Boykin v. State
Boykin v. State
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
At the April term of the Clarke county circuit court the appellant was jointly indicted with his aunt, Mrs. Garrison, for the murder of Marvin Long. At the next term of said court the case was nol-prossed as to Mrs. Garrison. At the March term, 1905, the defendant was tried and convicted of manslaughter, and sentenced to ten years in the penitentiary, from which conviction he prosecutes this appeal, and mainly assigns as error the refusal of on© instruction requested by him, the modification of four others, and the granting of two instructions requested by the state.
We think the court erred in refusing the instruction asked by appellant. The evidence for appellant shows that he had forbidden the removal of the sugar cane which had been banked on his premises by Jackson Long (who was his tenant the year before, and the father of deceased) until the accounts between them had been settled, and had posted a notice on the cane bank to that effect; that, on the day of the killing, said Long and his son Marvin went upon the premises of appellant with their wagon to remove this cane situated thereon; that, seeing them coming after it, appellant, who was working in the field near said cane with one McQuirter, went to the cane bank, accompanied by his aunt, Mrs: Garrison, and said McQuirter, and arrived there about the time (perhaps a little before) the Longs did; that, when the two parties first met, they spoke, and there was no manifestation of any unfriendly feeling existing between them. Jackson Long, the only eyewitness for the state, says that when he arrived at the cane pile he (quoting) “noticed a board on it with a note on it, and I asked Boy-kin what that note meant, and Boykin said, 'It is to forbid you or any one from taking that cane until you pay me for that sack of meal;’ ” that witness denied owing appellant; and that, when appellant repeated and reiterated that he did, witness said, “You are a liar,” and walked up to the appellant, and, while the colloquy was going on, witness (quoting) “got off
We deem the modifications made by the court of instructions Nos. 1, 3, 19, and 20 for appellant erroneous. We think the charges, as framed and asked by appellant’s counsel, correctly announced the principles of law as applied to the competent, pertinent evidence, and his theory of the case; and, as held in Lamar v. State, 64 Miss., 428, and other cases, this was a right which the law guaranteed him, and the modifying, restrictive clauses inserted by the court, by injecting other propositions into them, might, and probably did, serve to confuse and mislead the minds of the jury, and to deprive the defendant of a clean, clear-cut enunciation of the law as applicable to his theory of self-defense. As this case must be reversed, we will only add this observation to this branch of it: That, where the prosecution desires a modification of the principles of law as set forth in defendant’s instructions, the better practice is for it to ask the court for a separate instruction. Mask v. State, 36 Miss., 77; Archer v. Sinclair, 49 Miss., 343.
In our opinion, the fifth instruction granted the state is • plainly and palpably erroneous, in failing to embody the idea
Nor do we think the charge given the state numbered 6 in the record should have been granted, in view of the facts of this case. It instructs the jury that if the defendant was cutting Jackson Long with a knife, which was a deadly weapon, not in his necessary self-defense, then Marvin Long had the lawful right to attack the defendant while he was so cutting Jackson Long with a knife, even .to the taking of his life. Aside from any other objection, it is clearly subject to the criticism that it assumes as true a material fact prejudicial to defendant, of which there is no evidence — to wit, that the defendant was cutting Jackson Long with a knife when Marvin Long attacked defendant. Now, Jackson Long, the only witness for the state relative to this point, swears that the combat, and even scuffle, between himself and defendant had entirely and completely ended, and that defendant had turned him loose and quit, not only before defendant cut deceased, but even before deceased had alighted from the wagon. On the other hand, the appellant and his two witnesses swear in effect, if not in so many words, that appellant did not commence using his knife or cutting Jackson Long until after deceased had gotten off of the wagon, grabbed the stick, and begun and continued to strike Boykin with it. So that, in either view, the instruction assumes the existence of a state of facts which the evidence both for the state and the defendant shows was not proven. .And this court has settled beyond cavil or controversy, by repeated adjudications, that an instruction, in the absence of evidence upon which to predicate it, is erroneous, and that such an instruction, not based upon evidence, is fatally erroneous, if by any means it might mislead the jury. Oliver v. State, 39 Miss., 527; Frank v. State, Id., 705; Fore v. State, 75 Miss., 727 (23 South. Rep., 710); Cooper v. State, 31 South. Rep., 580; Smith v. State, 75 Miss., 542 (23 South. Rep., 260); Spradley v. State (Miss.), 31 South. Rep., 534; Rogers v. State,
