56 Kan. 31 | Kan. | 1895
The opinion of the court was delivered by
: The defendant was charged with and convicted of the premeditated murder of Sidney J. Jackman, in Clark county, on the 29th of January, 1895. He testified in his own behalf, and was examined and cross-examined at great length: His statement of the circumstances immediately connected with the tragedy is in substance as follows : That he came up town in Ashland, where both he and the deceased resided, about 10 o’clock in the morning ; that he saw the deceased in front of the butcher shop, which he had formerly owned, and which was then occupied by
“When Mr. Foster went through the middle door, he shut the door, and I heard the money-drawer. Sid. said, ‘Who is that?’ and I raised up off my seat and looked through the window in the door.
“Ques. There is a window in the door between the back room and front room? Ans. Yes ; a little one.
“Q. Just one pane of glass? A. Yes, sir. I told him it was Foster. ... I turned around to the water bucket that sat on the counter next to the east side of the back room and took a drink.
“Q. What then? A. I turned back to the stove.
*34 “Q,. How? A. Turned around and'went back of the stove.
“Q. Facing it? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. How near were you to the stove? A. I walked up and just put my foot up on the 2x4 as it is around the stove.
“Q,. Which foot, do you remember? A. My right' foot.
“Q. Where was Sid. at that time?' A. He was sitting across at the southwest side of the room.
“ Q. What, if anything, did you say at that time? A. I said, ‘ Sid. you are trying to break up my family, and you said that if I interfered that you would kill me, now what are you going to do about it?’
"Q. What, if anything, did he say? A. Heristhis way [indicating with his hand] and said ‘ God damn you, I will kill you,’ and I jerked the pistol out of my pocket and shot, and he jerked back this way as I shot, and fell, looked to me as though he hit the chair and went over this way against the trunk, and kind of doubled back and was in the corner.
“ Q. Doubled back between the trunk and stove?' A. Yes, sir.
“Q. I will ask you whether or not he struck the chair in falling? A. I think he did. That is the way it looked to me.
“ Q. You saw when he rose, what, if anything, did he have in his hand? A. It looked like a knife when I saw it, after his hand got up. . .
“ Q,. How did you happen to shoot the second shot? A. Because I thought he was getting his gun, then when he jerked his hand down — just as he threw his. hand down, I shot again.”
The defendant then went out through theJront room of the butcher shop to the street. Foster testifies that having heard the shots he came back and met the defendant just inside the outside door of the shop ; that the defendant then said to him “ Do n’t go in. I had to do it. I was too quick for him or he would have got me ” ; that when he left the back room Jackman
The principal claim of error is in giving the sixth instruction, which is as follows :
‘ ‘ In this case the killing with a deadly weapon is admitted by the defendant. The presumption therefore is that such killing was done with malice. This presumption stands until it is rebutted by evidence*36 showing that the killing either resulted bjr passion produced by sufficient provocation, or by evidence that the killing took place under such circumstances that excused the defendant in taking the life of the deceased.”
Many authorities are cited by counsel for the state supporting the instruction as given, and some even go much farther. The supreme court of Massachusetts, in the case of Commonwealth v. York, 9 Metc. 93, in an elaborate opinion affirmed an instruction as follows :
“The rule of law is, when the fact of killing is proved to have been committed by the defendant, and nothing further is shown, the presumption of law is that it is malicious and an act of murder. It follows, therefore, that in such cases the proof of matter of excuse or extenuation lies on the accused, and this may appear either from evidence adduced by the prosecution or evidence offered by the defendant.”
The supreme court of Ohio, in the case of Davis v. The State, 25 Ohio St. 369, said:
“The charge of the court, that malice is to be intended from the fact of killing, and that circumstances of justification or extenuation, not disclosed by the evidence adduced against him, are to be made out by the accused, is in our opinion unexceptionable, and the well-settled law of such cases.”
In 2 Bishop on Criminal Law, § 680, it is said :
“ As general doctrine, subject, we shall see, to some qualifications, the malice of murder is conclusively inferred from the unlawful use of a deadly weapon resulting in death.”
In the case of The State v. Mahn, 25 Kan. 184, it was held not error to refuse the following instruction :
“The jury are further instructed that the fact alone, by itself, that the deceased was. killed by defendant, is not sufficient to establish a malicious intent.”
“In many" cases the above instruction would be good law, but in the present case it would be misleading and erroneous. In the present case, the fact of killing was not the only fact that tended to show a malicious intent on the part of the defendant.”
By the nineteenth instruction the jury were told that the defendant was presumed innocent of the charge, and that this presumption should continue in his favor until every ingredient necessary to constitute the offense was proved beyond reasonable doubt. And by the twentieth instruction they were further told that the burden of proof rested on the state to establish every ingredient of the offense, and that so
A motion for a new trial was made, and numerous affidavits and the oral testimony of several witnesses were introduced in support thereof. The only newly-discovered evidence which appears to be important, disclosed by the testimony, is mere hearsay. Jacob Haindel states wdiat he heard L. J. Wood say — that Jackman had made a certain threat against Earnest. Wood’s affidavit was not presented. S. H. Lackey testified as to what one Frank Dudley had told him he knew about the matter. This was the baldest kind of hearsay, and altogether inadmissible for any purpose. No good reason is shown why W. G. Curtis, who helped take care of the body of Jackman, could not have been called as a witness at the trial. The affidavits with reference to what jurors said as to the basis of their verdict were inadmissible for the purpose of impeaching the verdict. The showing was wholly insufficient to warrant the granting of a new .trial.
. We find nothing in the record warranting an inter