Wilson v. State
Wilson v. State
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff in error was found guilty of murder in the first degree, and has been sentenced to be hung. There are but two questions presented to us on the writ of error:
1. The defendant before making a statement of his defense to the jury offered to prove by one Lee Wood,
The doctrine, that threats of violence by the deceased against the accused are admissible, where the question whether the deceased or the accused commenced the encounter is in any doubt, even though the threats were nor, brought to the knowledge of the accused, was recognized in Bond vs. State, 21 Fla., 739, and Garner vs. State, 28 Fla., 113, 9 South. Rep., 835, and is affirmed by the authorities cited in those opinions. Vida also Wharton’s Cr. Ev., sec. 757; Johnson vs. State, 54 Miss., 431; Hawthorne vs. State, 61 Miss., 749 ; Johnson vs. State, 66 Miss., 189. The principle of the admission of threats, under such circumstances, is that they tend to show that it was the intention of the deceased at the time of the meeting, to attack the accused, or that he was seeking the latter’s life, and hence they tend to prove that the
In Wiggins vs. People, 93 U. S., 460, the deceased was sitting on the steps of the building, with his face resting on his hands, as the accused and Dobson, the only witness to the encounter, approached. Dobson also said that the defendant jumped to his rear and immediately the firing began; that he did not know and could not tell who fired the first shot; that at the first report witness turned around and saw the blaze of a second shot from a pistol in the hands of defendant, and said: “Jack, don’t-kill him,” and then the defendant jumped on the steps and fired another shot-, the deceased then raising his hands and crying: “Don’t kill me; I am unarmed.” That immediately after the firing ceased, defendant stooped down as if to pick up something, and, when he raised up, had something in his left hand, but witness could not tell whether it was a pistol or not, and at the same time
In People vs. Scroggins, 37 Cal., 676, the deceased tore down the fence to defendant’s field in the latter’s presence, and defendant drew him out of the vehicle he and his family were in, and a scuffle ensued, and a third person coming up, took from deceased and gave to his wife a pistol, which deceased had placed in his breast pocket the day before, he never having been in the habit of carrying a pistol. Deceased then drove off, but shortly he stopped, and'rising in an angry manner, threatened to tear down the fence and shoot defendant, and then rode ■ on further' and stopped and began to tear down the fence again. The defendant then mounted a horse, and, passing the deceased, went to a neighboring house where he borrowed a shot gun, with which he. returned to the place where deceased had broken down the fence last. The latter had gone, and was then driving through the field, and the defendant pursued him, having the shot gun lying across-wise in front of him, and on overtaking deceased and coming within range shot him, and he fell from the vehicle, and the pistol was found on the ground, near to the deceased, by those who immediately came to his assistance. One of the physicians testified that “his right arm must have been raised, from the position of .shot, at the time of receiving it.” The widow
Myers vs. State, 02 Ala., b!)9, was a case in which on the day of the homicide the deceased and accused and others met at the house of one Patterson, who testified that he and deceased were conversing outside of the house when defendant came out and asked deceased about some locks, lie gives their conversation, the defendant making the first offensive remark, and also states that defendant complained to deceased about the way the latter had treated him as to the boat the day before, and the deceased replied that if he had been “over there’’ when defendant threatened to kill him yesterday, one of them would have gone to the lower woild “right there”; and that thereupon defendant replied that deceased should have a trial of it then, and got up from where he was sitting. Patterson then told them they must stop, and not have any fuss there; and he further testified that he heard several licks behind him, and on looking around he sawT defendant cut deceased just over the right ear with a pocket knife, and saw deceased stagger and fall. It was also shown that shortly after the difficulty the deceased’s hickory stick was found near where he had fallen. It was admitted that one Edney Walton, if present, would testify that on the morning of the homicide deceased came bjT her house with a hickory stick, about an inch in diameter, in his
The Supreme Court of Mississippi,' in Johnson vs. State, 54 Miss., 430, recognized the doctrine stated above as to the admissibility of uncommunicated threats, but held them inadmissible upon the facts of the ca.se. The main witness hearing the report of a gun, went to the front of his house and saw the smoke of a gun in front of deceased’s house, ten or fifteen yards from deceased’s wood yard,. passing over the cotton stalks in a patch of rank cotton near the wood
The above cases, considering their respective circumstances, illustrate in different aspects the doctrine under discussion; and the conclusion we have reached as to the cause before us is that the Circuit Judge erred in holding that no predicate had been laid for the introduction of evidence of threats, though uneomnmnicated. The exact attitude of the accused and deceased at the time of the tiring is not shown, even if it can be said to be known by any one. The wife of the deceased ivas in bed. Of course she could not see the defendant, and knew nothing of his bearing at the time, he came in sight of the deceased as the latter stood at the front door. That she was looking at the deceased at that moment, or when the pistol shot was
