30 S.C. 74 | S.C. | 1889
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The defendant was indicted and tried at the July term of the Court of General Sessions, 1888, for Pickens County, for the murder of his wife, Jane Alexander. He was convicted, and now appeals upon exceptions to his honor’s charge to the jury, alleging error both as to matters charged and in refusals to charge.
The two first exceptions impute error, because his honor declined to charge as requested, that in order to constitute murder, the'testimony must satisfy the jury that there was a premeditated and formed design to take life on the part of the accused before the commission of the act, and that the killing took place under this premeditated and formed design. His honor declining to charge as requested, charged that “murder was the killing of a human being with malice aforethought. Malice does not consist alone of a formed design to kill another. For instance, one man meets another on the street and an altercation ensues, and raises
In other words, the substance of his honor’s charge was, that murder might be committed, as the result of some illegal act, whether the design to take life was actually present or not. This was in accordance with the common law as found in Black-stone, where he says: “And in general, where an involuntary killing happens in consequence of an unlawful act, it will be either murder or manslaughter, according to the nature of the act which occasioned it. If it be in prosecution of a felonious intent, or in its consequences naturally tended to bloodshed, it will be murder; but if no more was intended than a mere civil trespass, it will amount only to manslaughter.”
2nd. His honor was requested to charge that where insanity is raised as a defence by evidence engendering a doubt, it devolves upon the State to remove this doubt and to establish the sanity of the accused beyond all reasonable doubt. This was declined, and very properly; because insanity is a defence, and whether sustained or not, must, like any other defence, depend upon the preponderance of testimony, for or against; weighed and balanced by the jury after it is all out. State v. Paulk, 18 S. C., 515; State v. Coleman, 20 Id., 452; State v. Bundy, 24 Id., 439.
3rd. His honor was requested to charge “That if by reason of mental derangement at the time of the act, the prisoner had not power to control the disposition or impulse to commit the deed, he should be acquitted.” It seems that the effort here was to get the judge to announce the doctrine of irresistible or uncontrollable impulse as distinguished from insanity — that a person though not absolutely insane, or demented to the extent of not knowing the difference between right and wrong, or not incap
His honor charged, “That where the killing is proven, and no more, the law will imply malice and make the act murder; but when all the facts and circumstances of the killing are in evidence, then the jury must say from the testimony what was the intention with which the act was committed. Then it becomes a matter of proof — no implication any longer.” And this was excepted to as error.' We see no error in it, certainly none of which the prisoner could complain; on the contrary, it was as favorable to him as the law allowed.
It is the judgment of this court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.