33 Fla. 348 | Fla. | 1894
The State having rested, the defendant introduced one J ohn Campbell, who stated that he knew the deceased, William Johnson, in his lifetime, and the witness was then asked by defendant’s counsel if he had heard the deceased shortly before ,the killing make any threats about the prisoner at the bar, and if so where and when they were made, and what they were. The State objected to the question on the ground that no sufficient predicate had been proved to authorize the admission of such threats, and the court having sustained the objection, the defendant excepted. The witness was then asked on behalf of the accused if he knew the reputation of the deceased in the neighborhood in which he lived for peace and quiet, and objection having been made on the ground of the absence from the testimony of a proper predicate for proving such reputation, the objection was sustained and the ruling excepted to. It is entirely clear that up to the time that these questions were asked there was no evidence tending to show an overt act upon the part of the deceased, nor was there any doubt as to who began the encounter, nor doubt as to the defendant having commenced it. Bond vs. State, 21 Fla., 738; Garner vs. State, 28 Fla., 113, 9 South. Rep., 835; Garner vs. State, 31 Fla., 170, 12 South. Rep., 638; Wilson vs. State, 30 Fla., 234, 11 South. Rep., 556. If the purpose of counsel was to prove threats which were part of the res gestae, he should have so indicated; there is nothing to suggest that any such purpose was enter
In Miller vs. State, 15 Fla., 577, decided in 1876, it was held that the sworn statement made by the accused of his defense iñ a criminal prosecution was for the jury alone, and to be taken by them into consideration in connection with all the evidence of the case, and to be allowed such weight and such only as they in their judgment may see fit to give it. This view of the statute was approved in Andrews vs. State, 21 Fla., 598, and Bond vs. State, Ibid, 738, and in the latter case, decided in 1886, it was also held that the statute did not make the statement of a defendant as to an overt act of the deceased such proof of the act as to constitute of itself a predicate for the admission of evidence of previous threats by the deceased against the accused, or of the dangerous character of the deceased, and
Of the instructions specially requested by the defendant and refused, it is sufficient to say that all but two of them were on subjects fully covered by charges already given to the jury. These two were: 1st. That if the jury believed from the evidence that the defendant was in possession of the house when the shooting occurred, and that it was his house, he had a right to be there, and he had a right to go into the house, and' the deceased was a trespasser if he was there contrary to the orders of the defendant, or remained there after the defendant ordered him away, and this would be the case although the title to the land was in dispute and subsequently determined adversely to the defendant. 2. That a man who is being kept out of his dwelling house where he is at the time dwelling, has as much right to defend himself against the intruder
The action of the court in restraining counsel for.defendant (not the one now representing him), on objection made by the State, from commenting on the-fact that the State Attorney had omitted to introduce Alee. Steele and Cattenhead as witnesses to prove-whether threats had been made by the deceased against-the defendant, is also assigned as error, but there is no
The testimony sustains the verdict beyond question, and the judgment must be affirmed. It will be ordered .•accordingly.