State v. Bright
State v. Bright
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
In March, 1910, the defendant Travis Bright shot and killed his father Hose Bright. On his' trial in the Court of General Sessions for Cherokee ■county he set up the plea of self-defense and -was convicted of manslaughter.
*230 The case is singular in that there is little if any material difference in the testimony of the witnesses for the State and for the defense. Hose Bright was a quiet and amiable man when sober, but aggressive and violent when drinking. For a day or two before his death he had been on a spree, and had threatened and struck his wife and the defendant. On the day of the homicide his wife, after being struck by him, fled from him, and in her flight went to the house of N. P. Smart, where the defendant was lying in bed somewhat unwell. Mrs. Bright did not stop in the room where defendant was, but as she passed through cried out: “O Lordy, don’t let him get to me. He is going bn kill me.” The defendant testified that he then got out of bed, took a pistol from a bureau drawer and sat down in a chair, holding the pistol in his lap. The following account of the defendant of the killing is in agreement with that of the other witnesses : “Did you hear any noise from your father out there? No, sir. I didn’t know he was out there, and he says, when he came in he commenced cursing me and he says to me, T want what you owe me.’ I says, ‘All right, pa, I will give it to you this morning-,’ and I says, ‘Pa, I want what you owe me.’ He says, ‘Owe you — you God— I don’t owe you anything.’ And he struck at me and I threw up my hand and knocked the lick off, and the next time he struck at me right along there (indicating) and knocked me over in the chair. And as I rose I shot him and he threw his hands so and says, and he staggered and says, ‘Lordy, Trate, you have killed me.’ And I says to him, ‘Pa, I had it to do.’ ”
The defendant further testified that his father threatened to kill him but struck with his hand only, and he saw no weapon at that time, though he had seen a knife in his father’s hand on the same evening at defendant’s own house.
*231
“I want counsel to understand the trend that this examination has been taking all along will make it necessary for me to charge that jury, when I come to charge them, that if the defendant, in shooting his father that night, was influenced by any ill treatment of his mother previous to the time of the shooting, that that is malice; so far from'being any cause of justification, it goes to make out the crime of murder.”
“It can serve no possible good purpose whatever under the charge I am going to malee to that jury; I mean just what I am telling you. His duty was to have gone to a *232 peace officer and have him bound over if he was going to injure his mother; not to kill him for it; and I hate to see a man prejudiced in the way he is being done in the view of the law that I entertain and shall present to that jury.”
Taken together, these remarks expressed a positive opinion of the Circuit Judge that the evidence which was offered by the defendant in support of his plea of self-defense and much of which was admitted, tended to prove that the homicide was committed with malice. The question whether the killing was malicious being a vital one in the case, the remarks of the Judge were in violation of the Constitution under the rule laid down in Willis v. Telegraph Co., 73 S. C. 379, 53 S. E. 639; State v. Arnold, 80 S. C. 383, 61 S. E. 891, and Latimer v. General Electric Co., 81 S. C. 374, 62 S. E. 438. It is to be observed, however, that the expression of the opinion of the Judge related to< the element of malice, and the jury by the verdict of manslaughter found for the defendant on the issue of malice. Eor this reason the error is not available to the defendant as a ground of reversal. State v. Robertson, 54 S. C. 147, 31 S. E. 868.
There are numerous exceptions to the charge, but we think all of them except two have been eliminated by the verdict for manslaughter instead of murder, or are based on too great refinement of criticism. 'The conclusion is unavoidable, however, that there must be a new trial for two- errors committed in the charge.
It is the judgment of this Court that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and the cause be remanded to that Court for a new trial.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- State v. Bright.
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- Syllabus
- 1. Under the plea of self-defense, evidence as to hostile attitude of deceased toward defendant and of unreasonable and general threats and as to acts done immediately before the homicide is admissible. 2. Charge. — In expressing his opinion of the competency of threats and of actions of deceased toward his wife and of the conduct of the case by defendant’s attorneys, the Judge violated the constitutional inhibition as to charging on the facts, but as the jury found defendant guilty of manslaughter only, the error is harmless. 3. Ibid. — After stating to the jury their responsible position in a murder case, saying, On the other hand the blood of a fellowman cries out from the ground, a civilized society is demanding protection at our hands today. Every consideration should be extended to the .accused, but it should not be forgotten that there are other lives which may be taken and which probably will be taken or spared, according as we discharge our duties here today, is a charge on the facts. 4. Sede-Devense. — One who kills another makes out the plea of self-defense if he proves by the preponderance of the evidence that when the fatal shot was fired he believed that he was in danger of death or serious bodily harm from his assailant and that it was necessary for him to shoot as he did to save himself from death or serious bodily harm, and that the circumstances were such as to induce that belief and lead to that action by a person of ordinary reason and firmness.