89 Iowa 182 | Iowa | 1893
It is conceded that on the night of the twelfth day of June, 1891, the defendant killed one Frederick Kemp by cutting him on and about the head and neck with a razor. The killing occurred during an altercation between the deceased and the defendant and some other persons, and the sole ground of defense, on the trial in the court below, was that the homicide was committed in self-defense. The parties to the affray, which resulted in the death of Kemp, met at a camp meeting that was then being held in the outskirts of the city of Des Moines. The defendant was armed with a razor, and, after his arrival at the meeting, he procured a revolver. While at the meeting the defendant and two of his companions engaged in a dispute with the deceased, his brother and one or more companions, and the parties left the immediate vicinity of the meeting for the purposes of a fight. The defendant exhibited his revolver, and the brother of the deceased had a revolver. No actual conflict in the way of a general ’ engagement took place between the opposing forces, and there was no violence, except that one of the defendant’s friends pushed the deceased over a guy rope attached to a camp meeting tent, and the defendant struck one of the comrades of the
■ I. It would be an almost endless task to review the evidence in an opinion, and we will not attempt to do so. It may be conceded, and we believe that the preponderance of the evidence, so far as the number of witnesses who testified to the last encounter is concerned, shows that the deceased and his friends made the first assault, and attacked the defendant, and one of them struck him with a piece of board. But there is a square conflict in the evidence on this question. If the evidence introduced by the state is to be believed, the defendant and his friends were the aggressors, not only in the affray at the tent, but in the final struggle, in which the defendant took the life of Kemp. A careful examination of every fact and circumstance disclosed in evidence satisfies us that this is not a case in which this court is authorized to interfere with the verdict as being contrary to the evidence. The evidence is quite fully set out in the abstract of the- appellant. There is an additional abstract prepared by counsel for the state, the correctness of which is denied by counsel for the appellant. An examination
II. It is claimed that the court erred in the ninth paragraph of the charge to the jury. It is as follows:
The specific objection to this instruction goes to that part of it which, under the facts recited, required the defendant to retreat- or retire from the conflict unless it appeared to him, as a reasonably prudent man, that he could not retreat without danger to his life or danger of great bodily injury. It may be conceded that in the earlier adjudications of this court there is language employed which may be said to lay down the doctrine that one who is assailed with a deadly
Another objection is made to this part of the charge, which we do not regard as of sufficient importance to give it special consideration. It appears to us to be a mere criticism, and without substantial merit.
III. A great many other objections are made to rulings of the court which do not appear to us to require separate discussion. They relate to alleged misconduct of the jury pending the trial, and to the prejudice of certain jurors before they entered upon their duties. There were affidavits accompanying the motion for a new trial, and counter affidavits were filed, and witnesses were examined, as to the conduct of the jury, to such an extent as is rarely found in any record in this court. It is sufficient to say, of all these objections, that the court did not err in overruling the motion for a new trial on the grounds mentioned.