Defendant Eugene Bester was indicted, tried by a jury of twelve and found guilty of murder in the first degree. His appeal assigns as error the giving of two instructions dealing with evidence of flight and the weight to be given defendant’s testimony. We reverse and remand for new trial.
The fatal shooting was an outgrowth of the relationship of two men and a woman. Defendаnt was seeing and often in the company of Mrs. Rose Washington in February 1968. Mrs. Washington and her husband, Bobby Washington, were separated. Part of the marital trouble was the relationship between defendant and Mrs. Washington. About a week after the separation Bobby saw defendant in a filling station. A fight ensued. Bobby threatened to kill defendant when they mеt at the filling station and repeated the threat when he found defendant and his wife together driving across the bridge on Walnut street in Des Moines. Washington had one or more guns; defendant testified he knew this and was afraid Washington would shoot him.
The borrowed car defendant was using at this time had an old shotgun in the trunk. The gun had a loose trigger guard, a loosе stock and was in general disrepair. Defendant got some shells for the gun. Shortly thereafter Washington and his wife engaged in a street fight over damage done to Washington’s apartment by his wife. Washington knocked his wife down. Defendant went to the car, got the shotgun and fired two shots in the direction of Washington but did not hit him. Defendant reloaded the gun, turned аnd shot Carl Cooley in the leg, severing the femoral artery which caused Cooley to bleed to death. The precise details of this altercation are in sharp conflict. Defendant fled the scene and was later picked up by the police in the near vicinity. Because of the ruling here made the conflict ovеr what actually happened at the scene need not be spelled out in detail. Suffice to say, the State produced sufficient evidence to justify a jury finding of murder in the first degree. Defendant claims the gun was discharged in the direction of Cooley entirely by accident. This story is not entirely uncorroborated. The jury acceрted the State’s version.
I. Defendant’s first assignment of error attacks the validity of instruction No. 14 which reads: “The law gives the defendant the right to testify in his own behalf, and it is for the jury to determine the weight to be given to his testimony, as in the case of any other witness.
“In considering and weighing his testimony you are not required to receive the testimony of the defendant as true, but to give it full and careful consideration, and determine whether it or any part of it is true or false, and whether such testimony is given by the defendant in good faith or for the purpose of avoiding conviction. You may take into consideration his interest in the outcome of this case as a person charged with a crimе, and you should give his testimony such weight as you deem it entitled to in view of all the facts and circumstances in evidence before you.”
The court gave the usual instruction on the law governing the weight to be given all evidence which read in part: “In pass *707 ing on the credibility of the witnesses and weighing their testimony, you may and should consider * * * their interest or lack of interest in the result of the trial, the motives, if any, actuating them as witnesses, their candor, fairness, bias or prejudice, the reasonableness and probability of their statements or the want thereof, * #: *
In 1940 we considered such an instruction which was attacked on fair trial (noncon-stitutional) grounds, State v. Gibson,
The identical instruction withstood similar attack on constitutional and fair trial grounds in State v. Ford (October 1966),
We consider the problem once more. It is argued here, as it was argued in each of the cited cases, that the giving of the instruction violates defendant’s rights under Amendment 5 to the United States Constitution. Heavy reliance is placed on Griffin v. California,
II. Statе v. Ford, supra, cites many Iowa cases holding the giving of such an ' instruction is not reversible error under Iowa law. The case refers to the annotation at
However, the rule is not universal. Arizona, California, Idaho, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Nevada, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Texas are cited as holding such an instruction is preju-dicially erroneous.
In State v. Asbury,
State v. Rogers,
“ ‘The court instructs you, as a matter of law, that when the defendant testified as a witness in this case, he became as any other witness, and his credibility is to be tested by, and subject to, the same tests as are legally applied to any other witness; and in determining the degree of credibility that shall be accorded his testimony, the jury have a right to take into consideration the fact that he is interested in the result of the trial, as well as his demeanor and conduct upon the witness stand, and during the trial, and whether or not he has been contradicted or corroborated by other witnesses or circumstances’ (Italics ours.)
“The words italicized, it is insisted by counsel for appellant, are prejudicial, for the reason that the defendant is singled out and the attention of the jury is particularly directed to his credibility as a witness. We think the better rule for the court to follow is not to single out any special witness personally and burden his testimony with any suggestions which might indicate to the jury that in the opinion of the court such witness was liable to testify falsely. Instructions as to the credibility of a witness should be general and apply equally to all of the witnesses for the state and the defendant alike. Because a witness may be the defendant is no particular reason why he should be visited with condemnation upon the one hand or clothed with sanctity upon the other. He is before the court as a witness, and should be treated by both the court and the jury just as other witnesses are treated, no better and no worse. And the giving of such instruction cannot be regarded as otherwise than erroneous. People v. Maughs, supra [
In condemning the giving of general instructions to consider the interest of witnesses where defendant was the sole witness for the defense, the Supreme Court of Mississippi in Hall v. State,
In Missouri the conflict on this point extended from about 1906 to 1917 when a divided court in State v. Finkelstein,
The Missouri Supreme Court then adоpted the reasoning of the early dissent and declared the giving of such an instruction to be reversible error.
The Finkelstein dissent argues forcefully that similar instructions had been approved in Missouri for over forty years and the principle should not be abandoned. However, the disapproval of such an instruction was firmly adhered to by the Missouri Supreme Court which reversed some seven cases in the same year on the same grounds and the matter did not again arise in Missouri until 1934. What we now take to be the Missouri rule on the whole matter was stated in State v. Stallings,
The Supreme Court of California in People v. Boren, (1903)
The above reasoning is applicable to section 781.12, Iowa Code, 1966, which reads: “Defеndant as witness. Defendants in all criminal proceedings shall be competent witnesses in their own behalf, but cannot be called as witnesses by the state.”
Iowa no longer has a statutory prohibition against judicial comment on the evidence but this court has reversed cases repeatedly where the instructions constituted such comment. Frederick v. Gaston,
Smith v. Cedar Rapids Country Club,
In this case it is defendant’s claim he shot decedent by accident. This defense rests largely on defendant’s testimony and the weight to be given to it. It was therefore of prime importance to defendant that the case not be weakened by special judicial comment on defendant’s interest in the case and the weight to be given his testimony as distinguished from the testimony of other witnesses.
After careful and repeated review of the considerations involved in the permissive use of a jury instruction which singles out and comments upon the testimony of a defendant, we conclude the giving of such an instruction constitutes reversible error.
III. The conclusion reached in Divisions I and II necessitates consideration of defendant’s second assignment of error. Instruction No. 13 told the jury: “* * * if you find the offense charged herein was committed and that the defendant fled from the scene for the purpose of avoiding and retarding the prosecution, then such flight was a сircumstance tending to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime; and the jury would be justified in considering such flight as evidence of guilt.” Defendant does not contend the statement is incorrect as a statement of the law of this State. The objection is that the issues do not justify the giving of such an instruction.
Defendant admitted he was the person who shot Carl Cooley. Therefore the instruction had no basis in the evidence and was improperly given. We cannot agree.
Defendant cites State v. Foster,
“It is well settled that the conduct of an accused person fоllowing the commission of an alleged crime may be circumstantially relevant to prove both the commission of the acts charged to the accused and the intent and purpose with which those acts were committed. Among such acts are flight of the accused and concealment of the results of the crime.” Rivers v. United States, 9 Cir.,
This court has consistently approved the giving of a flight instruction where such instruction is germane to the evidence. State v. Wimbush, Iowa,
Defendant does not complain of the admission of evidence of flight. See Anno.
For the reasons given in Division II we reverse and remand for new trial.
