Scott v. State

56 Miss. 287
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 56 Miss. 287 (Scott v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott v. State, 56 Miss. 287 (Mich. 1879).

Opinion

SiMRALL, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff in error, who was indicted for murder, placed his defence on two grounds: First, That he was justified in striking the fatal blow, “ in the lawful defence of his person, where there was reasonable ground to apprehend a design in the accused to take his life, or to do him some great personal injury, and there was imminent danger of such design being accomplished.” Code, sect. 2631. Second, That the killing happened “ by accident or misfortune, in the heat of passion, upon a sudden and sufficient provocation ; or upon a sudden combat, without any undue advantage being taken, and without any dangerous weapon being used, and not done in a-cruel or unusual manner.” Sect. 2632.

Requests of instruction to the jury were propounded on both theories; some were given, others refused or modified. Complaint is made in this court of the charges given for the State, and the refusal or modification of those asked by the defendant. We think that the instructions given by the court, in place of those prepared by the defendant’s counsel, announce the law of self-defence in conformity to the decisions [289]*289of this court. It is no just ground of complaint that the Nisi Prius judge should carefully scrutinize the requests of charges to the jury, aud, to insure an accurate and complete statement of the law, should give them in language of his own selection. He is charged with the duty of correctly stating the law-applicable to the testimony on all the points suggested by the written requests of counsel. If the language of counsel is obscure or equivocal, or if the law is not accurately and fully set forth, it would perhaps better subserve the ends of justice, in many cases, to amend the requests than to refuse them outright.

It has been uniformly ruled in this State that, to justify a homicide on the plea of self-defence, under the statute (Code, 2631), there must be something in the acts and conduct of the deceased indicating a present intention to kill, or do some great personal injury to the slayer, and imminent danger of such intention being accomplished. The justification arises out of the perilous situation of the slayer, and a necessity to take life in order to extricate himself from imminent, present, and urgent danger to his own life, or great personal injury. The circumstances must be such as that a reasonable man so situated would have just grounds to believe that the peril is so urgent and impending as that there is no reasonable mode of extrication except to kill his adversary. These circumstances must consist of acts, conduct, and behavior which, to a reasonable man, evince the “ design” or “ intent ” to commit a felony upon, take the life of, or do some great bodily injury to the slayer. Mere fear of such design, or apprehension that it will be put in execution, will not make out the defence, unless the present execution of the design is manifested by some act, conduct, or behavior of the deceased which would evince to a reasonable person that the peril was urgent and impending, and to slay was necessary to protect his own life, or his person from great injury. The slayer may act on “appearances,” but such “ appearances ” must indicate the danger, — as, if the deceased presents a “ fire-arm,” directed at the per[290]*290son of the accused, in range likely to produce death or great injury. If the “ reality ” was that the gun or pistol was not loaded, and the purpose was merely to intimidate the accused, he would he justified in killing, because the acts and conduct of the deceased would evince to a reasonable mind the presence of an urgent and impending danger.

The instructions substituted by the court conformed to these principles. Dyson’s Case, 26 Miss. 362; Wesley’s Case, 37 Miss. 327; Evans’s Case, 44 Miss. 762; Head’s Case, 44 Miss. 231.

Those granted for the State were correct.

The defendant offered to prove by one Harris that, in the evening of the day of the combat, he saw on the left side of the head of the accused a bruise which seemed to have been, freshly made. The testimony was excluded because the counsel for the accused admitted that he could not make proof by other evidence that the bruise was received in the combat.

Every event that occurs has its proper place and relation to a complication of circumstances, and has connection with the concurrent facts of which it forms a part.

When we investigate a particular act, alleged to have been criminal, the mind naturally craves knowledge of every thing that transpired at the time and place, what was said and done by the parties involved, so that we may be possessed of all the material that would in any wise aid in forming a judgment of the act, whether criminal or not, and if culpable, to what degree.

It may be said, therefore, that every circumstance and occurrence, however trivial in itself, which forms a part of the res gestee may be consulted, and may contribute somewhat to form a correct judgment of the character of the act.

Whenever the fact offered in evidence is or may have been part of the transaction for which the accused is on trial,.and comes within the rule of the res gestee, the single question presented to the court is one of relevancy or pertinency, and not of force or value as testimony.

[291]*291No matter hovf slight the inference may be that can be drawn from a particular fact, it is competent to be considered as an element of the entire concrete of facts from which the déduction is to be made.

The defence most relied on, and haying the greatest weight in the evidence, was that the accused struck the fatal blow to protect himself from an impending blow about being inflicted upon him with a bludgeon, which, in the hand of the deceased, was “ dangerous.”

The defendant was entitled to prove any circumstance that might be calculated, however feebly, to sustain his hypothesis.

The circumstances of the homicide might have been such that the “bruise,” although inflicted by the deceased, could not and ought not to have had any influence with the jury; and although excluded, the verdict, on well-settled principles, would not be set aside, by this court. Whether, therefore, the exclusion of the testimony is a sufficient reason, or not, why the verdict should be set aside, depends on the case made against the defendant by the testimony.

The witness Ross (for the State) described the deceased, at the time he was stricken by the accused, as making no attempt to use the stick, which he casually had in his hand, on the person of the accused.

The witness. Curry, for the defendant, represented the deceased as having the bludgeon impending in the air, and descending on the head of the accused, which was warded off with the left hand, at which moment the accused struck with the saw. This witness described the deceased as rather taking the initiative in the combat, and the accused as meeting force with force. The conflict between these witnesses is palpable and irreconcilable in three respects: first, as to which party first made the demonstration of force ; second, as to what was the attitude and action of the deceased at the moment the accused struck with the hand-saw• third, as to the character of the bludgeon in the hands of the deceased. Ross says that [292]

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Bluebook (online)
56 Miss. 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-state-miss-1879.