him at all, if the necessity for killing existed, which his Honor assumed, it would seem to have been rather a case of justifiable homicide." This short statement shows the utter dissimilarity of that case from the one at bar. In that case occurs the following sentence, illustrating amongst others not only the profound legal knowledge of the great Chief Justice, but also his intimate acquaintance with the mainsprings of human action. He says, on page 222; "It is true, while they were holding him in the piazza, he flourished his knife, and swore `one of us has to die before sunset'; but every one who has witnessed scenes of this kind, knows that such `rearing and charging and popping of fists' are far from evincing a deliberate purpose, particularly when the opponent is a much stouter and more able-bodied man. The barking of a dog shows that he thinks it safer to bark than to bite."
This illustration was very apt where used, but scarcely applies to the case at bar. The popping of a pistol, especially when aimed with a deadly intent, means far more than the popping of fists; and the barking of a Colt's revolver has a compass beyond the gamut of a barking dog. We regret to say that we see no evidence beyond a scintilla that the prisoner had in good faith wholly withdrawn from the contest before he fired his last shot, and certainly none that "the deceased knew that all danger from the prisoner had passed." The record says that there was "evidence tending to show that the prisoner armed himself with a pistol and returned to the tower for the purpose of shooting the deceased, drew his pistol as he went up the steps leading to the second story of (1139) the tower where he had left Brown, took aim at him with his pistol, fired once at him while deceased was sitting in his chair; that Brown returned the fire; prisoner fired again and inflicted a mortal would upon him. After firing the second shot the prisoner turned and fled down the steps, Brown pursued him to the ground floor of the tower. Prisoner got out of the tower and Brown, the deceased, went to the window on the lower floor, fell and died from the wound inflicted as *739 above stated." The record further says that, "The prisoner introduced evidence tending to show that the shooting, occurring in the upper story of the tower, was done in self-defense. Upon this evidence his Honor charged the jury as requested by the prisoner." As the prisoner appears to have had a fair trial, so much so that he has complained of nothing except the single exception already considered, to which he was not entitled, we are constrained to affirm the judgment of the court below.
Affirmed.
Cited: S. v. Hunt,
(1140)