22 Mont. 33 | Mont. | 1899
The defendant was convicted of murder in the first degree, in the District Court of the Seventh Judicial District, in and for Custer county, on November 9, 1897. On the 22d day of November, he was sentenced to be hanged. From this judgment of conviction, and from an order overruling his motion for a new trial, he has appealed to this Court. We notice the assignments of error somewhat m the order in which they are made.- The statement of facts appears in the opinion.
1. At the arraignment, the defendant made a motion to set aside the information, on the two grounds: That he had not been legally, or at all, committed by a magistrate; and that the information does not show that the County Attorney
As a matter of law, a defendant is not entitled to be committed by a magistrate before he is informed against. This may be done by leave of court. (Const. Art. Ill, Sec. 8.) He may also be prosecuted by indictment by a grand jury. Either mode is lawful. . Nor must the information show on its face that it was filed by leave of court. Even if this were true, the objection will not avail in this case, for the information itself shows that leave of court for that purpose was asked in writing and granted before the information was filed. The record independently of this shows that leave was asked in writing and granted. The affidavit filed in support of this motion merely alleges that the defendant had not been examined by a committing magistrate. This is not a ground upon which an information may be set aside, after leave has been obtained to file it. It appears that the defendant was first arrested upon a warrant issued by a magistrate. This proceeding was abandoned. The contention is made that this is ground for setting aside the information. No defendant, however, has a vested right to be prosecuted by any particular method. All he can claim is that he have a fair trial by one of the modes provided by law.
The affidavit and petition for leave to file the information states the name of the deceased as “William Hoover. ” His name was John Hoover. It is, therefore, insisted by counsel for defendant that this variance in the name vitiates the leave granted. This matter was not presented to the court below. Even if it had been, we are not prepared to say that it would have been error to disregard it. We do not understand that an, application for leave to file an information must conform strictly to the technical rules of pleading.
2. Counsel for defendant insist that the information does not state facts sufficient to show that the court had jurisdiction. After stating facts sufficient to charge the defendant with murder, it contains the following allegations: “That all the defendants are Cheyenne Indians, and that the said Hoover
The ' information is in conformity with the statute. The District Court has general jurisdiction of all felonies committed within the limits of the county where it sits. The allegation quoted supra is surplusage. If the defendant should be charged with a crime committed out of the court’s jurisdiction, this is a matter to be taken advantage of at the trial. The authorities cited by counsel in the brief have reference to courts of limited jurisdiction, and have no application. This question was presented by demurrer. The court overruled the demurrer. We think this correct.
3. The contention is made in this Court, for the first time in this case, that Indians maintaining tribal relations, and occupying a reservation within the State, are not subject to the jurisdiction of State courts, and triable therein, for crimes committed by them against white men while off the reservation. It appears from the proof that the Cheyenne Indians sustain tribal relations, and occupy a reservation in charge of an agent of the Federal Government. It also appears that the killing of Hoover was done without the limits of the reservation. This contention cannot be maintained either upon reason or authority. Where crimes are committed by whites against Indians, or by Indians against whites, outside of a reservation situated within a slate, the jurisdiction is in the State courts. (Am. and Eng. Ency. Law, Vol. 10, 443, and authorities cited.) In support of this summary, among other cases, is cited U S. v. Sa-Coo-Da- Cot, alias Yellow Sun, 1 Dill. (U. S.) 271; s.c., 27 Fed. Cas. 923. After going fully into the whole case, which was one arising in Nebraska, and similar to the one under consideration, the learned judge concludes that the United States Court had no jurisdiction, but that it was in the State courts, because there was no valid
