after stating the ease: We have not deemed it necessary to set out the entire evidence, but only so much as will present the merits of the
exception
taken
to the charge
of the court in regard to manslaughter, which, in our opinion, should be sustained. There was evidence in the case of murder in the first degree, murder in the second degree, manslaughter, and self-defense, and the court should have instructed the jury as to each offense and explained the law arising upon the evidence as properly applicable to each. As the judge excluded manslaughter from thе case, the prisoner is entitled to the benefit of every inference that the jury could fairly and reasonably draw in his favor. The case is much
*291
like that of
S. v. Curry,
In this case, if the facts are as stated by the prisoner in his testimony, and by those witnesses who corroborated him, he was assaulted by the deceased with a knife and was cut, and the deceased continued to press upon him while he was backing away, and not until he thought he was in danger of life or limb did he use the plank which he had jerked from the fence. This was calculated to arouse his passion and to dethrone his reason and to rebut the malice which otherwise would have made the killing a murder, and he was entitled to have this phase of the evidence submitted to the jury, with proper instructions. It does not prevеnt a conviction for murder, for the jury may find that is not true, but that he *295 acted from malice,, wbicb tbe law implies from use of a deadly weapon, or even with deliberation and premeditation.
The views we have expressed are strongly supported, we think, by
S. v. Curry, S. v. Miller,
and the other cases above cited, and also by the following:
S. v. Floyd,
In Baldwin’s case justice Holce said: “Manslaughter is the unlawful killing оf another without malice, and under given conditions this crime may be established, though the killing has been both unlawful and intentional. Thus, if two men fight upon a sudden quarrel and on equal terms, at least at the outset, and in the progress of the fight one kills the other— kills in the anger naturally aroused by the cоmbat — this ordinarily will be but manslaughter. In such case, though the killing may have been both unlawful and intentional, the passion, if aroused by provocation which the law deems adequate, is said to displace malice and is regarded as a mitigating circumstance reducing the degree of the crime.”
Upon a careful review of the case, our conclusion is that the court erred in excluding from the consideration of the jury the view which was presented as to manslaughter. There are other serious questions raised by the exceptions, but they may not be again presented, and, therefore, require no consideration now.
New trial.
