Court Opinion

ID: 6514754
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:25:36.086069+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:59.227441
License: Public Domain

THORINGTON, J.
Appellant was tried under an indictment charging him with murder. The plea was self-defense, and he was found guilty of murder in the second degree. The only questions reserved on the trial for consideration by this court are exceptions to portions of the general charge given by the court to the jury, and the refusal of the court to give several special charges requested by appellant.
The general charge, on demand of ajDpellant, was given by the court in writing. We have examined it carefully as a whole and find it to be a fair, clear and correct statement of the law, and to cover fully every phase of the case made by the testimony. The first exception is to that portion of the charge which is in the following words : “One remark of counsel, in addressing you, gentlemen, might mislead you. It was something 'to the effect that you are above this court *85and tbe Supreme Court in your right to decide this case. The statement, gentlemen, is only partially correct. So far as determining what the facts are, what the evidence shows, it is true; for yon are the sole judges of the facts, and in judging them you are above and beyond every other tribunal, personage or agency; but so far as determining what the law is which is to be applied to the facts, and by suph application a true verdict to be reached, the statement of the counsel is not correct.”
The bill of exceptions recites that “one of defendant’s counsel stated to the jury that they, the jury, were above the court and the Supreme Court in their right to decide this case.” This remark should not have been made by counsel without accompanying it with such an explanation as the court gave, and it clearly imposed upon the court the duty to see that the jury was not misled or improperly influenced by it. The mode adopted by the court of explaining and limiting it was proper, and the distinction drawn by the court between the province of the jury and that of the court is in accord with the law of this State, and amply supported by authority. — Marcus v. State, 89 Ala. 23; Harrison v. State, 78 Ala. 5.
The second exception is to that part of the charge in which the court, after laying down the law of self-defense, uses the following language: “In the system [of self-defense] so established, no balm or protection is provided for wounded pride or honor in declining combat, or sense of shame in being denounced as cowardly. Such thoughts are trash as compared with the inestimable right to live.” This is but the statement of a universally recognized doctrine of the criminal law, and has, in substance, frequently been de-elared4in the decisions of this court. — 3 Brick. Big., p. 219, § | 570 et seq.
The portion of the charge to which appellant’s third exception is directed asserts a correct principle of law, and is directly applicable to the testimony in the case. There was evidence tending to show that appellant had been drinking shortly before the killing occurred and was under the influence of liquor at the time, but not sufficiently so as to incapacitate him for knowing what he was doing. In a preceding portion of the general charge the court had correctly instructed the jury as to the law of self-defense, and that portion of the charge to which this exception is addressed instructed the jury, in effect, tli^t if the defendant by voluntarily putting himself under the influence of liquor incapacitated himself for taking such a view of the situation *86as a reasonably prudent man would have taken, under the circumstances, and, in consequence thereof, he acted upon an exagerated or unjustifiable belief as to the necessity for .taking the life of the deceased in defense of his own, such belief could not avail him as a defense to the charge in the indictment. This is unquestionably the enunciation of a sound principle of law. Justification for taking human life is not to be found in the excited or tortured imaginings of men whose passions are inflamed by what is generally recognized as itself often a potent incentive to crime.' If such excuses could avail in the courts, human life would be cheapened, crime encouraged, and the safe-guards provided by law for security to life and property would be seriously impaired. Drunkenness on the part of the accused at the time of committing the homicide may have the effect of reducing the offense from murder to manslaughter, if shown to have been so excessive as to render him incapable of forming the design to take life; but there is no principle of law which authorizes drunkenness to be invoked as an excuse for crime, or as a ground for enlarging the right of self-defense. — King v. State, 90 Ala. 612; Cleveland v. State., 86 Ala. 1; Williams v. State, 81 Ala. 1; Fonville v. State, 91 Ala. 39.
The fourth exception to the general charge covers that part thereof which announces the law of retreat as applicable to the facts of the case. The intentional killing of the deceased by the defendant with a deadly weapon was shown by the uncontradicted testimony of the State, and the burden was thereupon cast on the defendant not only to show a pressing necessity, actual or reasonably apparent, to take the life of deceased in self-defense, but the onus was further on him to show that he could not have safely retreated without apparently increasing his peril. The inability to retreat safely being one of the elements of fact which enters into and creates the necessity to kill, the defendant must prove it, unless it arises out of the evidence produced to prove the homicide; and the fact that retreat would not place him in less peril, or on better vantage ground than before, has been held in some cases not to excuse him from the performance of that duty. But this last principle is not to be extended beyond the particular cases in which it is applied, and cases based on analogous facts. — Stitt v. State, 91 Ala. 10; Davis v. State, 92 Ala. 20; Gibson v. State, 89 Ala. 121; Carter v. State, 82 Ala. 13; Wills v. Slate, 73 Ala. 362; Ingram v. State, 67 Ala. 67. The portion of the charge challenged by this exception is fully as favorable to the defendant as it should have been, and probably more *87so than it might have been tinder the proof and the law above declared as applicable to the facts of this case.