4. During the argument upon the demurrer and the motion to set aside the information, the defendant was not present in court. Also, on one day during the trial at the convening of the court after the noon recess, and while a witness for the State was on the stand, the County Attorney.put one question to the witness before the defendant appeared in court. This question was not answered, the court having stopped the proceedings until the defendant was brought in. Thereupon the jury was called and the examination of the witness resumed. As a matter of fact, so far as concerns the trial after the issues were made up, no testimony was taken, nor any other step, during the absence of the defendant. As to this feature of the proceedings in the court below, the defendant has suffered no prejudice; he, therefore, has no right to complain. Touching the absence of the defendant from the court room during the progress of the argument upon the demurrer and the motion to set aside the information, we think that this was in no sense of the word absence from court during trial. The word “trial,” when used in connection with criminal proceedings, means proceedings in open court, after the pleadings are finished and it is otherwise ready, down to and including the rendition of the verdict. It includes all those steps in the trial during which the defendant may be of assistance to his counsel in conducting the proceedings. It does not include the preliminary steps wherein the court is passing upon questions of law and preliminary motions, with a view of settling the issues. (3 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law, 735, and note, 2nd Edition, Vol. 6, 995.) It is true, the defendant must be present at the time of his arraignment in felony cases; but we apprehend this is for the purpose of informing the court that the plea interposed by him is his own personal plea. In this
5. Before the trial was begun in the court below, the defendant asked the court for an order changing the place of trial, on two grounds, to wit: First, that he believed that the people of the County of Custer, State of Montana, were so prejudiced against him, and against all the members of his tribe, that he could' not have a fair and impartial trial in that county; second, that he believed that it would be impossible to obtain jurors in the County of Custer who had not formed an opinion as to the guilt or innocence of the defendant, such as would disqualify them for the trial of his cause. This motion was based upon the affidavit of the defendant, with a number of clippings from newspapers, including the Stock Growers’ Journal, the' Yellowstone Journal, weekly and daily, both published in Miles City, and from the Forsyth Times, published in Forsyth, Custer county. These clippings are referred to in defendant’s affidavit, which, omitting immaterial parts, is as follows: “That at the time the body of Hoover, the sheepherder, was found, the citizens of this county were greatly alarmed and excited; that the excitement was not local, but extended to every part of the county, and even to other counties; that cowboys and ranchmen to the number of 200 left their homes, and gathered at one of the ranchers residing near the Cheyenne Indian Agency, whose name is not known to deponent; that these men were armed with six-shooters, Winchester rifles and Savage rifles; that the purpose of the gathering was to demand of Capt. George W. H. Stouch, Indian Agent, and of the Indians, the surrender of the murderer of Hoover, they claiming that the murderer of Hoover was a member of the tribe of Cheyenne Indians; and it was their intention, if the alleged murderer of Hoover was not surrendered, to go on the reservation in a body and exterminate the entire tribe of Indians; that, in furtherance of this object, several hundred rounds of cartridges and a great number of Savage rifles were ordered by them from Miles City; that, in addition to this, cartridges and rifles to a great
At the hearing, the court also heard orally the testimony of L. A. Huffman, and John Gibb, the sheriff of Custer county. Huffman’s statement is substantially as follows: “I am photographer in Miles City, Mont. At about the time of the discovery of the body of Mr. Hoover, last spring, 1 was on or near Powder river, east and south of here; I was traveling about with the round-ups, taking photographic views. I traveled over a considerable scope of country. In some places I found the people excited over the murder of Hoover. In other places they did not seem to pay much attention to it. With a few exceptions, in the places where I stopped, and about the wagons on the ranges at that time, the conversation led in the direction of the killing of Hoover by the Cheyenne Indians; there was undoubtedly a strong prejudice in the minds of the people; they seemed to be ready to drop their work and join in some sort of a movement against the Chey
John Gibb’s statement is as follows: “I am the same Mr. Gibb who made the affidavit just read. The first time I visited the Cheyenne Reservation in relation to the killing of Mr. Hoover, was, I think, on the 26th day of May; I was with Mr. Bateman, the coroner, who went to examine into the cause of the death of Mr. Hoover; and on that same trip we went to Lame Deer. There was lots of excitement among the inhabitants at that time as regards the killing of Hoover; there was a feeling that it was time these murders were stopped, and the murderers punished. 1 talked with more or less of the persons there with regard to the matter of getting a jury, but I can remember only in a general way the conversations had. I remember of hearing one Lee Tucker speaking about the matter; Tucker wanted to go in there and make a fight. I cannot remember all that he said, but that was the substance of it. He thought that the killing of that man, and the cattle killing, and the general condition of that character that had
