271 Mo. 43 | Mo. | 1917
Defendant was convicted of murder in-the second degree and his punishment was fixed by the jury at ten years in the penitentiary. He has appealed.
On August 9, 1915, defendant shot and hilled his father, Fount Goode. Defendant’s parents were married in 1887, and had seven children, most of whom were away from home. The defendant was twenty years old and married. He and his wife were living with his parents.
The evidence tends to show the following facts:
In the father’s absence the mother and son cut down two plum trees in the yard near the garden. When the father came home in the evening and discovered what had been done he became angry, and dug up some rose bushes and a spirea and threw them out in the road. The mother proceeded to reset the roses, when the father picked up an ax and threatened her with it. The defendant rushed into the house and came back with a shot-gun, and demanded that’ his father should put down the ax. The father went into the house with the ax and soon after disappeared. He went barefoot and hatless to a neighbor ’s about three-fourths of a mile distant. The defendant, suspecting that his father had gone for a gun, stood on watch by a machine shed across the road from Nthe house. About dark the father was seen coming with a shot-gun. The defendant told him to “stop.” The father fired, one shot hitting defendant’s leg, and another the temple, lodging near the ear. The defendant returned the shot and ran, the father pursuing him. The defendant recharged his gun with a shell as he ran and shot his father, killing him. As to the reason why he shot the last time, defendant testified:
“Well, when I turned and looked back he threw up his arms like this (indicating) to shoot again, and I turned and shot.” .
There was some evidence as to previous threats by defendant against his father.
The defendant was by the State subpoenaed as a witness at the coroner’s inquest. The statement made by him on that occasion, put in writing, and signed by him, was read in evidence at the trial over defendant’s objection. There was evidence at the trial that the defendant was told by both the prosecuting attorney and the coroner at the inquest that he did not'have to make a statement unless he wanted to do so. The evidence further showed that defendant was questioned by the prosecuting attorney while he was making such statement. He was not there told that any statement he should then make might be used against him. There was no evidence of any imposition upon the defendant, or of any improper conduct towards him by the coroner or prosecuting attorney or- any one else at the inquest; nor was there any evidence tending to show that such" statement of defendant was not purely voluntary on his part.
During the trial the defendant offered to prove by his mother that the deceased, about a year or a year and a half prior to his death, in a fit of passion, struck his wife, threw her on the bed, and was choking her and was pulled off by an older son, and .that the defendant was present and saw it. The defendant when making said offer stated that it was for the purpose of. showing that defendant had reasonable cause to apprehend that his father would do his mother some personal injury. Such offer was objected to by the State and the objection was sustained.
The court, among the instructions for the State, gave number 3, as follows:
“The defendant is a competent witness in his own behalf and his testimony should be considered by you in making your verdict, but in determining what weight you will give to his testimony you may consider the fact that*48 he is the defendant, on trial, and testifying in his own behalf. ’ ’
Instruction 4 for the State was as follows:
“If you find from the evidence in this case that the defendant willingly and voluntarily entered into the difficulty with the deceased, Fount Goode, for the purpose and with the intent of seeking an opportunity in such difficulty to kill the said Fount Goode, or do him some great bodily injury, then in such case he should not be acquitted on the ground of self-defense, however imminent his danger might afterwards have become in such difficulty. ’ ’
I. There was no error in the admission in evidence .of defendant’s statement made at the coroner’s inquest. The question of the competency of such statement was thoroughly discussed in State v. Young, 119 Mo. 495, where it was said (l. c. 519):
“The great question aftér all is, was the statement voluntary; and it must be determined from the facts m each case.”
In that case, as here, the defendant was subpoenaed before the coroner, but in that case the defendant, so far as it appears, was not told that he need not make any statement unless he wished to do so; but on the contrary the court said: “The defendant was not suffered to make one statement of his own suggestion and accord.”
Surely the fact that defendant was subpoenaed before the coroner was entirely nullified by the action of the officers in assuring him that he was under no compulsion to make a statement.
II. Instruction 4 given for the State is not the law in this case. It ignores and excludes the defendant’s right of self-defense. Although he may have brought on the difficulty with the intent to kill his father, still, if he was attempting to withdraw from the and was fleeing from his father in good faith for the purpose of such withdrawal, and if his
III. The exclusion of the evidence offered by defendant to show previous acts of violence on the part of Fount Goode towards his wife was error. In State v. Wilson, 250 Mo. l. c. 329, it was held that previous threats and acts of violence by the deceased towards the accused may he shown in evidence.,
The Cyclopedia of Law and Procedure says, Vol. 21, p. 972: “Every fact which would he competent to establish justification in the ease of a person killing another in self-defense is competent to establish it in the case where the killing was done in defense of another. Thus defendant may show that deceased was assaulting or attacking the person defended; that deceased entertained hostile feelings toward, and had made threats against, and assaults on the person defended.” [See also State v. Felker, 27 Mont. 451, and Foster v. State, 102 Tenn. 33.]
IY. Instruction 3 given for the State on the subject of weight to he given defendant’s evidence, under the ruling in State v. Finkelstein, 269 Mo. 612, is error.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
The foregoing opinion of Roy, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.