71 S.E. 332 | N.C. | 1911
After stating the case: The remark of the judge to the jury is severely criticised by counsel as an intimation by him that the case was being argued by defendant's counsel at too great length; but we cannot draw the inference from it. Counsel for the State might just as well complain that it was directed against them. It seems to have been made indifferently. We are not informed by the record what elicited the remark, and we are unable to see that it was prejudicial to the defendant. It may have been so, but it is incumbent upon him (445) to show it. We will not presume error. S. v. Tyson,
But it was strenuously contended and argued before us with much force and plausibility, that the words of the defendant, addressed to the deceased, were not calculated, nor could they have been intended, to provoke a difficulty, and, therefore, if the jury accepted the defendant's version of the facts, he was without fault, while the deceased made a sudden and deadly assault upon him, thus making complete the right of self-defense. Whether language is provocative or not, cannot always be determined by a mere consideration of the words by themselves. It is sometimes necessary, in order to ascertain the meaning or intention of the speaker, or the probable effect of what is said upon the person to whom he has spoken, that we should view them in their proper setting — the circumstances and surroundings of the parties, their previous relations to each other, and the state of their feelings. What is said by a friend may pass unnoticed, while if the same words are uttered by an enemy, they are like a spark, though small it be, falling into powder, and the explosion quickly follows. In such a case, a single word, though apparently innocent and harmless, will arouse the human passions of anger and resentment. An illustration may be found in McGrew v.State, 49 S.W. Rep., 226, in which it appeared that defendant and deceased being unfriendly, had met casually in a saloon. Defendant ordered a glass of Dutch beer, whereupon deceased said: "I will take a glass of American beer," and a fight ensued. It was contended that the words of the deceased were not calculated to provoke a difficulty, but the court ruled otherwise, and said: "While the act of provocation must be confined to the time when the homicide was committed, yet we do not understand by this that we cannot look back to facts transpiring before this, the course of conduct of the parties, and their former conversations, in order to shed light upon and render significant some act or declaration done at the time of the homicide." The evidence in the case shows that the deceased had previously quarreled with the defendant about this same matter, and each had ordered the other (446) not to speak to him. They were enemies, and the defendant should *362 have known and did know of this state of feeling, at the time he spoke to the deceased about driving over his "clover patch." According to his own testimony, he accused the deceased of bad faith, in that he had deliberately broken his promise not to injure his grass and clover, and he should have known, if he did not know, that such language was calculated to provoke a difficulty, as deceased had quarreled with him before under like circumstances, and they would have fought then if the defendant, as he says, had not exercised great self-control. The court properly instructed the jury to consider the evidence and decide whether or not the words were calculated and intended to bring on a fight, and the exception to this part of the charge must be overruled.
The defendant was entitled to the instruction requested by him and which we have set out in the statement of the case, if he was entitled to any which he asked to be given; but while the judge did not use the language of the prayer, as he was not required to do so, we think the substance of the instruction was given in the general charge to the jury, and that was a sufficient response to the prayer. It may well be said that the charge of the court was favorable to the defendant, as much so as he had any right to expect, for the jury were told that the deceased was where he had a right to be, and that if a "sudden, fierce, and continuous assault was made upon him with a deadly weapon," the law permitted him "to stand his ground" and slay his adversary, and he was not required to wait until the opportunity for successful defense had passed, but might act at once upon the facts as they appeared to him, and if the jury found, when the evidence is thus considered, that is, by putting themselves in his place, that the circumstances were such as to put a man of ordinary firmness in fear of death or great bodily harm, the killing of the deceased was excusable, and they should acquit the defendant.
The following instruction was still more favorable: "If you find from the evidence that the defendant was in a place he had a right to be — and I charge you he was in a place where he had a right to be, being (447) on his own land — and you further find that he was reasonably without fault in provoking the difficulty, and that Filmore Rose made a sudden, serious, and continuous assault upon him, then the defendant had the right to stand his ground and shoot the deceased to save his own life or himself from serious bodily harm." It will be observed that, in the last instruction, the court did not describe the kind of assault which would justify the taking of human life, with great particularity. He did not tell the jury that it must have been committed with intent to kill or even to inflict great bodily harm, but that if it was "sudden, serious, and continuous," and without regard to its effect upon the defendant's mind or whether calculated to excite a *363
reasonable apprehension of death or grievous bodily injury, it would be sufficient to justify him in "standing his ground" and killing his adversary. The word "serious" has no fixed or technical meaning in the law, but is rather general and indeterminate in its signification. It may, when applied to an assault, include one made with the intent to kill or to inflict great bodily harm, or it may not, and the jury should have been instructed more definitely upon the character of assault that will justify a killing in self-defense; but this omission was clearly in favor of the defendant, and he has no just cause of complaint. The defendant certainly has no ground upon which to base an exception that the case has not been tried in accordance with the law as declared in former decisions of this Court. S. v. Dixon,
The killing with a deadly weapon having been admitted, the defendant was guilty, at least, of murder in the second degree, nothing else appearing; and the burden accordingly rested upon him to satisfy the jury that such facts and circumstances of mitigation or justification existed as would excuse the homicide or reduce its grade to manslaughter. S. v.Brittain,
What was said in S. v. Fowler,
We have not set out the charge of the court in its entirety. If we had done so, it would appear, more clearly than it does in the few passages taken therefrom, that the jury were clearly and fully instructed as to the law and its application to the facts and that the defendant was treated with perfect fairness and impartiality. We need not consider the other numerous exceptions, as they cannot be sustained in view of what we have already said, and we find no reversible error in the ruling to which they were taken.
No error.
Cited: S. v. Vann,
(450)