153 Ind. 375 | Ind. | 1899
Appellant was convicted of murder in the first degree. The errors assigned are the overruling of his motion to quash the indictment and of his motion for a new trial.
The indictment follows the form for murder in the first degree by shooting, given in Gillett on Crim. Law 417. Though the form is archaic and not the plainest and tersest that might be drafted, it states facts sufficient to constitute the crime of murder in the first degree. The statute commands that an indictment shall not be quashed “for any sunplusage or repugnant allegation, if there is sufficient matter .alleged to indicate the crime and person charged.” §1756 R. S. 1881 and Horner 1897, §1825 Burns 1894.
Appellant complains of part of the twenty-fourth instruction to the effect that if appellant and deceased engaged in a mutual combat in which deceased was unarmed and appellant without legal excuse and without deceased’s knowledge voluntarily used a deadly weapon in a way likely to cause and actually causing the death of deceased, appellant would be guilty of murder. The point made is that intent to kill, malice and premeditation are ignored. The portion selected by counsel for criticism end with a semicolon. Eolio wing the semicolon, the instruction reads “and if it further appears from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant provided himself with such weapon for the occasion and used it deliberately and with malice aforethought and with intent to take the life of the deceased or to do him bodily harm, then such killing would be murder in the first
There was evidence tending to show that deceased had debauched appellant’s wife and that appellant knew of it in. December preceding the homicide in March. The twenty-sixth instruction takes up this evidence and proceeds: “The mere fact that one person had sexual intercourse with another person’s wife will not justify the taking of human life. Proof of this fact alone will be no defense in a prosecution for criminal homicide. The most it can do is, in certain cases, to reduce the grade of the crime from murder to manslaughter. If a man finds another in the act of sexual intercourse with his wife and kills him in a heat and transport of passion engendered thereby, the crime will be manslaughter only. This circumstance will, in law, be deemed a sufficient provocation to reduce the grade of the crime from murder to manslaughter. If, however, the husband, after making the discoveiy, does not bill the offender until after a sufficient time has elapsed for his sudden heat and transport of passion to cool and subside, and in which he has an oppor
The thirtieth instruction reads: “In a criminal case the defendant is a competent witness in his own behalf at his election. If he fails to testify, it is his right so-to do, and the fact that he does not testify will raise no presumption of any kind against him, and no inference of any kind can be drawn therefrom by the jury.” This is a sufficient compliance with the fourth subdivision of §1798 R. S. 1881 and Horner 1897, §1867 Burns 1894. No formula of words is prescribed in which the court shall “instruct the jury as to their duty under the provisions of this section”. It is not presumable that the jury, sworn and instructed to find the facts from the evidence, considered and discussed a matter which they were told was neither direct nor inferential evidence against appellant.
Appellant’s wife testified in his behalf. Character evidence was introduced in rebuttal to impeach her as a witness. Referring to this evidence, the court in the thirty-first instruction said: “If the testimony shows that her character was good at and prior to the time that deceased was killed,
Several witnesses testified to the reputation of Mrs. Thrawley. One of them, Mogle, after testifying on direct examination that he knew her general reputation, etc., stated on cross-examination that his testimony was based entirely on his own opinion formed from what Mrs. Thrawley had told him since the - homicide. The court overruled appellant’s motion to strike out the witness’s testimony. The onlv specification in the motion for a new trial under which this alleged error could be presented was one charging that the
The court refused to give various instructions prepared by appellant’s counsel, regarding the various degrees of homicide, malice, premeditation, provocation and self-defense. The charge of the court to the jury comprised thirty-seven instructions and covered the entire case fully and fairly. Whenever this is done, further instructions covering the same ground in different phraseology become hindrances rather than helps to the jury.