Specimens'of clippings from various newspapers, including the Stock Growers’ Journal, and the Yellowstone Journal of Miles City, and the Forsyth Times of Forsyth, all of general circulation, were introduced and considered as part of the showing in support of this motion. It is impossible to set forth these at length. They cover 60 pages of the record. In general, they discuss rather heatedly, the disappearence of Hoover; they charge it to the Indians; they complain bitterly of the depredations alleged to have been committed from time to time by the Indians; they state that the long suffering disposition of the people will not continue indefinitely; they recount the trouble had with the Indians for years, and the probability of the alleged murder of Hoover bringing things to a crisis, so that the Government at Washington will at last be forced to remove the Indians from the State. They detail the conflict of jurisdiction between the civil and military authorities; the gathering of arms and getting ready of ammunition for trouble with the Indians; the removal of a large number of families to places of safety; the abandonment of roundups and shearing among stockmen, owing to the fear of Indians; the gathering of armed men; and the correspondence between the Governor of Montana, the county attorney and the authorities at Washington. In short, editorially and through their correspondents from different points of the county, there are recounted all the various rumors and extravagant statements usual among a people wrought up with excitement.
In opposition to this showing made by the defendant and the testimony of the witnesses examined orally, affidavits were filed by T. J. Porter, the County Attorney, and John Gibb, the Sheriff. Omitting the opinions of the affiant touching the prevalence of prejudice in the County of Custer, the affidavit of Mr Porter is as follows:
*52 ‘ ‘Affiant states, on information and belief, that it is wholly untrue that any number of men at any place took any vow or oath to be present at the trial or upon the acquittal of this defendant or any Indian, to take the law in their own hands, and hang or in any way injure or harm any Indian, or made any threats against defendant’s counsel or the Judge of this court, or any threat whatsoever; or that there exists with the body of the people of this county any prejudice, bitterness, or hatred against this defendant; or that, from this or any cause, the jurors summoned herein will be prevented from according this defendant a fair and impartial trial; or that there is any bias or prejudice existing among the people of this county that will prevent defendant from having a fair and impartial trial of this cause. ’ ’
John Gibb, after stating that he is the Sheriff of Custer county, and that he has read the affidavit of Spotted Hawk, the defendant, says:
‘ ‘At the time of, investigating the death of Hoover, the undersigned was present near the Cheyenne Indian Reservation, and met and talked with a large number of the residents of that vicinity; but at no time was it necessary to place any deputy in charge of any cowboys or settlers to keep them from attacking the Indians, or for any purpose whatsoever, or that any deputy sheriff was at any time placed in charge of any cowboys or settlers, and that the affidavit of said Spotted Hawk as to the actions of the Sheriff in such matter is wholly untrue. ’ ’
This constitutes the showing made at the time of the application. It has been repeatedly held by this Court that an application for a change of the place of trial is addressed to the sound discretion of the court, and that the action of the trial court thereon will not be disturbed, unless it appears that there has been an abuse of this power. (Territory v: Manton, 8 Mont. 95, 19 Pac. 387; Kennon v. Gilmer, 5 Mont. 257, 5 Pac. 817; in re Davis' Estate, 11 Mont. 1, 27 Pac. 312; Territory v. Corbett, 3 Mont. 50.) It is also the rule that the application must set forth the facts upon which it is
It is also the rule that every application of this kind must be determined upon the facts and circumstances presented by it. No general rule can be laid down. The lower court denied the motion, for the’reason that the affidavits and proof were insufficient, under the rule announced in the case of Territory v. Manton, supra. Examining the the affidavits supporting the motion in Territory v. Manton, they are substantially to the effect that “the affiants have heard the case frequently discussed in their respective neighborhoods, and, from what they have heard, they do not believe the defendant can have a fair and impartial trial in the county, for the reason that the inhabitants of said county are prejudiced against said Manton.” Of the same character are the affidavits in the other cases cited. In such an affidavit no fact is stated from which the court could form a conclusion. It merely sets forth the opinion of the witness. The court acting upon it would act, not upon a conclusion of its own, but upon the conclusion of another. Can this be said of the