State v. Bowers

43 S.E. 656, 65 S.C. 207, 1903 S.C. LEXIS 15
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 11, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 43 S.E. 656 (State v. Bowers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Bowers, 43 S.E. 656, 65 S.C. 207, 1903 S.C. LEXIS 15 (S.C. 1903).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Chiee Justice Pope.

The question presented by this appeal is whether the Circuit Judge, his Honor, Judge Gage, in his charge to the jury, correctly set forth the law of this State defining the crime of manslaughter, of which the defendant was convicted by the jury. It is but just to the presiding Judge that his entire charge should be reproduced. It is as follows: “Gentlemen of the jury: I am not going to say much to you in this case, because it is not .necessary for me to say much. The features of this case lie within a very narrow compass. If you are satisfied that Alexander Bowers killed James Howard, then you have only one inquiry to make, and that is, How did he come to kill him? It is unlawful for one man to kill another. So that your next inquiry is, How did Alexander Bowers come to kill James Howard ? I charge you that if he killed him in self-defense, you will acquit him or excuse him. Now self-defense means, gentlemen, just what these words imply. It means that when one man kills another of necessity. It exists when one man finds himself in a position of peril — imminent peril either to himself or .to another; in peril of his life, or in peril of serious bodily harm; and where he finds himself in that position, and strikes to save his life, or strikes to save his body from serious harm, or to save the life of another person, or to save another person from serious bodily harm, the *209 law constitutes that self-defense; and if you believe the defendant in this case did that, then you should render a verdict of not guilty. If you find out that he did not do that, gentlemen, then you will disregard self-defense, and go one step farther, and see if there is another defense, and that is what is called defense of the castle. That means this, gentlemen: it is different from self-defense. If a man has a home, a residence, and living in it, and another man undertakes to drive him out, he has a right to kill him to keep him out. That is the law. When a man enters his home and another man comes tó take him out, go into the house by force, break in, any occupant of the house has a right to kill him and keep him out. Now, if you believe that state of facts, you should render a verdict of not guilty; if you don’t believe that state of facts, you should disregard it and render a verdict of guilty; there is where the office of the jury comes in. Gentlemen, I can tell you what the law is, but it is for the jury to say what the facts are. It is for the jury to say whether or not Alexander Bowers struck on thát day, if he did strike, to save his life or his body from serious harm, or to save his wife and children from serious harm. I tell you, if he did, you will acquit him. Whether or not he did, is a matter for you. I tell you, if Alexander Bowers struck to keep the man from entering his house, the law- acquits him. Whether or not he did do that, is a question for you.

“If you decide both of these defenses against Alexander Bowers, then you go one step further, and inquire out of what sort of heart he did this killing. I tell you, if he did it out of a malicious heart, sinful heart, it is murder, and the penalty is death. You might ask yourselves how are you to determine upon a human heart ? That is the province of a jury every day. Just like a surgeon looks at a sick man’s tongue * * * so jurymen look upon a man’s hands and tell what motive prompted his heart. I tell you, if Alexander Bowers struck this blow out of a heart full of sin and malice, that is murder. Whether or not he had that sort of heart, is a matter for you. If you are satisfied that he did have that *210 sort of heart, render a verdict of guilty; if you have reasonable doubt about it, write a verdict of not guilty of murder. If you acquit him of murder, then your next inquiry is: is he guilty of manslaughter? The difference between manslaughter and murder is like the difference between day and night. Murder is, as I told you, where a man strikes out of a hot heart; heart full of passion, full of anger and yet not full of sin. If he strikes out of that sort of heart, the law denominates it manslaughter, and the penalty is imprisonment for a series of years. That is all I have to say to you except about the matter of reasonable doubt. Alexander Bowers is put on trial here for a serious crime, and it is the business of the State in every case to satisfy the jury beyond a reasonable doubt of a man’s guilt. Now, reasonable doubt, gentlemen, means just what the words imply. If I should tell you what an unreasonable man was, you would know what I meant; if I should tell you what a reasonable man was, you would know what I meant. Therefore, you must understand, when I say to you, if you have a reasonable doubt about this man’s guilt, you must find him not guilty;' and if you have no such doubt of this man’s guilt, if you are satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt of his guilt, you should render a verdict of guilty.

“Now, gentlemen, as to the form of your verdict. If you believe that he struck this blow in self-defense, write a verdict of not guilty. If you believe he struck this blow to keep Janies Howard from entering his house, write a verdict of not guilty. If you disbelieve both of these defenses, and believe he struck out of a malicious heart, write a verdict of guilty. If you believe he did not strike out of a hard heart, write a verdict of manslaughter. With reference to a general verdict of guilty. Gentlemen, it is proper for me to say to you, in special cases that it is proper for the jury to recommend a party to mercy; that practically gives them the right to fix the penalty. No man can forfeit his life under the laws of this country except by consent of a jury. To recommend a party to mercy is to thereby save his life, and the *211 ■ law fixes the punishment at lifetime imprisonment. Now, gentlemen, this is a solemn business for you. I am going to put it where the law puts it, where the constitutional law puts it, upon your shoulders. This is your country. The defendant at the bar is your fellow-citizen; the dead man was your fellow-citizen. Whatever your verdict be, gentlemen, write it upon the back of this indictment, and sign your name as foreman.”

The following grounds of appeal are presented:

“1. Because the Judge erred in charging the jury as follows : ‘Now, gentlemen, as to the form of your verdict. If you believe that he struck this blow in self-defense, write a verdict of not guilty. If you believe he struck this blow to keep James Howard from entering his house, write a verdict of not guilty. If you disbelieve both of these defenses and believe he struck out of a malicious heart, write a verdict of guilty. If you believe he did not strike out of a hard heart, write a verdict of manslaughter.’ The error being that the language, ‘If you believe he did not strike out of a hard heart, write a verdict of manslaughter,’ is ambiguous, indefinite, incorrect, and was misleading to the jury— especially so when the record shows that said language was used just as the Judge was closing his charge to the jury, and he not having previously clearly charged the law of manslaughter.
“2. Because the Circuit Judge erred in not charging the law of manslaughter, thereby violating the provisions of article V., section 26, of the Constitution of South Carolina, which provides: ‘Judges shall not charge juries in respect to matters of fact, but shall declare the law.’

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 S.E. 656, 65 S.C. 207, 1903 S.C. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bowers-sc-1903.