STATE
v.
ROBINSON.
Supreme Court of Missouri, Division No. 2.
Cecil Block and Stanley M. Rosenblum, St. Louis, for appellant.
J. E. Taylor, Atty. Gen. and D. D. Guffey, Asst. Atty. Gen., for respondent.
BARRETT, Commissioner.
In this reassigned cause, upon the trial of a charge of murder in the second degree the appellant, James Robinson, has been found guilty of manslaughter and sentenced to three years' imprisonment.
On September 17, 1949, James Robinson, aged sixty-five years, operated a tavern at 3695 Laclede Avenue in St. Louis. Robinson's daughter, Mae, and his son-in-law, Clarence "Toss" Shamblin, spent the greater part of the evening in the tavern drinking beer. They left the tavern and returned a time or two and the evening was rather uneventful until near closing time. According to the state's evidence Robinson and his friend, Audrey Farrell, became abusivе towards Mae Shamblin and her husband until, finally, Clarence Shamblin struck and beat both Robinson and Farrell with his fists, knocking both of them down. According to Mae, in the course of the fighting, probably as Shamblin struck Farrell, her father came from behind the bar, called to Shamblin and shot him as he approached in response to the call. According to the defendant and his witnesses Shamblin was the aggressor throughout and became enraged when refused further drinks after closing time. They said that Shamblin cursed, beat and kicked them and, finally, Shamblin threatened to kill Robinson and аs he again advanced upon him, Robinson, thinking his life in danger, shot and killed Shamblin in self-defense. This brief résumé of the evidence is sufficient to demonstrate that the jury could reasonably find the appellant guilty of manslaughter, or the jury could have acquitted him upon the ground of self-defense.
Upon this appeal the principal question briefed and argued is that the court prejudicially erred in giving instruction three on self-defense. It was the only instruction on this subject and paragraph four is as follows:
"But before you acquit the defendant on the ground of self-defense you ought to be satisfied that defendant's cause of *799 fear for his life or personal safety was reasonable. Whether the facts constituting such reasonable cause have been established by the evidence you are to determine, and unless the facts constituting such reasonable cause have been established by the evidence in this case, you cannot acquit the defendant on the ground of self-defense, even though you may believe the defendant thought he was in danger."
The specific objection to this paragraph of the instruction is that the words "satisfied" and "established" have the effect of improperly limiting the defendant's right of self-defense in that "the burden of so satisfying and establishing is placed squarely by the instruction on the defendant-appellant." It is said that "an instruction which requires the defendаnt in a criminal case to satisfy the jury of the facts upon which he relies as a justification for his acts, in effect, shifts the burden of proof to the defendant and is an unwarranted limitation оf his right of self-defense." This instruction was copied from State v. Eaton,
In general, it may be noted, an instruction upon the subject of self-defense should be coupled with an instruction on reasоnable doubt as to the defensive matter; it must fully and clearly cover the constituent elements of self-defense including the nature, imminence and apprehension of danger tо which the accused was subject, and such an instruction must correctly cover the subject of burden of proof. 41 C.J.S., Homicide, §§ 378, 380, 384; annotation
It is not necessary, however, to say that this instruction misplaces the burden of proof or unduly limits or restricts the right of self-defense merely because it employs the phrase "you ought to be satisfied" in the first sentence quoted. The seсond sentence is identical, even to punctuation, with the sentence condemned in State v. Davis,
WESTHUES and BOHLING, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM.
The foregoing opinion by BARRETT, C., is adopted as the opinion of the Court.
All concur.