In reaching the conclusion announced in the preceding paragraph we are not unmindful that one’s home is the castle of defense for-himself and his family, and that an assault upon it with an intent to injure him or any of them, may be met in the same way as an assault upon himself or any of them, and that he may meet the assailant at the threshold and use the necessary force for his and their protection against the threatened invasion and harm; State vs. Patterson, 45 Vt., 308; Pond vs. People, 8 Mich., 150; People vs. Coughlin, 67 Mich., 466; Morgan vs. Durfee, 69 Mo., 469; State vs. Peacock, 40 Ohio St., 333; Stoneman vs. Commonwealth, 25 Gratt., 887; but the purpose and necessity for the conclusion we have reached is the ascertainment of the attitude of the parties at the time they came together, and to this end it is the duty of the court to admit all relevant.testimony, in order that the jury may discharge their exclusive functions as to its credibility and -weight. Moreover this is not a case in which the statement of the accused is the sole
II. The only other point to be considered relates to a charge to the jury. The defendant requested the judge to charge the jury: If the jury believes from the evidence that at the time the defendant shot Hollis Wilson, he had reason to believe that said Hollis Wilson intended to kill him, or to do him great bodily harm, and that if the prisoner believed that such shooting was necessary to save his own life, or to protect him from some great bodily harm, then the defendant was justifiable in shooting, and the jury should find him not guilty. The judge gave the instruction, not, however, merely as it was offered, but adding thereto the following: But if you believe from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant went to the house of the deceased and commenced and brought on the difficulty with the deceased in his own house, and shot him down and killed him, without the deceased having first assaulted him with a deadly weapon, putting the defendant in reasonable fear of his own life, or of any great bodily harm to himself, then you must find him guilty as charged in the indictment.
It is urged that there was error in not giving the charge as it was when offered, without any addition, and also that the addition is not good law.
The judgment is reversed, and the ■ cause is remanded for a new trial.
Justice Mabry dissents from the conclusion announced in the first sub-division of the above opinion.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Miles Wilson, in Error v. The State of Florida, in Error
- Syllabus
- 1. Threats of violence by the deceased against the accused, though not communicated to the latter, ai-e admissible as evidence where there is any doubt as to who began the encounter. They tend to show that it was the intention of the deceased at the time of the meeting to attack the accused, and hence tend to prove that the former brought on the conflict, and are relevant evidence. If all the evidence is to the effect that the defendant was the aggressor, they are not admissible. 2. The question of the admissibility of uncommunicated threats as evidence touching the issue who began the encounter is one for the court, its function being merely to .decide whether or not, viewing the entire evidence at the time the offer to prove them is made, there is any doubt as to who began the encounter. Their weight when introduced, is for the jury’s determination, upon considering them m connection with all the other evidence. 3. The wife of the deceased was the only witness present at the time of the homicide. She testified that defendant came to deceased’s home, a small log house with two rooms, in the morning about day light, before sun-rise, and called the deceased and shot through the back door; deceased got up out of bed immediately, and put on his pants and opened the front door and asked defendant where he was; the latter replied that he was “around here,” and then he walked around to the front door and said: “Hollis, I want my money; I have got to have it,” and also asked him what that was he had in his hand, and as soon as he said this the pistol fired, and deceased exclaimed that he was shot, and ran into his room to his wife, and then ran out after defendant. That deceased did not have any pistol that she knew of, and again that he had no weapon when he went out, nor any the night before; that she did not get out of bed until defendant had shot deceased: .and that it was just a moment from the time Miles fired into the back door until deceased opened the front door. She also testified to a white handled pistol being on the front piazza, which she said was not her husband’s. It was not indisputable, viewing the entire evidence, whether the accused shot with a white handle or a black handle pistol, or that the accused ever had a white handled pistol. There was evidence that they had gambled the evening before at deceased’s, house, and had quarreled, the deceased refusing to play longer, and the defendant had threatened to kill the deceased if he did not give defendant his money back or play with him until he broke him. Held, (Mabry J., dissenting), that the case was one in which the testimony did not show the exact attitude of the parties at the time they came in sight of each other, and that the trial judge erred in holding that no predicate had been laid for the admission of any threats by the deceased against the accused. 4. A person’s dwelling houre is a castle of defense for himself and his family; and an assault upon it with intent to injure him or any of them, may be met in the same way as an assault upon himself or am' of them, and he may meet the assailant at the. threshold and use the force necessary for his or their protec tion against the threatened invasion and harm. 5. Where the force of an instruction which is requested and is proper in itself, is not changed by an addition made to it by the court, there is no error in the mere fact of making the addition. C, There must have been not only the belief, but also reasonable, ground for the accused to believe that, at the time of killing the deceased, he was in imminent or immediate danger of his ’ life or great bodily harm from the deceased, to excuse, the homicide on the ground of self-defense. 7. The words, “first done some apparently hostile act towards the defendant,\’ suggested as a safe substitute