application here? The defendant here, in the most direct and positive language, not upon information and belief, enumerates a number of facts and circumstances tending to show that he could not get a fair trial in Custer county, to wit: That the people were greatly excited in all parts of the county; that cowboys and ranchmen.to the number of 200 had left their homes and gathered at a ranch near the Cheyenne Indian Agency; that these men were armed; that they had gathered together to force the- Indian Agent to surrender the murderer of Hoover, claiming that the murderer was a member of this tribe; that it was their intention, if the murderer was not surrendered, to go upon the reservation and exterminate the tribe; that they, in furtherance of this object, gathered ammunition and rifles from Miles City and eastern cities; that cartridges
The fact that a jury was obtained in Custer county, that answered all the statutory requirements, after an examination of 65 veniremen only, is not at all conclusive upon the question of the existence of such a prejudice in the community as to render a fair and impartial trial impossible. 1 ‘This is not the test to be applied to the question, for such a jury might be found when the public sentiment was in a blaze of excitement and passion against one of the parties to the action; and the pressure of this public sentiment might make itself felt during the trial, in very many ways, upon the jury, upon the witnesses and officers of court, and upon the court itself. Jurors, witnesses and officers cannot be insensible to a strong and excited public feeling and sentiment concerning the trial that is going on, and are liable to be influenced by it, unconsciously, and with an honest intention of doing their whole duty. The court room is a public place, and a trial, in which a community is deeply interested, brings the people there; and the pressure of their presence and feeling is a strong argument, and almost irresistible, one way or the other. The influence of their presence, and the expression of their interest in the event of the trial, in divers ways, might give a false coloring to the testimony, or warp and bias the judgment in weighing and considering it. ’ ’ (Kennon v. Gilmer, 5 Mont., at page 264, 5 Pac. 850.)
The refusal to grant this application of the defendant we deem to be such an abuse of discretion on the part of the trial court, that this cause should be reversed, and a new trial granted, on this ground alone.
“A conviction cannot be had on the testimony of an accomplice, unless he is corroborated by other evidence, which in itself, and without the aid of the testimony of the accomplice, tends to connect the defendant with the commission of the offense; and the corroboration ¿s not sufficient, if it merely shows the commission of the offense, or the circumstances thereof. ’ ’
The construction put by this Court upon this section will be found in the case of State v. Geddes, in which the opinion was handed down at the present term. (Post p. 68, 55 Pac. 919.) For a full discussion of the authorities and the conclusions of the Court thereon, reference is made to that case. Applying the rule there laid down to the facts of this case, let us look into the testimony as presented by the accomplice and the corroborating evidence. The witness Whirlwind tells the story of the murder in the following words:
“I know where the Indian named Calf lives. My wife and I visited there last spring. Eed Bird came there, and measured the plowed ground while we were there. Spotted Hawk used to visit us there. One morning Spotted Hawk came there on horseback. He had a carbine — a soldier’s gun. He asked me to go along, and go out riding or roaming around. I assented, and then went for'my horse. I got a sorrel horse, belonging to my wife. We then started. The gun I had belonged to White Moon. Spotted Hawk and I both had belts with cartridges; they were all soldiers’ cartridges, those in my belt; that is, 45-70’s — the kind soldiers use. A boy named Shoulder Blade helped me to get my horse; he did not have a gun. After we got saddled up, all three of us went down to Little Whirlwind’s house, and asked him to go along. He went for a horse and brought a buckskin, a sorrel horse. After he had saddled up his horse, he got his gun and some*58 cartridges; it was a Winchester gun. He had little cartridges. There is other ammunition for the big guns, but the gun he had shot this little kind. Shoulder Blade was riding a sorrel horse, and Spotted Hawk had an American horse; that is, a white man’s horse. As soon as Little Whirlwind got his gun and saddled his horse, we started. It was in the middle of the forenoon. We followed the road that comes down Tongue river. We went down as far as Eire Crow’s tepee. There is a road there that runs off into the hills, and we took that road. We did not find anything to shoot at before we came to Eire Crow’s house. I do not remember what we talked about as we rode along. I could not tell the name of the ground that we went over, but after we left the road we went up. The first thing we found to shoot was a bunch of five cows. The first shot was fired by Little Whirlwind; he shot and killed a