On behalf of appellant no reputation witnesses were produced to show that the character of deceased for peaceableness was bad. Appellant did not testify, but his defense was that he killed deceased in a hand-to-hand encounter in the proper defense of his person from an apparently felonious assault by deceased. On rebuttal the State proved the good reputation of deceased for peaceableness. The voluntary killing of deceased by appellant having been admitted, the questions to be solved by the jury were: Did he do it with premeditated malice? Or, with malice, but without premeditation? Or, without premeditation or malice, but in a sudden heat and without legal excuse? Or, was appellant without fault in the encounter, and was deceased the aggressor, and did appellant honestly believe that it was necessary to take life to protect himself from his assailant’s apparently felonious assault? The appellant sought to meet the charge against him by' a countercharge against the deceased. Therefore the jury, in determining appellant’s guilt or innocence, were bound to try, if not the truth of the charge, at least, the honesty of appellant’s belief of the
In Hinch v. State, 25 Ga. 699, it was held that, in disproof of defendant’s plea of self-defense, evidence that deceased was a small, frail man was admissible “to enable the jury to form a more satisfactory judgment upon the necessity of taking the life of the deceased.” Is it not as necessary that the jury shall know deceased’s disposition to use his strength? Whether he is a Falstaff or a De Bergerac?
The question has already been decided by this court. In Dukes v. State, 11 Ind. 557, 71 Am. Dec. 370, on page 565 the court said: “The State was permitted to give evidence of the character of the deceased, White. As a general rule, it is the character of the living — the defendant on trial for the commission of crime and not of the person on whom the crime was committed, that is in issue, and as to which, therefore, that evidence is admissible. But, in a case like the present, where the question arises whether the accused acted, in the commission of a homicide, upon grounds that justify him in the deed, it would seem that the character of the deceased might be a circumstance to be taken into consideration. Especially might this be the case where the accused knew that character.” Unfortunately, the record of this case has been lost from the files; and it does not appear explicitly from the report at what point in the trial and under what conditions this evidence was received. But it is fairly inferable that it was admitted to rebut the claim of self-defense; and also that defendant made no attack upon the character of deceased for peaceableness except by charging that deceased was the aggressor, for otherwise the admissibility of the evidence would have been put upon the
On the question as to whether or not deceased was in fact the' aggressor, this evidence was admissible in negation of appellant’s declaration that he was, just as evidence of appellant’s good character for peace would have been received in disproof of the State’s evidence that appellant was the aggressor. But this evidence would not be competent disproof of the honesty of appellant’s claimed belief of imminent peril,, apart from evidence that deceased’s good character for peace-was known to appellant. The evidence shows that deceased and appellant were neighbors on the day of the homicide and for a long time before. The good character of deceased was proved by evidence of his general reputation in that neighborhood. This afforded presumptive evidence of appellant’s knowledge. Horrigan & Thompson’s Cases on Self-Defense, note, pp. 695-6.
The next specification in the motion reads: “The court-erred in refusing to require the State to allow the defendant an inspection of the grand jury record containing the evidence of the State’s witnesses before the grand jury, with a view to the proper cross-examination of said witnesses touch
Appellant’s bullet passed clear through deceased’s head. In determining the attitudes and relative positions of the parties when the shot was fired, it was important that the jury should know through which hole in the skull the bullet entered. A surgeon testified to certain physical evidences in the skull by which this could be known. It was proper to submit the skull itself to the jury for inspection. Davidson v. State, 135 Ind. 254; State v. Wieners, 66 Mo. 13.
A witness for the State was permitted to testify to the results of experiments in shooting with appellant’s revolver at blotting-pads. This evidence was limited by the court to the’purpose of showing how far unburned grains of powder would carry. Against appellant’s claim that the homicide occurred in a hand-to-hand combat, the State proved that a heavy snow had fallen the night before; that the tracks of the deceased proceeded in a straight line along the highway to the point where he was found dead; that the tracks of appellant led from his gate out into the highway to a point
There was no want of evidence to support each allegation of the indictment. Weight of evidence and credibility of witnesses are matters exclusively for the jury.
Judgment affirmed.