281 S.W. 29 | Mo. | 1926
The defendant was charged in the Circuit Court of Butler County with murder in the first degree, found guilty of murder in the second degree and sentenced to the penitentiary for a term of fifty years, from which judgment he appeals.
The defendant shot and killed John Carter at the village of Oglesville, Butler County, on the morning of November 26, 1923. Carter went to the defendant's house and stopped at the front gate. A young man named Noah Miles accompanied Carter on an errand of his own. Robinett was on his front porch. Carter called to him saying: *638 "Bill, come here I want to talk to you." Robinett stepped into his house, got his shotgun and came out, saying, "Get out of the way, Noah, I am going to shoot him." Defendant fired two shots, both of which struck Carter in the breast, inflicting fatal wounds from which he died in a few minutes. Miles ran into the house, saw the defendant reloading his gun and asked him not to shoot again, as he had already killed Carter. A search of Carter's body disclosed that he was unarmed. The defendant was arrested and signed a voluntary statement concerning the homicide which was read in evidence, but it is not set out in the bill of exceptions.
The statement by defendant's counsel is as follows:
"On a trial of the case defendant invoked a plea of self-defense and offered testimony tending to prove threats made against him by the deceased, which testimony showed that sometime previous to the killing deceased and defendant had some trouble over deceased wanting defendant to work at a still and further trouble over insults offered to defendant's wife by deceased. Defendant testified `that he had ordered deceased to stay away from his home and to stop making advances to his wife, who was partially insane, but deceased refused to do this and would go to defendant's home in his absence and persist in his advances' and when remonstrated with, deceased cursed defendant and on several occasions threatened to kill him.
"On the morning of the 26th day of November, 1923, deceased went to the home of defendant and, according to defendant's testimony, started in through the yard gate, calling to defendant to come out, cursing him and threatening to kill him. Defendant testified that `from his actions, he believed deceased was drunk' and this is corroborated by the witness Luke, who testified that he `smelled whiskey on decedent after he was shot.' Defendant testified that `as deceased was advancing toward him, he reached for his hip pocket as if to draw a weapon and that he (defendant) picked up a shot gun and shot *639 deceased, thinking that his life was in immediate danger."
I. The Attorney-General calls attention to the fact that the record fails to show an arraignment and plea. Section 3958, Revised Statutes 1919, contemplates that theArraignment. defendant shall be arraigned and required to enter a plea. In State v. Braunschweig,
"Much of the common-law solemnity that was formerly used in the formal arraignment of those who stood indicted for crime is now dispensed with. There were reasons for an adherence to them which do not exist now. It was at one time necessary to ask him how he should be tried; but as the right to trial by battle never obtained with us, and the law has provided that every such issue shall be submitted to a jury of the country, as the exclusive triers of the fact, that question would be entirely meaningless. Our law does not demand that he shall formally and explicitly plead not guilty; if he requires a trial, or does not confess the indictment to be true, it is the duty of the court to enter a plea of not guilty, and proceed in the same manner as if he had formally pleaded. [2 R.C. 1856, sec. 5, p. 1181.] The defendant was present with his counsel when the jury was impaneled, waived the reading of the indictment, a plea of not guilty was entered of record, and we do not see how he can be injuriously affected because the arraignment was not made in a solemn, formal manner."
In State v. O'Kelley,
"In criminal prosecutions the accused shall have the right to appear and defend, in person and by counsel; to demand the nature and cause of the accusation; to meet the witnesses against him face to face; to have process to compel the attendance of witnesses in his behalf; and to a speedy, public trial by an impartial jury of the county." *640
The enactment of these humane provisions wrought a revolution in criminal procedure. Monstrous as it may now seem, all these and other substantive rights were denied to the accused at common law. These rights, however, were fully accorded to the defendant in the case at bar. The information distinctly specified the offense with which he was charged; he appeared in person and by counsel; he had process to compel the attendance of his witnesses; he had a speedy, public trial before an impartial jury of his county; he was permitted to testify in his own behalf, and he met the witnesses for the State face to face. There was a time when it was held in the absence of the plea of not guilty there was no issue joined; nothing to try; and in such case a conviction would be set aside. That theory, devoid of all semblance of merit, has been abandoned, at least in this State. The defendant went to trial without objection and contested the case made by the State as fully and effectively as if he had been formally arraigned. This was tantamount to a plea of not guilty and a waiver of a formal arraignment. [State v. Allen,
The appellant complains: (1) The court erred in giving Instruction 5; (2) and in giving Instruction 6; and (3) in permitting the prosecuting attorney in his argument to comment on the fact that defendant's wife had failed to take the stand to testify in the case.
