State v. Cameron

135 S.E. 364, 137 S.C. 371, 1926 S.C. LEXIS 188
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 3, 1926
Docket12095
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 135 S.E. 364 (State v. Cameron) 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. Cameron, 135 S.E. 364, 137 S.C. 371, 1926 S.C. LEXIS 188 (S.C. 1926).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Cothran.

Indictment for assult and battery with intent to kill; verdict, “guilty”; sentence, imprisonment for from five to ten years. Defendant appeals.

It is conceded that the prosecutor, B. B. Melton, while in his own store, in the town of Bugoff, in Kershaw county, received a wound in his arm from the discharge of a double-barreled shotgun, which resulted in the amputation of his arm. The state alleges that the wound was inflicted by the defendant with intent to kill and murder the said Melton. The defendant claims that the gun was accidentaly fired while he and Melton were struggling for its possession. No plea or claim of self-defense was interposed by the defendant. His defense was solely that the occurrence was an accident.

The evidence for the state tended to show the following facts: The day before the shooting the defendant got into a difficulty with a traveling man named Gary, in Melton’s store, and drew a magazine pistol on the traveling man. Melton prevented him from shooting by pushing back the *373 “safety” catch on the pistol. The defendant, who was drunk at the time, desisted from his attempt, put the pistol in his pocket, and left the store. The next morning the defendant was still drinking, and about 30 minutes before the shooting told a witness that “he had a gun down there, and was'going to shoot somebody.” He tried to buy shells from another witness, who refused to sell them to him. Shortly thereafter he went to Melton’s store, and met him on the outside in front of the store, and claimed to have lost his gun (pistol). He told Melton that he had a grudge against him. Melton replied that it must be a good one. The defendant said to Melton, “Get your gun, I am going to kill you, and I want to give you a chance.” Melton replied, “No,” and went back in the store to the office. The defendant followed him, and said, “G — • d— it, I am going to kill you,” and shot. He threw up his gun the second time, but did not shoot. Melton caught the gun. The doctor testified that wound entered the back part of Melton’s arm.

The evidence for the defendant tended to show that he had no ill will against Melton; that he remembered nothing about the alleged difficulty with the traveling man; that he was drinking the next day, and was preparing to go hunting; that he went with his shotgun into Melton’s store following him after a conversation at the front between Melton and one Jones; that he went back and standing near the stove, and made a remark to Melton about the good fire he had; that Melton said that Rabón had told him that he (the defendant) was going out to kill a man; that Melton insisted on his leaving his gun in the store, which he declined to do, and, as he reached to pick it up, they both grabbed it, and in the scuffle over the gun it was discharged, striking Melton in the arm. The defendant admitted that he had been drinking, but added, “I knew what I was doing.”

The exceptions are directed solely to alleged errors in the charge of his Honor, Judge Henry, as follows:

*374 1. It is complained that his Honor, in assimilating the offense of asault and battery of a high and aggravated nature to the offense of manslaughter, committed error in defining manslaughter as follows: “Manslaughter is the unlawful killing of a human being, usually in sudden heat and (of?) passion upon sufficient legal’provocation”; the specific objection to this portion of the charge being in the use of the word “usually.” It is a matter of common knowledge that the mitigating circumstances which reduce a homicide from murder to manslaughter occur under the condition stated, “in sudden heat of passion,” in the vast majority of cases. The)*- may have occurred not under the condition of “sudden heat of passion,” as in a case of accident due to gross or reckless negligence. State v. Davis, 128 S. C., 265; 122 S. E., 770. State v. Williams, 131 S. C., 294; 127 S. E., 264. The word “usually” necessarily implies that they may have occurred under other conditions than of “sudden heat of passion,” and therefore does not constitute reversible error, if error at all. It is true that the lapse of an appreciable time between the act of “legal provocation” and the fatal blow will not deprive the defendant of the reduction from murder to manslaughter, unless he has had sufficient cooling time during the interval (State v. Jacobs, 28 S. C., 29 at page 32; 4 S. E., 799. State v. McCants, 1 Speers, 384) ; but even under these circumstances the claim of reduction of the offense for murder to manslaughter rests still upon the condition of “sudden heat of passion,” which is supposed to' have continued in full force during the interval. We do not think, therefore, that this assignment of error can be sustained.

2. It is complained that under the circumstances stated in subdivision 1 above his Honor committed error in charging the jury:

“It must be a legal provocation in order to reduce the killing from murder to manslaughter. And you will answer the question,, “Did he kill him out of that legal provocation?” If so it must be- sudden heat and (of?) passion, *375 instantly, suddenly raised. If so, why that would reduce the killing from murder to manslaughter,” — the specific objection to this portion of the charge being that the sudden heat of passion “may have been .raised some time before (the killing?), and the question whether or not the defendant had had sufficient time to cool is a question for the jury.”

The proposition upon which the counsel for the appellant appears to rely is that it is not essential that the fatal blow shall have been delivered instantly upon the provocation, but the defendant has the right to rely upon “sudden heat of passion,” provided he has not had suffifficient cooling time to recover his normal mental poise. ' In this he is correct, as above indicated; but the charge was to the effect that the heat of passion must have been “instantly suddenly raised,” and had no reference to the precipitate character of the blow after the provocation. In State v. Smith, 10 Rich., 347, the passion which reduces a felonious killing to manslaughter is characterized as a “temporary frenzy, excited by sufficient legal provocation”; and in State v. McConts, 1 Speers, 390, Judge Wardlaw speaks of this passion as “the violent impulse of anger outstripping the tardier operations of reason, * * * provoked by sufficient cause.” See, also, State v. Davis, 50 S. C., 405; 27 S. E., 905; 62 Am. St. Rep., 837. We perceive, therfore, no error in charging that the “heat of passion” must be “instantly and suddenly raised.”

3. It is complained that under the circumstances stated in subdivision 1 above his honor committed error in charging the jury that the legal provocation necessary to reduce a felonious killing from murder to manslaughter must be ‘such as would amount to an assault upon the man who did the killing, or some attack on him, or something of that kind”; the specific objection to this portion of the charge being that “many things other than an actual assault by the deceased may reduce murder to manslaughter.

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662 S.E.2d 410 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 2008)
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57 S.E.2d 55 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1949)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 S.E. 364, 137 S.C. 371, 1926 S.C. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cameron-sc-1926.