159 So. 549 | Miss. | 1935
On an indictment for murder in the killing of Jesse Lewis, appellant was tried, convicted, and sentenced to be hanged by the lower court, and appeals here.
In August, 1934, Meadow Pressgrove, a white man, carried a truckload of twenty-one negro men from Minter City to Lambert on Sunday afternoon to engage in a game of baseball. They lost the game, and returned to Minter City. It was after dark when they reached *247 what the witnesses called Shoe Bridge railroad crossing. Two of the witnesses, who were in the truck at the time, testified that they saw the appellant and a woman standing on the side of the highway as they went over the railroad crossing; that the appellant had his hand on his pistol, was close enough to touch the truck, and after they had passed him a few feet he stepped back and fired one shot in the direction of the truck. After they had proceeded a short distance it was discovered that one of the passengers on the truck had been wounded and another, Jesse Lewis, had been shot through the head, from which wound he subsequently died.
One state witness told the officers that appellant had fired the shot, and the other state witnesses identified appellant as being there at the crossing. Some of the witnesses for the state testified positively that there was no talking, boisterous conduct, or indecent language used on the highway at or near the point where this shooting occurred. According to all four witnesses presented by the state, no word was spoken between the appellant and the occupants of the truck.
Witness Smith, who owned a plantation on which appellant's wife lived, testified that Shoe Bridge railroad crossing was in the second district of Tallahatchie county, Mississippi, and makes it sufficiently clear that the venue was in that county.
The appellant testified that on several occasions before this occurrence trucks had passed his house, which was a short distance from the highway near this crossing, and that insulting remarks had been directed toward his wife by occupants of a truck, but it was not shown that the occupants of this truck were guilty of such conduct. He further testified that he had sent a boy to a store, the boy had remarked that he was afraid to come back after dark, and the appellant took his pistol, which he had owned several years, and walked with his wife to meet the boy. As they were proceeding along the highway the *248 truck passed and some one thereon addressed insulting lascivious remarks to his wife. He testified further that he did not shoot any certain way, that he shot to "stop them and scare them from that bad talk," and that he "didn't intend to kill anybody." His wife corroborated his testimony as to the indecent language addressed to her, and stated that she did not know that her husband was armed, and did not see him fire the shot. The appellant had never been arrested before, according to his evidence. He was arrested at his work about a week after the shooting and very soon thereafter was tried. He stated to witness Smith, who made the arrest, that he shot at the truck because of the "nasty talk" addressed by some occupants thereof to his wife.
First. We think the venue was sufficiently shown by the witness Smith.
Second. Appellant hints that this court should hold that the homicide was accidental, but there is not a line of testimony to support a theory of an accidental shot, in fact, the appellant's own statement is that he fired the pistol, and he gives the reason therefor, but unfortunately he fired it in the direction of the truck loaded with human beings. He shot as the truck was going from him down grade, therefore he was on an elevation above the truck, and evidently the pistol was pointed toward the truck for the shot to wound one occupant thereof and kill another.
Third. It is contended that the state should have procured from the court an instruction on manslaughter. The appellant did not ask for any manslaughter instruction, therefore, he cannot complain in this behalf. See Cosey v. State,
Fourth. It is next insisted that the appellant is entitled to a new trial in this case because the verdict of the jury is against the overwhelming weight of the evidence, and that at most the appellant could only be guilty of manslaughter. This contention is based upon the insulting *249
language testified to by appellant and his wife as being addressed to her by some occupant of this truck. We are not called upon to again take up the question of whether or not insulting language, although addressed to a female member of the accused's family, can ever be offered to reduce a homicide from murder to manslaughter, for the reason that the state's evidence is to the effect that no such language was used, and no reason appears here for not permitting the jury to pass upon that conflict in the evidence. As we see it, it was peculiarly within the province of the jury to pass upon the conflict in the facts. The use of the deadly weapon, under the circumstances detailed here, raised a presumption of malice. Lamar v. State,
Fifth. It is next contended that it was error for the court to grant the state the following instructions:
"The court instructs the jury for the state that murder is the killing of a human being with malice aforethought without authority of law, by any means or in any manner, when done with the deliberate design to effect the death of the person killed."
"The court instructs the jury for the state that the killing of a human being without authority of law, when done in the commission of an act eminently dangerous to others, and evincing a depraved heart, regardless of human life, although without any premeditated design to effect the death of any particular individual, is murder."
Appellant contends that both of these instructions in a proper case are correct abstract statements of law, but that in this case it was improper for the court to instruct *250
the jury on deliberate design, and cites in support of his contention Gentry v. State,
In the case at bar, a deadly weapon was discharged at a truck, with twenty-two persons crowded thereon, by the appellant, and from the act the jury might find malice and motive. See House v. State,
The indictment in this case followed the statutory mandate as follows, "Did wilfully, unlawfully, feloniously and of his malice aforethought kill and murder Jesse Lewis, a human being." This indictment is in the language of and authorized by section 1211, Code of 1930, and this statute was intended to relieve the pleader of *251 the necessity of setting forth in an indictment the manner and details of a homicide.
The Gentry case, supra, dealt with a charge of assault with intent to kill and murder a designated person, and therein the evidence showed that the appellant shot into a wagon occupied by that designated person and several others. The court there held that it was error to instruct the jury that proof of a design to kill the designated person was unnecessary in order to warrant a conviction. Likewise, the Faulkner case. Assault, or an assault and battery with intent to kill and murder, is a statutory crime not recognized at the common law, and intent is the gist of the offense, and those cases have no application to a charge of murder preferred in an indictment based upon and conforming to the statute. This court has held in Ross v. State,
Sixth. It is next insisted that the court erred in the form of verdict instruction in the event the jury found the defendant guilty of murder. The instruction informed the jury what action the court would take on the verdict in the matter of sentencing the defendant on both forms thereof involving life imprisonment, but did not tell the jury that if it returned a general verdict of guilty as charged, it would be the duty of the court to sentence the appellant to be hanged. There was no possible chance for the jury to be misled by this instruction. It was advised fully as to the two conditions upon which the punishment by life imprisonment could be imposed, and under those circumstances was bound to know that a failure to fix life imprisonment would result in the imposition of the death penalty if it returned a verdict of guilty as charged. The jury knew it was trying a capital case, and the instances in which the life imprisonment could *252
be imposed were clearly stated; there was no chance for the jury to misunderstand this instruction. We are not unmindful of the case of Walton v. State,
Affirmed, and Friday, April 19, 1935, is set for the date of the execution.