The court erred in charging the law on confession for the reasons set out in the opinion.
The following assignments of error are argued: "At no point in the trial or record of said case did the prosecution claim a confession. That reference to a portion of the evidence as a confession, whether oral or in writing, when the same was not a confession or admission of guilt, even referring to it as a contention of the State, is error when the same was clearly one of justifiable homicide. (b) That it was misleading to the jury. (c) That it was confusing to the jury. That it was erroneous for the following reason: That said purported evidence did not constitute a confession or an admission of guilt, and a charge relative to such when the same was not involved should not have been the subject of any portion of the charge. By reference to it in the charge, the trial judge indicated to the jury that a confession was involved, when as a matter of fact such was not the case." The evidence did not constitute a plenary confession. While it is true that the defendant admitted that he cut the deceased (and the record reveals that only one stab was made with a knife), he did so under such circumstances as would justify him, as follows: "The deceased, Bellamy, run his hand in his pocket, and he thought he was going to do something to him, and he pulled his knife and cut him." We do not think this is a confession. While he admitted the killing, and gave his reason therefor, as stated to the witness, the evidence was sufficient to bring in the question of whether, under all the circumstances of the case, he acted under the fears of a reasonable man. Our leading case on this principle, since followed by our appellate courts, and cited many times, is Cumming v. State,
It is earnestly contended by the State that the charge, of which complaint is made, is controlled by the ruling in McCloud
v. State,
Judgment reversed. Broyles, C. J., and MacIntyre, J., concur. *Page 485
