31 Fla. 320 | Fla. | 1893
The plaintiff in error was tried by a jury at the -ÍM1 term, 1892, of the Circuit Court in Polk county, and found guilty of murder in the- first degree, and 'sentenced to be hung, for killing one William Powell.
There are six assignments of error. The fifth and 'sixth will be considered together, and are, the refusal of the judge to give to the jury certain instructions ‘asked by the prisoner. These instructions are as follows: 2d. The State must prove beyond a reasonable doubt every material allegation contained in the indictment, and if, after due consideration of all the evidence, there remains in your minds a reasonable doubt as to the proof of any one material allegation of the indictment, it will be your duty to acquit the prisoner. 8d.
The judge had previously, in his general charge, in-, structed the jury that when a man is placed on trial charged with the violation of any of the criminal laws, of the State, he is presumed to. be innocent until proven guilty by competent testimony, and by this, rule they were to decide the case now in their hands, x x x _ The indictment in this case charges the. defendant with the killing of one William Powell, by-cutting him with a knife-, and that the alleged killing-was murder in the first degree, and you are instructed that if you believe from the- evidence beyond all reasonable. doubt that the defendant, in the county of1 Polk and State of Florida, at any time before the finding of the indictment (the day, month and year being-immaterial), cut and killed William Powell as charged in the indictment, and that the alleged killing was un-, lawful, malicious, willful and from a premeditated and. previously formed design on the part of the defendant to effect the death of him, the said William Pow-. ell, the defendant is guilty of murder in the first degree, and you should convict him accordingly. As to, all these facts you are to judge fr.Qjn.the evidence you.
In so far as the rejected instructions assert that “ every material allegation ” of the indictment must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt, it is apparent that the same requirement is presented by the first three sentences of the charges given, as set out above, and that part of the fourth sentence which precedes the word “but,” wdiere it is used the second time. All of the material facts necessary to constitute the offense with which the prisoner was charged, and of which he has been convicted, are there stated, and it is clear
Passing to the second of the refused instructions, we find the complaint to be the refusal to give a certain definition of a reasonable doubt-. It is not a case in which there has been no charge on the subject of a reasonable doubt. Moreover, unlike that of Lovett vs. State, 30 Fla., 142, 11 South. Rep., 350, it is not one in which an erroneous charge on the point has been given to the jury; on the contrary, there has been a charge on the subject,' properly preceded with full instructions as to the presumption of innocence which surrounded a prisoner on trial, but the instruction given on the subject of a reasonable doubt has gone no further in explaining or defining such a doubt than to state that the doubt ‘ ‘must be a reasonable, a sensible doubt, and not a mere possible doubt,” and that
II. The second assignment of error is that the verdict is against the charge of the court. The charge which the brief of counsel for plaintiff in error designates as having been disregarded or violated by the finding of the jury was one predicated nearly alto
III. The first, third and fourth assignments are, in substance, that the evidence does not sustain the verdict, and that the benefit of a reasonable doubt was not given by the jury to the defendant. It is said in support of these assignments that it is an undenied and undisputed fact that throughout the whole transaction between the deceased and the prisoner, the deceased was the aggressor, that he held in his hands a bottle which he was flourishing in a threatening manner, and at the same time, in the vilest of language, threatening the accused with great personal violence; and that during these violent demonstrations, and in sudden heat of passion, and without any premeditated design to effect death, the prisoner struck the the fatal blow; and that the lick was a back-hand lick, and was given by the prisoner suddenly and under great provocation, and in the heat of passion, he holding the knife in his left hand.
It is not proper or necessary that the reports should be encumbered with the testimony in cases of this
The judgment is affirmed.