As shown by the evidence and the bill of exceptions taken on the motion for the new trial, objection was also made to said fifth and sixth instructions on account of the circumstances under which they were granted. The prosecuting attorney presented the instructions to the court for the first time during the closing argument for the defendant, and the court gave them. Counsel for defendant testify that they were in utter ignorance of their having been granted until after they had concluded their arguments, and that their attention was called to the same for the first time when the district attorney began to read them to the jury in his closing argument, whereupon they objected to his reading said instructions on the ground that they were given by the court while counsel for defendant was making the closing argument, and were never submitted to them, and they knew nothing of their existence, which objection was overruled by the court, and the district attorney proceeded to argue and comment on them without even offering to defendant’s counsel the right or opportunity to reply thereto or to discuss said instructions, to all of which due exceptions were taken. This evidence brings the case squarely within Montgomery v. State, 85 Miss., 331 (s.c., 37 South. Rep., 835), where this court condemned exactly the same practice, and reversed and remanded the case on account thereof. The facts in the instant case make it even stronger than in the Montgomery case; for there, when the defendant’s counsel objected to the reading of the instruction, the state’s counsel offered him the right to answer it or reply thereto. As this is a question of importance, which arises constantly in the trial of causes, and which, if the proper practice is not observed, will necessitate frequent reversals, and the consequent entailment of costs on the state and other litigants, we take occasion to commend and reaffirm the announcement of the Montgomery case relative to' the proper prac
It -residís that the Gase must be reversed and remanded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- William Boykin v. State of Mississippi
- Cited By
- 7 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. CRIMINAL Law. Murder. Trespasser. Instruction. Where the deceased was hilled while aiding a tenant to remove agricultural products from the leased premises, in violation of defendant’s rights, and over the protest of defendant, the landlord, he was a trespasser, and it was error to refuse defendant an instruction to that effect. 2. Same. Self-defense. Where defendant killed deceased in a difficulty after deceased and his father had made an attempt to remove sugar cane to which they were not entitled from defendant’s land, it was error for the court to refuse to charge that, if deceased and his father were trespassers, defendant was entitled to use such reasonable force as might be necessary to prevent the trespass; that they were not entitled to resist such force, and, if the jury believed they employed means in resisting such force which were likely to produce death or inflict great bodily harm on defendant, he was entitled to meet such resistance, and if in so doing he wounded deceased, from which wound he died, the killing was justifiable. 3. Same. In a prosecution for homicide, an instruction that if deceased assaulted defendant with a deadly weapon, “and not in necessary self-defense,” defendant was entitled to repel such assault by the use of a deadly weapon, and if, in repelling the same, defendant wounded deceased by cutting him with a knife, from which deceased died, then the killing was justifiable, was improperly modified by inserting the words quoted. 4. Same. In a prosecution for homicide it was error for the court to modify a requested instruction that if deceased’s father began an assault on defendant with his fist, and, while thus assaulting defendant, deceased began beating him with a deadly weapon “at a time when defendant was not cutting [deceased] with his knife,” then defendant was entitled to defend himself against such attacks, even to the point of taking the life of either or both deceased and his father, if actually or apparently necessary to save his own life or limb, etc., by inserting the words quoted. 5. Same. Witnesses. Instrruetion. Disregard testimony. An instruction authorizing the jury to disregard the entire testimony of any witness who had willfully and corruptly testified falsely to any fact in the ease, without reference to whether such fact was immaterial, collateral, incompetent, or irrelevant, was error. 6. Same. Where, in a prosecution for homicide, the only witness for the state testified that the combat between witness and defendant had ended before defendant cut deceased, while defendant’s witnesses testified that defendant did not commence using his knife or cutting such witness until after deceased had begun and continued to strike defendant with a stick, it was error for the court to charge that if defendant was cutting the witness with a knife, which was a deadly weapon, not in his necessary self-defense, then deceased was entitled to attack defendant while he was so cutting witness with a knife, even to taking his life. 7. Same. Instructions not to be gimen, out of time. Where certain instructions requested hy the state during defendant’s closing argument were not submitted to defendant’s attorneys, and they were given no opportunity either to refer or reply to them, it was error for the court to give them.