Goff v. State

77 So. 877, 75 Fla. 87
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 18, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 77 So. 877 (Goff 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
Goff v. State, 77 So. 877, 75 Fla. 87 (Fla. 1918).

Opinion

Jones, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff in error and one Bill Roberts were indicted and tried jointly for murder in the first degree of one Mack Paul. The plaintiff in error was convicted of murder in the second degree and sentenced to life imprisonment, and Bill Roberts was acquitted. From such judgment and sentence the plaintiff in error seeks relief here by writ of error.

There are seven assignments of error, and. these will be considered in the order of their presentation'.

The first assignment is that “The court erred in refusing to give the special written charge numbered one requested by the defendant, as follows: 'In arriving at [89]*89your verdict in this case, if you believe the defendant, seeing what he saw, knowing what he knew and believing he was in imminent danger of serious bodily harm as any reasonable and prudent person would have believed under similar circumstances, cut the deceased, as he honestly believed in defense of himself, then you should find him not guilty. It matters not whether the life of Goff was in danger or not, yet if the danger appeared real to him, as it would have to any reasonably prudent person under similar circumstances, and the defendant acted under an honest belief he was in serious danger, then he had the right to protect himself even to the extent of taking life.’ ”

Counsel for plaintiff in error in his argument here seems to have overlooked that portion of the court’s general charge which embraces the law of self defense more fully and correctly than does the réquested instruction. The court in his general charge instructed the jury that “a man is justified in taking life when without being himself the aggressor in bringing on the difficulty he is, or reasonably believes himself to be in present imminent danger of death, or of receiving some great bodily injury at the hands of another, and his acts are, or reasonably seem to be, necessary to protect himself from such imminent danger. In order that he may be so justified, it is not essential that there he real danger, if there be only apparent danger, but the appearances are such that a reasonably prudent and cautious man in the same situation would believe the danger real, and the defendants did so believe they would be justified in taking such steps and using such force and means, and only such force and means as reasonably seemed, to be necessary to avert such real or apparent danger.” The requested instruction was properly refused. Jarvis v. State, 73 Fla. 635, 74 South. Rep. 794.

[90]*90The second assignment of error is that the court erred in refusing to give special charge requested No. 2, as follows: “In this case the State relies on circumstantial evidence for conviction, and while such evidence maybe relied upon, yet if the circumstances are as consistent with innocence as with guilt, you should find defendant not guilty.” There was no error in the-refusal to give this instruction because the - court gave in the general charge full and correct instructions upon the law of circumstantial evidence. Ciprian v. State, 73 Fla. 858, 74 South. Rep. 980.

The third and fourth assignments of error are -based upon the ruling of the court in refusing to permit the witness Dr. Dowling to answer the following questions propounded by defendant:

“(3). Didn’t you receive a message as being sfent from Goff to you?

“(4) Do you know whether or not Goff went up to that house to have these people phone to you ?”

The fifth and sixth assignments are based upon the refusal of the court to permit the defendant Goff to answer the following questions propounded to him' by his-counsel :•

“(5) After the cutting what happened?

“(6) Will -you state whether or not immediately after the cutting which you say you had to do to protect yourself you made any effort to get a doctor there to the man who was cut ?”

The testimony sought by the questions embraced in the third, fourth and fifth assignments was to show some act of defendant Goff. Before testimony of such acts could be received in favor of defendant it should have been shown that such act was a part of the res gestae. The doctor testified that he reached the scene of the difficulty [91]*91forty or fifty minutes after the difficulty was said to have occurred. It is not shown what time elapsed after the difficulty before the message inquired about was sent, nor what defendant was doing during the intervening time. The question “After the difficulty what happened,” was too indefinite, as it referred to no particular event or circumstance, and too general as to time in which something may or may not have happened. When the time intervening between a homicide and the defendant’s acts or statements does not appear, such statement or act cannot be admitted as a part of the res gestae. 6 Ency. of Evidence 615 text and citations.

It was held in State v. Garrand, 5 Ore. 216, “To make declarations a part of the res gestae they must be contemporaneous with the main fact, but in order to be com temporaneous they are not required to be precisely concurrent in time. If the declaration springs out of the transaction, if it elucidates it, if it is voluntary and spontaneous and if it is made at a time so near to the main transaction as reasonably to preclude the idea of deliberate design it is then to be regarded as contemporaneous,” and each case must of course depend upon its facts and the trial court must' exercise a sound discretion in determining whether the facts bring the offered evidence within the rule. Lambright v. State, 34 Fla. 564, 16 South. Rep. 582. Applying this rule to the question embraced in the sixth assignment of error and the testimony sought by the question, it is clear that the court erred in not permitting the defendait to answer it. The defendant had testified that he and the deceased had cursed each other and deceased had knocked him down. The defendant said “I got up and I said ‘you’re larger-than I am and a better man and I will take it’ and I turned to go home.” He testified further that he had [92]*92walked away thirty or forty feet when the deceased overtook him, caught hold of his coat, threatened to' cut him and “popped his knife in me,” and that he then cut deceased because he was afraid of deceased and to save his own life. That Bill Roberts walked up to where they were fighting and pushed them apart. The testimony of the defendant tends to show that he was not the aggressor in bringing on the difficulty; on the contrary he was making an effort to avoid further trouble with deceased, and if upon being separated the defendant saw that he had seriously wounded deceased and immediately made an effort to secure the services of a physician to care for the wounded: man, he should have been permitted to testify to his acts as throwing some light upon the question as to who was the aggressor, and his state of mind during and immediately after the difficulty. However, the error was harmless because the defendant during his cross-examination testified without objection that “I turned and went to Elbert O’Briens to phone for the doctor.” Bill Roberts also testified that he said to defendant, “John you cut him, go after the doctor for him, you and John Hawkins, and John commenced crying and said ‘I had it to, but I can’t do it;’ and I said 'Well God damn it, go and get him,’ and he turned and went after the doctor, went off in a trot.”

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Bluebook (online)
77 So. 877, 75 Fla. 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goff-v-state-fla-1918.