The special charge numbered four requested by the defendant instructs the jury that his good character, alone, if proved to the satisfaction of the jury, might raise a reasonable doubt that the hilling was done by defendant with a criminal intent. This was tantamount to an instruction that the good character of the defendant would alone justify his acquittal, and is, therefore, clearly erroneous as a proposition of law. The correct doctrine is that proof of the good character of the accused is admissible in all criminal cases, not only where doubt exists on the other proof, but also to generate a doubt; but such proof must be considered by the jury in connection with all the other testimony and not independently thereof, and the guilt or innocence of the defendant determined from all the testimony. — Pate v. State, 94 Ala. 14; Johnson v. State, 94 Ala. 35; Williams v. State, 52 Ala. 412.
Charge numbered thirteen, requested by the defen lant and refused by the court, ignores entirely the inquiry whether deceased made any hostile demonstration toward defendant after drawing his knife, and assumes as a matter of law that the mere drawing of a knife by the deceased," in a hostile manner, created an impending, imperious necessity for the defendant slaying him in self-defense. It is not enough that the deceased had at hand the means for effecting a deadly purpose with respect to the defendant, but it must also appear by some act or demonstration of the former that he intended, at the time of the killing, to carry out his purpose, or the circumstances must be such as to create a reasonable belief in the mind of the slayer that it was necessary to deprive his assailant of his life to save his own, or his body from grievous harm. — Rogers v. State, 67 Ala. 170; Lewis v. State, 51 Ala. 1. Taking the charge as a whole, the jury might have found every fact hypothesized in it without finding that there existed any necessity, actual or apparent, for defendant to take the life of the deceased at the time he fired the fatal shot. The charge is obviously copied from section 579 of 3 Brick. Dig. p. 221, but overlooks the qualifying reference therein to the next preceding-section relating to the element of impending peril, actual or apparent. It is also erroneous because it assumes as matter of law that the mere hostile drawing of a knife by the deceased made it necessary for defendant to kill him in self-defense, instead of leaving that question to the jury.
Charge number fourteen assumes as matter of law that on *88the facts therein postulated the defendant could not have retreated without endangering his life. It was an inquiry for the jury to determine on all the proof whether the defendant could have retreated without endangering his safety, or increasing his peril, and not a matter to be decided by the court. It may further be said of this charge that it assumes the defendant was assaulted by deceased with a deadly weapon, or a knife calculated to produce death, whereas the testimony, so far as the bill of exceptions discloses, fails to show that the knife was a deadly weapon, or to show any description whatever of the knife.
Charge number 15 is the substantial embodiment of the two charges numbered, respectively, thirteen and fourteen, and is, therefore, subject to the infirmities above pointed out to each of these charges.
As a further objection to all three of the charges it maybe added that they are each and all framed in entire disregard of the inquiry as to the degree of force it may have been necessary for defendant to employ in order to repel the threatened danger he claims to have been in at the time of slaying the deceased. Self-defense, it has been said, is simply the resistance of force or seriously threatened force, actually impending (or reasonably apparent) by force sufficient to repel the actual (or apparent) danger and no more. If it goes beyond this, there is guilt which is not excusable or justifiable. — Lewis v. State, 51 Ala. 11; Hughey v. State, 47 Ala. 97. As pertinent to all three of the charges, it may be said that, in order to justify the homicide, the defendant must have been free from fault himself in provoking or bringing on the difficulty, and must not have entered into it willingly, and there must have existed at the time of the killing an imperious necessity to kill his alleged assailant, or such an ajjpearance of such imperious, impending necessity as to impress the mind of a reasonably prudent man that such necessity did exist; and he should have used only such force as was necessary to repel the actual, or reasonably apparent, danger, and no more, and the circumstances and surroundings must have been such that he could not have retreated or declined the combat without in-. creasing the danger to which he was then in fact or apparently subjected.
After carefully weighing the testimony in this case, and allowing it the utmost probative force, we have no hesitancy in saying that it falls far short of meeting the conditions necessary to make out a case of self-defense according to the rules and authorities referred to herein.
*89On tlie contrary, taking into consideration tbe position' of tbe deceased in tbe wagon, and defendant’s position when be fired, whether on bis mnle, as tbe State’s witnesses testify, or on the ground, as defendant himself states, and accepting tbe defendant’s own testimony as to bis means and opportunity for avoiding, without danger to himself, tbe necessity of slaying tbe deceased, we are unable to reach any other conclusion but that tbe question was simply, narrowed down to tbe choice, on defendant’s part, of murdering tbe deceased or turning loose a “wild and skittish mule,” and that tbe defendant elected to take tbe life of Wilder and bold on to bis mule. He must now abide by tbe consequences tbe law attaches to bis rash and wicked act. — Squire v. State, 87 Ala. 114.
All tbe exceptions, shown by tbe record, predicated on tbe law of self-defense might have been overruled, on bis own testimony.
Charge numbered eighteen is abstract. Tbe bill of exceptions fails to disclose any testimony to which it can be referred. It is also erroneous because it invades tbe province of tbe jury. It is altogether with tbe jury wliat weight they will give to tbe testimony of a witness who is shown to have made contradictory statements.
We have carefully considered all tbe rulings of tbe court to which exceptions were reserved, as well as tbe entire record, and find no reversible error. Tbe judgment and sentence of tbe Circuit Court are accordingly affirmed.
Affirmed.