69 S.E. 11 | N.C. | 1910
There are seventy-eight exceptions noted in the voluminous record in the case. The Attorney-General, with characteristic candor, which may well be emulated by all public prosecutors, admits that at least seven of the exceptions are material and well taken, and that the prisoner is entitled to a new trial.
While the opinion of the State's attorney has much weight with us, it is our practice to examine the record carefully ourselves before setting aside a conviction for crime and directing another trial.
We find that many exceptions as to material matters of proof were well taken, but as those errors may not occur on another trial, it is unnecessary to discuss them.
The principal error committed by the judge below was in holding that in no view of the evidence could the prisoner be acquitted (605) upon the ground of self-defense and in excluding pertinent evidence competent to support that plea.
The evidence of the prisoner himself is sufficient to entitle him to have that plea submitted to the jury under proper instructions. The prisoner testified substantially that he and deceased had a slight dispute in the morning and met again in the afternoon; that he said "good morning" to deceased, who at once, without provocation, cursed prisoner and attacked him; pushed his head violently against corner of shed; hit him four times, three times in eye causing excruciating pain and blinding him; that prisoner resisted as best he could, but that deceased weighed 200 pounds, was six feet high and was a far more powerful man than prisoner and capable of doing him serious bodily harm; that deceased had prisoner by the neck, and his nose and mouth jammed against deceased's stomach, and was beating him so severely that prisoner was *493 afraid of his life, and that in such condition, unable to get away, he drew his pistol and shot deceased.
In the prisoner's version of the affair he did not enter the fight willingly, and is not debarred from the plea of self-defense on that ground. He was seized by the deceased, who, the prisoner testifies, was a powerful and desperate man, capable of doing him great bodily harm, and who proceeded to beat the prisoner most unmercifully, attempting to knock out his eyes.
Under such circumstances, whether the prisoner used excessive force in repelling the assault with his pistol was one peculiarly for the jury.
The innocence of the prisoner depends upon whether, from the whole testimony, or from that of any witness, including himself, at the time of the killing, he himself was without fault and then had a reasonable ground to believe the attempt of the deceased was with the design to take his life or to do him great bodily harm.
The reasonableness of prisoner's apprehensions was not a question to be decided by the prisoner or by the court, but by the jury to whom it should have been submitted with proper instructions. S. v. Harris,
New trial.
(606)