72 S.E. 1075 | N.C. | 1911
Indictment for murder. There was evidence tending to show that on 21 December, 1910, the prisoner, openly and in the presence of several witnesses, shot John Simmons, the deceased, in the back, with a pistol, and killed him, and that the killing was deliberate and premediated.
There was evidence on the part of the prisoner tending to show that the killing was not deliberate, of premediated purpose; second, that the mind of the prisoner was, at the time, so affected by disease that he was incapable of committing crime; third, that the mind of the prisoner was so affected, at the time, by voluntary drunkenness that he was incapable of committing murder in the first degree.
The court charged the jury as to the degrees of crime, embraced in the bill of indictment and on different phases of the evidence, elaborately as to nonresponsibility for crime in case of insanity, and in closing the charge said:
"Take the case; give it the consideration that its importance (616) merits, and make up your verdict. If you find the defendant guilty of murder in the first degree, your verdict will be `Guilty,' simply. If you find him guilty of murder in the second degree, your verdict will be `Guilty of murder in the second degree.' If you find him guilty of manslaughter, your verdict will be `Guilty of manslaughter.' If acquitted, you will say `Not guilty,' and no more."
The jury rendered a verdict of "Guilty," and the same being so recorded, there was sentence of death, and the prisoner excepted and appealed, assigning for error (1) that the court failed and refused to charge, as requested, that if the mind of the prisoner, at the time of the killing, was so affected by drunkenness, though voluntary, as to be incapable of forming or entertaining a deliberate, premediated purpose to take the life of the deceased, he could not be convicted of murder in the first degree. (2) That the verdict, as rendered, did not justify the court in pronouncing sentence of death. *487 After stating the case: Our statute, dividing the crime of murder into two degrees, concluded with the direction that the jury before whom an offender is tried "shall determine, in their verdict, whether the crime is murder in the first or second degree." This portion of the law now appears in Revisal, sec. 3271, and contains peremptory requirement that before sentence of death may be pronounced the trial jury shall determine, in their verdict, that the prisoner is guilty of murder in the first degree. We have held in several cases that although a verdict, as expressed, may not be sufficiently determinative, it may become so by reference to the pleadings or the charge of the court, or even to the evidence, when the same all appears of record.
An instance of the verdict cured by reference to the charge of trial judge is afforded in Richardson v. Edwards,
Without definite ruling as to the form and sufficiency of the verdict when considered in reference to the charge of the lower court, we are of opinion that the prisoner is entitled to a new trial by reason of the failure to present the view, arising on the testimony and embodied in his prayers for instructions, as to the effect of "voluntary drunkenness."
It is very generally understood that voluntary drunkenness is no legal excuse for crime, and the position has been held controlling in many causes in this State and on indictments for homicide, as in S. v. Wilson,
In illustration of the principles stated in Reaper v. Vincent,
Applying the principle, the Court is of opinion that there was error committed in failing to present the view embodied in the prisoner's prayer for instructions, and he is entitled to have his cause tried before another jury.
New trial.
Cited: S. v. English,