153 S.E. 395 | N.C. | 1930
The defendant was convicted of murder in the second degree. Late in the afternoon, on 9 July, 1929, the defendant and the deceased met each other in a public road. The defendant was walking; the deceased was riding a mule. The defendant admitted that when they met he shot and killed the deceased with a pistol, but contended that the deceased assaulted him with a knife. He contended that he had killed the deceased in self-defense. Evidence relevant to the exceptions is set out in the opinion. The deceased as the overseer of a public road cut down a chestnut tree on the defendant's land. A witness for the State testified that after the tree had been cut and about two years before the homicide he heard the defendant say, "I guess Mr. Solesbee (the deceased) thinks it is all over, but I will get him some time or another." The defendant *764 excepted on the ground that the threat was too remote to be admissible. Joe Teague, another witness for the State, testified that about a year before the trial the defendant said in his presence that "Pink Solesbee (the deceased) had done him damage cutting timber, and he was going to get even with him one way or another." The defendant admitted he "had had words" with the deceased concerning the tree, and testified that the homicide occurred at their first subsequent meeting.
In S. v. Howard,
In defining the legal provocation which will reduce murder in the second degree to manslaughter, the judge told the jury that mere words, however abusive, would not mitigate the homicide, but that an assault would; that there was legal provocation if the deceased laid hands upon the defendant against his will, or struck at him, or choked him. An exception was taken because there was no evidence that the defendant was choked. But he testified that the deceased was in the act of assaulting him with a knife when the shot was fired; this was legal provocation, and the inadvertent use of the word "choke" could not have misled the jury to the prejudice of the defendant, especially when a definite application of the principle restricted the provocation to the alleged assault with a knife.
In stating the law of self-defense as an abstract principle the trial judge did not accurately point out the distinction between the necessity of retreating in the case of an ordinary assault (S. v. Blevins,
No error.