143 Iowa 224 | Iowa | 1909
The circumstances of the killing of one Claude Grice by the defendant, with which he was charged in the indictment, so far as material to a consideration of the errors relied upon for reversal, were as follows: The deceased and his brother, Marion, were engaged in operating a bakery in Bed Oak, occupying for that purpose the first floor and basement of a building which fronted to, the east. The stairs to the basement were at the rear or west end of the building. On the day preceding the homicide the defendant and his younger brother Newton were with the deceased in the bakery, when something was said in relation to a small debt owed by Newton to the deceased, and Newton paid the deceased $1.Y5, which, as Newton testifies, was a little less than deceased claimed, but it is not contended that there was any
There is nothing in this case to take it out of the usual rule in this respect. The jury in fact found the defendant guilty1 of felonious homicide without malice aforethought, but that does not, in itsélf, show that it was not properly left to the jury to determine under «the evidence whether there was such intentional killing as to constitute the second degree of murder, or such deliberation and premeditation as to establish the first degree.. We have held it to be error to submit the question of murder in the first degree where the indictment does not properly charge murder in that degree, even though the jury may have found the defendant guilty of manslaughter only. State v. Andrews, 84 Iowa, 88; State v. Boyle, 28 Iowa, 522; State v. Knouse, 29 Iowa, 118. But- we think it would be introducing a wholly unnecessary complication into the trial of prosecutions for murder if we should hold that the trial judge must, at his peril, before submitting a charge of murder in the first degree to the jury, determine whether under the evidence a conviction of murder in that degree could be sustained, and this would certainly be true in a case where the fatal blow was intentionally
Finding no error in the record, the judgment is affirmed.