9 Nev. 58 | Nev. | 1873
By the Court,
Appellant stands convicted of murder in the first degree, and objects that the jury were misdirected in certain instructions given and by the refusal of one offered by him.
The first instruction to be reviewed is in the following language: “No threats or menaces, made by the deceased against the defendant D. M. Hall, can avail Hall, unless he at the time of the killing was actually assailed or had sufficient evidence to convince any reasonable person that he was in danger of incurring bodily injury, or of losing his life at the hands of the deceased. Whatever threats may have been made by deceased, they cannot be of avail to the defendant, unless at the time of the killing something was
There is no material conflict in the evidence, which tends to show that about one year before the homicide the deceased had at sundry times attacked appellant, and made threats to take his life, both in his presence and elsewhere; that of the threats made out of the hearing of appellant, he had been informed; that on the day of the killing appellant casually met the deceased as, in company with another person, appellant stopped for a moment at a store while driving past; that a short time after, he said to his companion, at the same time taking a pistol out of his pocket, that he had a mind to go back and kill that man. Nothing, however, was done; the parties accomplished the purpose .of their drive, and in half an hour more or less appellant returned to the store of one Yollmer, when he said: “There is a man in town who threatened to kill me on sight; I don’t think I will take the chances; I think I will go and kill him.” Yollmer “told hiTn not to do it; to let him alone; that the teams would go out in a short time again, perhaps day after to-morrow;” but appellant said ‘‘ he would not take any chances, as the man was watching for him two or three times under oath to kill him.” Appellant then walked to a neighboring store; shot and killed deceased, who at the time was helping to unload a wagon and who made no demonstration, whether hostile or otherwise, and uttered no word save, when appellant after the shooting said “You have threatened my life and are a damned thief” to say, “No, no, no.”
The specification of objection to the instruction is, that the court “erred in instructing the jury that'there must
The court refused this instruction offered by appellant: “If the jury believe the above defendant was assaulted in a violent and deadly manner by Jack Copeland or Black Jack a year or more, anterior to the homicide; and that Jack Copeland made threats to take the life of the above defendant, and that the attacks or threats excited fear or passion in the above defendant, they are instructed that The law assigns no limits within which cooling time may be said to take place.’ ”
Waiving the point that the kind of fear or passion which will excuse a homicide is insufficiently stated and that the instruction is generally drawn with dangerous looseness, and to come to what was manifestly intended as its point, that is the last sentence; the giving without explanation would have been to mislead the jury. True, the law fixes no definite time as a general rule within which an irresistible passion may cool or a reasonable fear abate; that must depend upon the circumstances of each case. An hour has been held sufficient, also a portion of a day for passion to cool; and it is always held that, if there has been cooling time before a homicide, the killing is still murder, though in fact the passion has not cooled. “ So, when anger provoked by a cause sufficient to mitigate an instantaneous homicide has been continued beyond the time, which in view of all the circumstances of the case may be deemed reasonable, the evidence is found of that depraved spirit in which malice resides.” State v. McCauts, 1 Spears. 390. The question for the jury to consider was, whether there had been time for a reasonable man to cool his passion or to quiet his fears —not whether the one was cooled or the other quieted; as, says the author relied on by appellant, “ However great the
To have given this instruction would have been error, as tending to distract the mind of the jury from the proper issue, by giving them an abstract fragment rather than the concrete whole, of the law upon the point involved.
The judgment is affirmed, and the district court directed to fix a day for carrying the sentence into execution.