two-year-old cow; it was sorrel in color. The boy Shoulder Blade came up into the hills with us, but was off a little ways when the cow was shot. When the cow was shot, we all got off our horses and started to skin it; that is, cutting down the legs and getting ready to take the hide off. Our guns were laid on the ground, a little ways off from the cow. We held our horses by ropes. Shoulder Blade was a little way off, where we could see him. Only one shot was fired. At this time a white man came up close. He hollered, and we all saw him" and then got on our horses. The white man went away. He did not say anything. When the white man hollered, Shoulder Blade run off. He was on horseback. I did not see the boy any more until I came back to the tepee. When we got on our horses, we took our guns: We said nothing, but followed him, the white man, keeping off quite a ways. The white man went back to where his sheep were. While we were at this cow we said, ‘This white man has seen us, and he will know us. ’ This is all that was said. ‘This man will know us, for he is close on to us. ’ We said this to each other. We said that he would go and tell on us, for he knew us. As we followed him on our. horses, we stayed back a little way. When he got back to his sheep, we went up close on him.*59 We made a charge on him; that is. Spotted.Hawk, Little Whirlwind and myself. As we charged, we all three shot at him. He fell. When the man fell, Spotted Hawk shot him. He shot him again, and. he was close on to him. Spotted Hawk was on his horse when he shot. The shot struck him about there (indicating the left breast). There wa.s a little dog roaming .around there, and we all said, ‘This dog will go down there, and they will know it up there;’ and so .Little Whirlwind shot it with the Winchester, and put him by the man, where the white .man was lying. Little Whirlwind got off from his horse, but Spotted Hawk and 1 remained on our horses. We then run away. We all went home together, and went along to our different tepees. It was nearly sundown when we got back. When I got to Calf’s tepee, the boy Shoulder Blade was there. It was about three days after this that I stopped visiting at Calf’s tepee, and went away. This white man was short. I had never seen him before. The white man did not see us when we were following him, or when we charged on him. After the white man was shot first, he' started to get up. When Spotted Hawk shot the man, he had in his hand the same gun as he had when we started in the morning. It was a soldier’s gun — a car bine — and the ammunition was soldier’s ammunition. It was early in the spring when Spotted Hawk came to my house. ■ If I could talk English, I would know the month of the year. The Cheyennes have different kinds of names for the months from the white men. I do no.t know the name of the month in which Spotted Hawk came to Calf’s .tepee. It was in nice weather, and the trees were just budding out. I have no tepee or ground on Otter creek, nor have I a plow or team of horses.- At the time Spotted Hawk came to my tepee, and wanted me to go riding with him, the people were plowing. The Indians on Tongue river were plowing several days; there were lots of bu.cks plowing there — all over there around the mission. I could not tell all of them if I were to count them. Spotted Hawk was one, Walking Horse, Calf, Two Bulls, Badger, Twin, Wolf, Chubby, Little Whirlwind, Sam Crow, Medicine*60 Bow and myself.' I was with the plowing gang. I do not belong to Bed Bird’s plowing gang; I just went over there. Two Bulls was the boss of the plowing gang. The white man had not gone very far from where we killed the beef before we overtook him. The country was hilly around there. The white man was looking at us when we charged on him. He did not run, and said nothing; just stood there, and let ns shoot him. We did not sneak up behind him, and shoot him. He was not sitting down. When the dog was killed, it was laid close up by the side of the body. I did not visit the body again after the killing. ”
This is all of the testimony of the witness Whirlwind touching the facts and circumstances, of the killing. The testimony of witness Shoulder Blade agrees, substantially, with that of Whirlwind up to the time of killing the cow. He says that the party, including himself,. Whirlwind, Little Whirlwind and Spotted Hawk, the defendant, were out riding together, or roaming around. The defendant was riding an American horse; the Indians were riding their own horses. All the party, except himself, were armed and had cartridge belts. All the incidents of the killing of the cow he details. The appearance of the white man interrupted their proceedings, and his running away after the rest mounted their horses and the white man disappeared, is recounted. He left the rest of the party behind, and did not see anything of them until near sundown of that day, when Whirlwind returned to Calf's tepee. Calf is the father of Shoulder Blade. After the arrest, and while the defendant Spotted Hawk was being brought to Miles City from the Agency, in company with the witness Shoulder Blade, Spotted Hawk urged him “not to tell it” (pointing in a direction not disclosed.)
