26 S.E.2d 875 | N.C. | 1943
Criminal prosecution upon an indictment charging defendant with murder of one Clarence Cable.
In the trial court the defendant entered plea of not guilty and relied upon a plea of self-defense.
On the call of the case for trial the solicitor for the State announced in open court that the State would not ask for a verdict of murder in the first degree, but would ask for a verdict of murder in the second degree or manslaughter, as the facts may warrant.
Verdict: Guilty of murder in the second degree.
Judgment: Confinement in State Prison for a term of not less than 20 nor more than 25 years.
The defendant appeals to the Supreme Court and assigns error. *393 Portions of the charge to the jury, to which assignments of error 7 and 8 are directed and well taken, affect substantial right of defendant and exceptions thereto entitle him to a new trial.
It appears in the record on appeal that the court, after charging the jury with respect to the presumptions arising upon the admission or proof of an intentional killing of a human being with a deadly weapon, properly charged that upon such admission or proof the burden is upon the defendant to show to the satisfaction of the jury facts and circumstances sufficient to excuse the homicide or to reduce it to manslaughter. S. v. Capps,
The intensity of the proof required is that the jury must be satisfied. Even proof by the greater weight of the evidence may be sufficient to satisfy the jury. Hence, the correct rule as to the intensity of such proof is that when the intentional killing of a human being with a deadly weapon is admitted, or is established by the evidence, "the law then casts upon the defendant the burden of proving to the satisfaction of the *394
jury — not by the greater weight of the evidence nor beyond a reasonable doubt — but simply to the satisfaction of the jury . . . the legal provocation that will rob the crime of malice and thus reduce it to manslaughter, or that will excuse it altogether upon the grounds of self-defense, accident or misadventure." S. v. Benson,
However, there may be found in the opinions of the Court statements which if lifted from the context may support the charge as given, but when such statements are considered contextually the rule as generally stated requires that if there be evidence sufficient for the consideration of the jury, of which the court shall be the judge, the intensity of such evidence must be "simply to the satisfaction of the jury," of which the jury alone is the judge.
It is not deemed necessary to deal with other exceptions which may not recur on another trial.
New trial.