139 Iowa 474 | Iowa | 1908
The alleged assault was by shooting with a revolver. Defendant admitted the shooting, but claimed that it was done in self-defense. No requests were made by defendant for instructions. In the instructions, given by the court on its own motion, the jury was not told in formal phrase that the burden of proof was with the State. It was said, however, that the defendant “ is presumed to be innocent until his guilt is established by sufficient legal evidence.” And again: “ The degree of proof necessary to justify a conviction ... is such evidence as shall satisfy you, beyond a reasonable doubt, of his guilt. Where there is a reasonable doubt of the defendant being proven to be guilty, he is entitled to an acquittal. Full and- satisfactory proof is required,” etc. After defining the elements essential to the crime charged, the jury was further told: “ And in this case, before you can convict the defendant . . . you must be satisfied from the evidence, "beyond a reasonable doubt, that the' defendant did, with malice aforethought, assault Abbananti with the specific intent to hill him,” etc. In the eleventh instruction, after stating correctly the abstract rule of self-defense, the court continued thus: “ If you find that, shortly before the shooting, there had been an affray between the defendant and the person injured, and that such affray had ceased, and the defendant had gone away, then he had no right to return, either armed with a revolver or otherwise, for the purpose of defending himself against what had already occurred. Defendant cannot justify himself on the ground of self-defense, unless he was actually assaulted, after his return to the car, after going away and obtaining a revolver. It is for you to decide from the evidence whether or not he was assaulted after his return.
Tbe demand for a reversal of tbe judgment is based on tbe failure of tbe court to properly instruct on the subject of burden of proof. And it is tbe argument that instruction 11 may very well have been understood by tbe jury as placing the burden of proving self-defense on tbe defendant; this especially as tbe last sentence of tbe instruction seems to make an acquittal depend upon an affirmative finding “ that defendant, at tbe time of the shooting, was properly acting in self-defense.” It is the rule in this jurisdiction that “ tbe burden is on tbe State to show that the defendant was not acting in self-defense, and this it must do by evidence sufficiently strong to remove all reasonable doubt.” State v. Shea, 104 Iowa, 724, and cases cited. Here the court conceived that self-defense was an issue in tbe ease, and proceeded to instruct on the subject. It goes without saying that tbe law should have been fairly and correctly stated. Tbe vice of tbe instruction assailed lies in the fact that it implies, or may be understood to imply, that a finding that defendant was properly acting in self-defense was necessary to bis acquittal. Under tbe rule be was entitled to an acquittal if the State bad failed to negative tbe claim of self-defense. And that is only another way of saying that, if tbe evidence addressed to self-defense was sufficient to give rise to a reasonable doubt of the defendant’s guilt, he was entitled to an acquittal.
But the State insists that, conceding the error in the instruction, it was' without prejudice. Aiad the argument here is that there was no basis, in tbe evidence, to support
No other matters of error are contended for in argument. Accordingly the judgment is affirmed.