The time of the killing is fixed by the testimony of witness Fred. Barringer, at from the 28th of April to the 3d day of May, 1897. By the testimony of Bed Bird, Capt. Stoueh and others, the defendant was at the Tongue Biver Mission, where the plowing camps were, from the 25th of April until about the 2d day of May. In the evening of the 27th day of
Shoulder Blade was not an accomplice in the murder and therefore his testimony is to be considered as independent testimony. The different items of this proof are: The larceny of the cow; the discovery of the defendant and his companions by a white man while in the act of committing the larceny; the defendant last seen in company with Whirlwind and Lit-
In this connection we would advise the parties in cases like this to follow the suggestions made by this Court in Wood v. Lowney, 20 Mont. 273, 50 Pac. 794, as to the use of maps and diagrams. The use of them in this case would doubtless have remedied the defect in the proof just mentioned. It certainly would have lightened the labors of this Court in the case at bar.
The foregoing discussion also disposes of the contention by counsel that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain the verdict, and it is therefore not necessary to examine the evidence further.
A great many other errors are assigned in the record, but it is not necessary to notice them all. We shall notice briefly such of them as will be of aid to the lower court at another trial.
7. On the cross examination of the witness Whirlwind, counsel for defendant asked him if he had not had a conversation with Spotted Elk at the Agency, in which he had stated to Spotted Elk that he (Whirlwind) alone had killed the white man, giving the particulars in full. He denied 'having had such a conversation. Spotted Elk was examined on behalf of the defendant, and asked about this con
8. On cross examination, Whirlwind was asked this question: “Were you not discharged from the army for the reason that you were periodically insane and generally imbecile?” On Objection by the counsel for the State it was disallowed as incompetent. Afterwards the defense offered in evidence a certified copy from the War Department in Washington of Whirlwind’s discharge from the army, of date of July 10, 1893. This paper contained a recital of the reasons for his discharge, setting forth that he was deficient in intellect, had no appreciation- of moral responsibility, was in the infantile stage and had undeveloped reasoning powers. Upon objection by the State, this was also excluded. To both these rulings exception is taken. This action of the court was correct. The question put to the witness is so shaped as to bring out an answer showing the estimate in which the' witness was held by others, and not the fact as to his mental conditon then or at any other time, it might have been competent to show his real mental condition, with a view of testing his credibility; but it was not competent to prove by him what others thought. Nor was the certificate competent. It is a mere ex parte statement by a person not shown to be qualified to speak as to the mental condition of the witness. It was also an attempt to impeach the witness on a collateral matter.
