The defendant (appellant) was charged by indictment with having unlawfully, feloniously, purposely and with premeditated malice killed and murdered Oscar Cutsinger, at Johnson county, in the State of Indiana, on June 10, 1924, by shooting him with a revolver loaded with gun powder and balls, and thereby inflicting a mortal wound from which he died. Defendant was tried by a jury which returned a verdict finding him guilty of murder in the first degree and fixing his punishment at imprisonment for life, and judgment was rendered accordingly. His motion for a new trial for the alleged reasons that the verdict was not sustained by sufficient evidence, and that the trial court erred in excluding certain evidence and in giving certain instructions, was overruled and he excepted, and has assigned that ruling as error.
In determining whether or not a verdict of guilty is sustained by sufficient evidence, a court to which an appeal is taken is limited to the consideration of that part of the evidence 1-3. which most strongly tends to prove defendant's guilt. Jackson v. State (1924),
Defendant offered evidence to the effect that about twelve months before the homicide, he saw Cutsinger and a Mr. Durham standing near the corner of Holland and Main Cross streets in the town of Edinburg "eyeing" him when he went into a barber shop and again when he came out and got into his wagon and started for home; that he went south a square and there saw Cutsinger with a board six feet long and eight or ten inches wide, which had been torn from a fence, and which he held in a menacing way, and that Cutsinger then dropped the board and drew a knife from his pocket. And he also testified that about three weeks after that encounter, he bought the gun with which the homicide was committed, as was stated above, and since then had carried it in his hip pocket or on the seat of his wagon when driving "in the south end of town." Defendant offered also to prove that at the time of that encounter, just before Durham and Cutsinger started down the street from where they were "eyeing" defendant to where Cutsinger afterward had the board, *Page 146 Durham said to Cutsinger, "There he goes, now is the time to get him," and that, after they had walked down the street to the corner, Durham drew a gun and shot at defendant; but each of these items of evidence was excluded. Defendant reserved an exception to each ruling, and assigned these rulings as reasons for which a new trial was asked.
The court permitted the defendant and his witnesses to testify fully concerning all that was said and done by Cutsinger at that time, and at all times before the fatal shot was fired. 4, 5. But Durham was not shown to have been present when the homicide was committed a year after he had made the remark and fired the shots, nor was it shown that he had anything to do with impounding the calf about which defendant and Cutsinger were quarreling at the time of the homicide, nor anything at all to do with their quarrel at that time or what led up to it. Appellant insists that the excluded evidence was competent, first, as being part of the rest gestae of his own quarrel with Cutsinger which he claims caused him to fear that Cutsinger would attempt to take his life, and second, as tending to explain his purchase, a few weeks later, of the gun with which Cutsinger was killed the next year. That shots for which Cutsinger was not shown in any degree to have been responsible were fired by Durham at a time when Cutsinger, himself, did acts which resulted in his being found guilty of a simple assault and fined a dollar, twelve months before the homicide, would not have tended to justify defendant in killing Cutsinger after the lapse of so long a time, in a quarrel with which Durham had nothing to do, and when he was not present. And the state having offered no evidence as to when, where or how defendant obtained the gun with which he shot Cutsinger, defendant could not make this evidence material and admissible by testifying *Page 147 that he had bought it nearly a year before because Durham then had shot at him. Proof of statements and acts of third persons which constitute part of the res gestae of the homicide, itself, may sometimes be admissible. But evidence of such statements and acts at a time when the deceased merely threatened to strike defendant, a year before the quarrel began that led to the shooting, was too remote. No error was committed in excluding this evidence.
The court gave an instruction complained of by which he told the jury that, "If you find from the evidence in this cause and beyond a reasonable doubt that, as charged in the 6. indictment, the defendant unlawfully, feloniously, purposely and with premeditated malice did kill Oscar Cutsinger, in the manner charged in the indictment, then he would be guilty of murder in the first degree." Counsel for appellant admit that this was a correct statement of the law, but point to the fact that in instructions defining voluntary and involuntary manslaughter, also given by the court, the words "without legal excuse or justification" were inserted, thereby telling the jury that, "If you find from the evidence in this cause and beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant, without legal excuse orjustification (our italics), did kill said Oscar Cutsinger, in the manner charged in the indictment, and that such killing was without malice," etc. (completing the definition) he would be guilty of manslaughter. And they insist that putting the qualifying phrase in the instructions which defined manslaughter, but not in the definition of murder, misled the jury into the belief that defendant might be found guilty of murder even though there may have been a legal excuse and justification for the killing. But the jury was admonished by several instructions which the court gave of its own motion that if the killing was done in self-defense, *Page 148 defendant could not be convicted at all, and the court gave a series of six instructions requested by defendant, containing more than 1,200 words, in which the doctrine of self-defense was fully set out and applied to the specific facts of the case on trial. No error was committed in omitting the phrase "without legal excuse or justification" from the instruction defining the crime of murder. §§ 2412, 2415 Burns 1926, §§ 347, 350, Acts 1905 p. 584, 660.
And since it does not appear that any rights of the defendant were or could have been prejudiced by the use of those words in defining manslaughter, we decide nothing as to whether or not they made the definition of manslaughter inaccurate.
The judgment is affirmed.
