81 Tenn. 221 | Tenn. | 1884
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant was convicted of an assault and battery upon one Jo. Holmes, with intent to commit murder in the first degree. The evidence in the cause fully warrants the verdict, and the only questions that have been seriously urged arise upon the charge of'
The court was specially requested by the defendant' to charge the jury that if “they believed from the proof that the defendant shot Holmes while he'
Holmes had a warrant against the defendant for a misdemeanor, and had been specially deputized to arrest him upon it, and was attempting his arrest at the time he was shot by the defendant. The defendant’s counsel also requested the court to charge, the language of the statute, that when arresting a person “the officer shall inform him of the authority ■and cause of arrest, and exhibit the warrant if he has one, except when the person being arrested is in the act of committing some offense in the presence ■of the officer.” The court modified the instruction as requested, by adding the qualification, “ if defendant questions his authority,” after the words “ he
The defendant’s counsel also requested the court to charge that “no officer, though armed with a warrant to make an arrest for a misdemeanor, has the right to shoot at or kill a person who attempts to-escape from arrest; and if an officer makes an assault upon a person against whom he has a warrant such person has a right to resist such assault, and defend himself from any wrong or injury from the officer.” This request was also refused by the court,, and which is insisted for defendant was error. The proof showed that Holmes with two other persons went to the house of one Wilcox, where the defend
There was nothing in the testimony, as we see it, to which the charge requested was applicable, and it was properly refused. There is no error - in the record, and the judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed.