Branch v. State

118 So. 13, 96 Fla. 307
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 20, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 118 So. 13 (Branch v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Branch v. State, 118 So. 13, 96 Fla. 307 (Fla. 1928).

Opinion

*309 Ellis, C. J.

The plaintiff in error was convicted of the murder of his father. The jury reccommended mercy, so the sentence was life imprisonment. He seeks a reversal of the jurgment on writ of error.

An examination of the “transcript of testimony” as reported by the court reporter discloses evidence abundantly sufficient to support the verdict.

The plaintiff in error, who was the son of the man killed, had been attacked by his father early Sunday morning on the 7th of February, 1926. The circumstances occurred in about the following manner: the accused’Johnnie Branch, who lived with his father and mother and their family, arose early and went in the yard to the toilet. His father, the deceased, came to the door of the little house, opened it and struck his son with a stick. The mother of the defendant called to her husband who immediately returned to the house. The defendant left the premises and went to a house some distance away and procured an automatic pistol from an acquaintance. Armed with that weapon he returned to the house, went to his room and began packing his clothes preparatory to leaving, according to his statement. Seeing his father near the front door he went to him and asked why his father had treated him as he did. An altercation occurred between them and the defendant shot his father several times producing wounds in the latter’s body which almost instantly produced death.

It appears that some unpleasantness had existed between the father and the son, who was about twenty-three years old, occasioned by the latter taking money, quite a large sum, from his father and going off to another state with it from which he was brought back by an officer on the father’s complaint.

The defense appeared to have been justifiable homicide because of self defense. There is nothing in the court re *310 porter’s transcript of the testimony upon which to rest the theory that the defendant killed his father while resisting an attempt of the latter to murder the former or to commit any felony upon him, or that the homicide was committed by the defendant in the lawful defense of himself when there existed reasonable ground for his apprehension that his father designed to commit a felony upon him or to do him-some great personal injury and there was imminent danger of such design being accomplished.

There was a conflict between the defendant’s testimony and that of other witnesses as to whether the deceased at the time he was killed by his son had a water glass or a pistol in his right hand.' A shattered water glass was found near the body immediately after the shooting and particles of glass were found in the right hand of the deceased. The defendant, however, said that his father held a pistol in that hand from which he, the defendant, removed it immediately after the shooting. There was some evidence that when the son renewed the conversation in the house with his father the latter made a gesture toward his “back” pocket, the inference being that such a gesture was a threatening one. The jury, however, whose province it was, resolved those differences against the defendant at least in so far as that even if the gesture was made by the deceased it did not under the circumstances afford reasonable ground upon which the accused could entertain apprehension of great bodily injury to himself and imminent danger of its being accomplished. See Collins v. State, 88 Fla. 578, 102 So. R. 880.

A motion was made for a new trial on newly discovered evidence and other grounds which was overruled.

The errors assigned as numbers nine, ten, eleven, twelve, thirteen, fourteen and fifteen relate to the tenth ground of the motion for a new trial on newly discovered evi *311 denee. That ground of the motion relates that Eossell O’Neal and Julian Branch would testify that the deceased “had drawn his gun or weapon upon the defendant before the defendant shot him and that the defendant shot the deceased in his necessary self defense. ’ ’

The latter portion of such proposed evidence would not be permissible as it is solely the province of the jury from the facts in evidence to decide whether the drawing of a “gun” on another under the circumstances constituted reasonable ground to believe that bodily harm was intended by such act to be inflicted upon the defendant and that he had reasonable ground to apprehend imminent danger of its being accomplished. Again, the phrase “had drawn his gun or weapon upon the defendant” is more or less veiled in some obscurity of meaning. What constitutes a drawing of a weapon upon another so that the other has reasonable ground to apprehend its immediate use upon him to justify the taking of life is a question for the jury. The deceased may have “drawn” a weapon, that is to say, taken it from his pocket or procured it from some other place and yet in the circumstances the fact would not have evidenced an intention to use it upon the other. The phrase used in the affidavit contained a subtle insinuation of the motive of the deceased.

It is true that the phrase “He drew his pistol” is a common one but it is equally true that it invariably implies the motive with which it is drawn. To say that one drew his pistol on another implies that he did so with the motive of shooting that other with the weapon. Now by a long line of authorities the rule is well established that a witness is not permitted to testify as to the undisclosed intention or motive of a third person, that the witness must be confined to a statement of facts leaving it to the jury to draw the proper inferences as to what were the *312 party’s intentions or motives. See Dixon v. State, 13 Fla., 636; Hodge v. State, 26 Fla. 11, 7 So. R. 593.

The same rule which obtains in construing a motion for a sontinuance in a criminal case that it should be scanned with more care than in a civil case obtains in construing a motion for a new trial on newly discovered eveidence. The latter are looked upon by the courts with distrust and disfavor. The evidence must have been discovered since the former trial; the defendant must have used due diligence to procure it on the former trial; the evidence proposed must be material to the issue; it must go to the merits of the cause and not merely to impeach the character of a witness; it must not be cumulative and it must be such that in another trial it will produce an opposite result on the merits. See Howard v. State, 36 Fla. 21, 17 So. R. 84; Mitchell v. State, 43 Fla. 584, 31 So. R. 242; Robinson v. State, 50 Fla. 115, 39 So. R. 465; Herndon v. State, 73 Fla. 451, 74 So. R. 511.

The evidence in this case raises no grave doubt as to the defendant’s guilt, therefore the rule should not be relaxed. See Adams v. State, 55 Fla. 1, 46 So. R. 152.

The affidavits in support of the motion and those offered against it are not contained in the bill of exceptions. They perhaps should not therefore be considered as they were purely matters in pais and constituted no part of the record. The Act of 1927 Chap. 12019 was intended however to cure imperfections in making up transcripts of the records of causes tried in court but its language is by no means clear. A motion for a new trial is not part of the record of a cause nor are the affidavits offered in support of it.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Geissler v. State
90 So. 3d 941 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2012)
Lee v. State
729 So. 2d 975 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1999)
Shiver v. State
564 So. 2d 1158 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1990)
Clark v. State
379 So. 2d 97 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1979)
Burch v. State
360 So. 2d 462 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1978)
Holland v. State
359 So. 2d 28 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1978)
Milton v. State
192 So. 219 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1939)
Holstun & Son v. Embry
169 So. 400 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1936)
Rowe v. State
163 So. 22 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1935)
Smith v. State
158 So. 91 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1934)
Lee v. State
155 So. 123 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1934)
Jarvis v. State
156 So. 310 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1934)
Mungin v. State
147 So. 577 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1933)
St. Andrews Bay Lumber Co. v. Bernard
143 So. 159 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 So. 13, 96 Fla. 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/branch-v-state-fla-1928.