II. Instruction 5 reads as follows:
"You are instructed that words or epithets however abusive do not justify an assault, and if you find and believe from the evidence in this cause, that the defendant shotJustification. the deceased Carter because of *641 any words or epithets addressed by said Carter to the defendant, you can not acquit the defendant on that account."
In State v. Ballance,
"Instruction number thirteen is challenged. In these words the court instructed the jury `that no words or epithets, however opprobrious or insulting, can justify the killing of the party who uses them.' It is insisted that the word `alone' should have been added after the word `insulting.'" This instruction correctly declared the law of this State. Insulting or opprobrious epithets may arouse the passion to such an extent that if the person to whom they are applied, acting under the heat of passion engendered thereby, kills his adversary, such provocation will reduce the killing to murder in the second degree, but they do not amount to a justification of the party who uses them. [State v. Gartrell, 171 Mo. l.c. 516, 517; State v. Gordon, 191 Mo. l.c. 125.]" See also State v. Gieseke,
There is no merit in the complaint as to Instruction 5.
III. Instruction 6 reads:
"You are instructed that you will take into consideration the evidence as to threats, if any, made by deceased prior to the killing. If you believe that any such threats were made by deceased and were not communicated to the defendant,Threats. then such threat or threats may be considered by you as explaining the conduct and demeanor of deceased at the time of the shooting."
The instruction complained of is general in its terms as to the consideration to be given by the jury to threats. It includes communicated as well as uncommunicated threats. Instructions are required to be read and considered together, and hence the rule of expressio unius, often invoked in the construction of statutes, has no application here. The subsequent portion therefore of the *642 instruction as to uncommunicated threats correctly declared the law, but placed no limitation upon the manner in which the jury was to consider communicated threats. This was not error. A full and complete instruction on self-defense had been given, from which the jury could determine their duty concerning any threats shown to have been made by the deceased and determine their effect from all of the other facts and circumstances in the case. Ample protection of the defendant's rights being thus afforded, as we held in State v. Fletcher, 190 S.W. l.c. 323, if the defendant desired a more definite instruction on threats he should have requested that it be given. Not having done so he should not be heard to complain.
The Supreme Court of Georgia in Swain v. State, 112 S.E. 141, held that a correct instruction on uncommunicated threats by the deceased against the accused is not erroneous, because of a failure in that instruction or elsewhere to charge on communicated threats.
In Kimbrell v. State, 138 Ga. l.c. 414, a murder case, in which the court had fully charged upon murder, manslaughter and justifiable homicide, including reasonable fears, it was held not to be error to fail to instruct upon threats, of which there was evidence, in the absence of a request therefor. The rule in regard to the giving of an instruction for self-defense as rendering unnecessary an instruction on threats, unless the latter is requested, is based on the reason that in the giving of the former the rights of the defendant as to threats, whether communicated or not, and other defensive matters, are protected in a general way, and if he deems a more specific instruction necessary in regard to threats he must ask for it.
IV. In his argument to the jury, the prosecuting attorney said: "And here's Robinett's wife. Why didn't she testify?" The court promptly sustained an objection to this remark and directed the jury to disregard it and not to take it into consideration in arriving at their verdict. The court did all that appellant's counsel asked. *643 The court was not asked to further rebuke counsel. There is no merit in this complaint.
The information formally charged the defendant with murder in the first degree. The instructions fairly submitted the case to the jury and the verdict was warranted by the evidence. The judgment is therefore affirmed. White, J., concurs; Blair,J., concurs in the result.