149 S.E. 590 | N.C. | 1929
Criminal prosecution, tried upon an indictment charging the defendant with a capital felony, murder in the first degree.
Verdict: Guilty of murder in the first degree.
Judgment: Death by electrocution.
Defendant appeals, assigning errors. There is evidence on behalf of the State tending to show that on Sunday afternoon, 10 February, 1929, the prisoner, Percy Miller, a colored man, shot and killed Patrick White, chief of police of the town of Windsor, Bertie County, while the latter, in the discharge of his duties as an officer, was attempting to arrest the prisoner or to prevent his forcible escape from custody. The defendant, on a number of occasions, sometimes when drinking and others when sober, and once while at a still, had threatened to kill any officer who attempted to arrest him, and several times the deceased was singled out as the object of his threats: "The first time the s-o-b policeman (Patrick White) arrests me, I am going to kill him." And again: "If Sheriff White comes up here (to the still), I would shoot hell out of him." Dewey Smithwick, knowing that a warrant was out for the defendant, asked him "if they wouldn't get him if he went around town now?" His reply was: "I would like to see anybody try to arrest me. I will kill the first s-o-b that does." These threats were communicated to the deceased. About eight or nine minutes before the homicide, the defendant was in the street, in front of Boone's Cafe, apparently under the influence of an intoxicant, with a pistol in his hand, flashing it around, saying that he wanted to kill somebody — some s-o-b. There were no eye-witnesses to the homicide, but from the number of shots heard, the prisoner and the chief of police were apparently engaged in a gun battle, in the middle of the street, when the fatal shot was fired. The deceased was shot in the *447 heart and died instantly. His pistol was found four steps back of his body. A few minutes before the shooting, the officer was seen holding the defendant by the arm or shoulder, while the prisoner seemed to be in a resisting position.
The prisoner, who testified that he was not drinking on the day in question, tendered a plea of murder in the second degree, but this was not accepted by the State. The appeal, therefore, presents the single question as to whether the evidence tending to show premeditation and deliberation is sufficient to warrant a verdict of murder in the first degree. We think it is. S. v. McClure,
That the prisoner had premeditated upon the killing, "thought of it beforehand," is amply shown from the threats made against the officer; and where one with a previously fixed purpose to kill, formed while sober, deliberately bringing on a difficulty, or voluntarily intoxicates himself in order to carry out his previously fixed design, and under such circumstances, kills his intended victim, the law will not excuse him or mitigate his offense, but pronounces his crime murder in the first degree.S. v. Benson,
It is in evidence that the officer was within his rights in arresting or attempting to arrest the defendant. S. v. Robinson,
Speaking to the subject in Holloway v. Moser,
Murder in the first degree is the unlawful killing of a human being with malice and with premeditation and deliberation; while murder in the second degree is the unlawful killing of a human being with malice, but without premeditation and deliberation. The presence in the one case of premeditation and deliberation and the absence in the other of one or both of these elements is the distinguishing difference between these two grades of an unlawful homicide. S. v. Benson, supra.
When on a trial for homicide, a killing with a deadly weapon is admitted or established by the evidence, the law raises two — and only two — presumptions against the slayer: first, that the killing was unlawful; and, second, that it was done with malice; and an unlawful killing with malice is murder in the second degree. S. v. Walker,
The verdict in the instant case is warranted by the evidence, and no sufficient reason has been shown for disturbing the judgment.
No error. *449