130 Mo. App. 398 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
Defendant was convicted of exhibiting a deadly weapon (a loaded shotgun) in a rude, angry and threatening manner in the presence of three persons.
Defendant denied drawing the gun. He testified that he procured the gun when he saw the trespass being committed, and went to meet them for the purpose of forbidding them going over his premises; that he took the gun along only for the purpose of protection in case all of them assaulted him in resentment of his ordering them out.
Instruction numbered 3 for the. State was erroneous in that it was misleading. While recognizing defendant’s right to keep trespassers off his premises, it went on to say that if “he used more force than was necessary under the circumstances they will find him guilty.” Considering the evidence of all that passed between the parties when they met, in connection with the specific charge of exhibiting a deadly weapon in an angry and threatening manner, the jury were left at liberty to consider something other than the exhibition of the gun as rendering defendant guilty.
Though one may resist a trespass on his property, he cannot be allowed to kill the trespasser. But if defendant went to meet the trespassers to forbid them going through his premises and turn them back, it was a rightful purpose; and if he took his gun along only
In this view of the law defendant’s refused instruction numbered 2 should be given on retrial, amended by the words inclnded in parenthesis, viz.: “The jury are instructed that if they find and believe from the evidence that the defendant at the time of the alleged offense was within his enclosure, and he had posted notices forbidding persons from entering same, and that the witnesses in violation of the terms of such notices wrongfully tore 'down defendant’s fence so enclosing his said land and entered thereon, and refused to leave said premises, when defendant requested them so to do (and started to assault him); then defendant had a right to draw Ms gun on them in a threatening manner.”
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.