Many of the witnesses in the trial had to be examined by the aid of an interpreter. Often in the examinatipn of these witnesses, leading questions were allowed on the part of the County Attorney. Upon examination of the same character of witnesses by the defense, this mode of examination was dis
9. The defendant requested the court to give the following instruction, which was refused: “The jury are instructed that in this case the witness Whirlwind (alias David Stanley) is what is known in law asan ‘accomplice;’ andas to the testimony of an accomplice, or one jointly charged with the defendant on trial with the commission of the offense, you should always act upon such testimony with great care and caution, and subject it to careful examination in the light of all the other evidence in the case, and the jury ought not to convict upon such testimony unless, after a careful examination of such testimony, they are satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt of its truth, and that they can safely rely upon it. ’ ’
The court in this case might very well have assumed that Whirlwind was an accomplice, and cautioned the jury that his testimony should be distrusted. (Code of Civil Procedure, Sec. 3390.) It was admitted that Whirlwind was an accomplice. But this instruction assumes that one jointly charged with the defendant is an accomplice, and directs the jury to test his evidence by the rules applicable to the testimony of an accomplice. An accomplice is one who is guilty of complicity in the crime charged, either by being present and aiding or abetting in it, or by having advised and encouraged it, though absent from the place at which it is committed. (Penal Code, Sec. 41.) The instruction was therefore properly refused.
The following was also requested and refused: “The jury are instructed that one accomplice cannot corroborate the testimony of another accomplice. ’ ’ This was requested upon the assumption that Shoulder Blade was an accomplice in the murder. There is no testimony tending to show that he was.
It is insisted that the .court .erred in refusing the following instruction: “The jury are instructed that, while the prosecution must establish beyond a reasonable doubt the guilt of the defendant, it is not incumbent upon the defendant to prove an alibi beyond a reasonable doubt. Though the evidence offered to establish an alibi falls short of the weight of moral certainty as to the existence of the alibi, yet if it leave in the minds of the jury such a doubt or uncertainty that, taken by itself, they could not find for or against the alibi, they are bound to carry such doubt into the case of the prosecution, and to array it there as an element of the reasonable doubt beyond which the prosecution must establish guilt. The defendant is entitled as much to the benefit of such doubt as to any other doubt raised by the evidence; and if the weight alone, or added to that of any other, be sufficient to reduce belief in their minds as to the defendant’s guilt to a reasonable doubt, they must acquit. ’ ’
In this connection the court, in the general charge, instructed the jury as follows: “The jury are instructed that one of the defenses made by the defendant in this case is what is known as an alibi; that is, that the defendant was in another place at the time of the commission of the crime. This is a proper defense, if proven; and if, in view of all of the evidence of the case, the jury have a reasonable doubt as to the presence of the defendant at the time and place where the crime was committed, they should give the defendant the benefit of the doubt, and find him not guilty. ’ ’
The contention is made that the instruction requested should have been given, and that the general charge of the court is erroneous in the use of the word ‘ ‘proven. ’ ’ While the burden of establishing an alibi beyond a reasonable doubt, or even iby a preponderance of the evidence, does not rest upon the
10. After the case was submitted, the jury returned into court, and requested additional instructions upon the words “deliberation,” “premeditation,” or “preconceived design,” used by the .court in defining the distinction between murder in the first and second degrees. The court thereupon gave the following instruction: “The jury are instructed that ‘conceive,’ as used in these instructions, means to think of; ‘preconceive’ means to think of beforehand — that is, before the execution of the act thought of; therefore, ‘preconceived,’ as used in these instructions, means ‘premeditation;’ and ‘premeditation’ is thought beforehand for any length of time, however short. ‘Deliberation’ does not mean brooded over, considered, reflected upon for a week, or day, or an hour, but it means the intent to kill, executed by the party not under the influence of a violent passion suddenly aroused, amounting to a temporary dethronement of the reason, but in the furtherance of a formed design to gratify a feeling of revenge, or to accomplish some other unlawful purpose; that is, it means in a cool state of blood, and is usually characterized by what are ordinarily termed ‘cold-blooded murders,’ such as proceed from deep malignity of heart, and are prompted by motives of revenge or gain. ’ ’ Counsel insists that this is error. While this instruction is not as artificially drawn as it might have been, still it is a substantially correct statement of the law. (2 Thompson on Trials, Sec. 2209.)
Reversed and remanded.