A jury found Doris Smart guilty of murder in the second degree and fixed her punishment at 17 years’ imprisonment. She has appealed from the ensuing judgment and sentence.
According to the state’s evidence, the only evidence presented at the trial, Doris Smart shot her husband, Jack L. Smart, Sr., in their house near Osceola three times with a .30-.30 rifle on the evening of August 21, 1970. The shooting culminated a stormy and frequently violent existence of the deceased, his wife and their four children, with the deceased the violent actor. On the day of his death, he had displayed his anger because the family had gone to Clinton in the morning without preparing a meal for him. In the afternoon, Jack was trying to teach his nine-year-old son to shoot and slapped him on the head whenever he sighted with the *92 wrong eye. Doris observed this and told her daughter: “Don’t be surprised if something happens tonight.” Later she told the daughter, “Don’t be surprised if something happens tonight because I might kill him.” She showed the daughter several new bullets and told her they would not jam in the gun.
In the evening, Doris and her husband, both of whom had been drinking, went hunting for a short time and returned to the house. Jack later got the family engaged in a chicken plucking job which he thought should have been done earlier. At the conclusion of the job, Jack and his 13-year-old son, Jack, Jr., became involved in an argument. Jack knocked his son down in the living room of the house and started choking him. His daughter said, “Do something, he is going to kill him.” Jack ordered the girl to get a belt and she went to a bedroom for it. Doris also went to the bedroom and got a .30-.30 rifle. When she returned to the living room with the rifle, the father and son had separated. Doris told Jack, Sr. to get out and he said he was leaving. He started to go but then turned around and took a step back toward the living room. Appellant fired a shot which struck her husband. He fell to the floor and said, “Honey, don’t do it.” She fired two more shots into his body as he lay on the floor.
Appellant then told her son to get a .22 rifle and shoot her in the arm “to make it look more like self-defense.” The boy did as directed. The sheriff was called. Jack, Sr. was dead when the sheriff arrived.
Appellant was charged with murder in the first degree. At the trial, the court instructed on murder in the first degree, second degree, manslaughter and justifiable homicide.
On this appeal, the instruction on murder in the second degree, the offense of which the appellant stands convicted, is attacked. The here pertinent of the instruction was as follows:
“ * * * If you find and believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt:
“First, that on August 21, 1970, in the County of St. Clair, State of Missouri, the defendant caused the death of Jack Lee Smart by shooting him, and
“Second, that the defendant intended to do serious bodily harm to Jack Lee Smart, and
“Third, defendant did not do so in sudden fear or agitation provoked by physical violence committed or threatened to be committed by Jack Lee Smart to the person of the defendant, or her children, then you will find the defendant guilty of murder in the second degree.”
Appellant contends that this instruction omits required findings by the jury of premeditation and malice aforethought which she contends are essential elements of the crime of murder in the second degree.
Except for the substitution of intent to do great bodily harm for intent to kill in paragraph second, this instruction follows the form suggested by the Committee of the Missouri Bar
on
Criminal Pattern Instructions. That committee’s suggested form of instruction for murder in the first degree was recently found sufficient by this court in State v. Marston, Mo.,
What has been described as the “classic definition” (State v. Tettamble,
*93
Mo.Sup.,
Under the old instruction employing the term “premeditatedly” the court was obliged also to define the term for the benefit of the jury. State v. LaMance,
On the issue of “malice” or “malice aforethought,” that again is an element of murder, including murder in the second degree. State v. Wieners,
Appellant attacks the manslaughter instruction because it omitted any reference to provocation. The instruction given on this subject did not follow the suggested pattern instructions. As with the suggested pattern voluntary manslaughter instruction, there is no reference to provocation which would permit a finding of action in the heat of passion, negativing malice, and therefore authorizing a finding of guilt of manslaughter.
In State v. Gore,
None of the cases cited by appellant on this point involves the content of a manslaughter instruction after the 1919 enactment, supra. See State v. Williams, Mo.Sup.,
*94
As above noted, the manslaughter instruction was not in the form of the suggested pattern instructions, as were the first and second degree murder instructions. The mixing of the old and the new resulted in the use in the manslaughter instruction of terms such as “wilfully and fe-loniously,” “without malice” and “without premeditation.” Such terms were not defined and appellant contends that the failure to do so constituted error. The term “wilfully” is frequently the subject of definition by instruction, but the definition usually given is “intentionally, not accidentally.” State v. Foster,
Appellant’s final contention is that the trial court erred in giving, over her objection, an instruction advising the jury that the defendant was not required to testify and that her failure to do so should give rise to no presumption of guilt or inference of any nature. Insofar as the objection is based upon the provisions of § 546.270 RSMo 1969, V.A.M.S., and Supreme Court Rule 26.08, V.A.M.R., the answer to the objection is supplied by the case of State v. De Witt,
Appellant also invokes federal constitutional guaranties as applied in Griffin v.
California,
Numerous jurisdictions which have considered the question here raised since Griffin have held that the giving of such an instruction without the defendant’s request and in some cases over the objection of the defendant does not constitute reversible error. State v. McAlvain, supra; Kimmel v. People (Colo.),
The Iowa Supreme Court in State v. Kimball, Iowa,
“We must recognize, however, that the instruction is a comment on defendant’s failure to testify even though it is supposedly for defendant’s benefit and is designed to keep the jury from speculating on the reasons for his failure to take the stand and drawing improper inferences therefrom. There are those who believe the instruction is more harmful than helpful and regardless of how favorably to the accused the instruction may be worded it may inadvertently cause the jurors to consider certain adverse inferences which would not otherwise have entered their minds.
“[12] Because of the divergent opinions in this sensitive area and as the giving of even a cautionary instruction favorable to defendant may violate the spirit of Griffin v. State of California, supra, we believe it is advisable for us to take a definitive position on this issue. We now hold that such instruction should not be given in any future trial unless it is requested by defendant, and that it will be considered error if it is given, absent such request, in any trial started after the date this opinion is filed.”
In State v. Hutchinson, Mo.Sup.,
In the case of Becher v. United States, 2nd Cir.,
Judgment affirmed.
PER CURIAM:
The foregoing opinion by WELBORN, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.
All of the Judges concur.
