96 Tenn. 242 | Tenn. | 1896
The defendant is convicted of an assault with intent to murder and sentenced to one year in the State penitentiary, and has appealed. The case is one of the most remarkable that has come under the observation of this Court. The charge of the trial Judge has a number of errors, but it is not necessary, in the view we have taken of the case, to pass upon them specially.
It appears that the defendant is a young man of excellent character, and against whom nothing appears in this record that is at all derogatory to his good morals and good citizenship. He is a married man with a wife and children. He had given an entertainment to his friends and neighbors, and many young people of the community had gathered at his home to enjoy the occasion in a quiet, decorous, and peaceable manner. The prosecutor was not expected at this gathering, but, it appears, put in his attendance as an unbidden guest. Soon after his arrival the defendant found him, and welcomed him to the entertainment in a cordial, frank, and open manner. The prosecutor soon afterwards found a fit companion in a young man who had some whisky, and these two went out of doors and behind the house, and proceeded to partake of this whisky. Both soon became boisterous and disorderly, and especially the prosecutor, who indulged in loud, rude, and ob
It is almost incredible that the defendant could, by any jury, be found guilty of any offense under this statement of the case, and there is no other theory that has the least semblance of truth or consistency. Defendant was a quiet citizen, not drunk • or drinking, in his own house, and in the presence of his own family and friends, attempting, in a
As is appropriately said in Eversole v. Commonwealth, 95 Ky. Rep., 626: “The verdict shows-the jury were either lacking in intelligence or con
Under our constitution every citizen of the State has the right to keep and bear arms for his proper defense, and the Legislature only has power by law to regulate the wearing of arms to prevent crime. Article I., Section 26; 3 Heis., 178.
He has a right also to protect his own house and family, and to preserve peace and good order in his own house, and he has the right to eject therefrom those who are drunken, disorderly, and dangerous, and to use such force as is necessary for that purpose. If while engaged in this duty he is beset or menaced, he is entitled not only to the right of self-defense, but to use such force as may be necessary to protect himself and family and eject the intruder. He is not required to retreat or escape from his own premises, but may stand his ground, and is not required to give back before he can plead self-defense. Nor will he be precluded from such plea by the fact that be used a deadly weapon, if he did it for the purpose of defending himself and family. Fitzgerald v. The State, 1 Leg. Rep., 53; Foutch v. The State, 11 Pickle, 711.