State v. Coyle

67 S.E. 24, 86 S.C. 81, 1910 S.C. LEXIS 2
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMay 14, 1910
Docket7581
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 67 S.E. 24 (State v. Coyle) 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. Coyle, 67 S.E. 24, 86 S.C. 81, 1910 S.C. LEXIS 2 (S.C. 1910).

Opinions

May 14, 1910. The opinion of the Court was delivered by Defendant tried for assault with intent to kill Julian Still, was convicted of assault and battery of high and aggravated nature, and sentenced to eight years at hard labor in the State penitentiary.

The exceptions relate solely to the charge, but a statement of the testimony will help to make clear the points involved.

The testimony for the State was as follows:

Julian Still: "I live at the Greenwood Cotton Mill. I am 22 yeards old, and am married. I had a difficulty with Jeff Coyle on the night of August 15, somewhere about eleven o'clock. I don't know what his condition was, he seemed to be drinking. When I came up to where Coyle was I asked Mr. Christian if there was any trouble, and Coyle spoke up and said, I have had some trouble — said come here, I will tell you about it. He had out his knife. *Page 83 I told him to put up the knife and I would come over there. He said he wouldn't do it. Coyle caught hold of my arm and followed me about ten steps and told me to stop, he wanted to tell me about the trouble. I said, all right, I will stop. He asked me if I didn't remember about six years ago when him and my father had a fuss. I said yes, and he began talking about it. He started at me with his knife open, and I knocked him down and walked over him, and started to hit him again, but I didn't, and walked off six or eight steps, and he got up and started towards me. He kept coming on me, and I backed ten steps and turned, and he ran up and stabbed me in the left side, and I ran toward the railroad and he cut me in the back. I ran up the street, and he knocked me down and began beating me. I hollered and he kept on beating me. I got up and ran in Will Joe Dean's yard, and he ran behind me and knocked me down again, and went on out through the back way. I think he cut me about ten times. The stick was an iron rod covered with leather. It was my stick. That is what I knocked him down with."

Cross-examination: "I was going in the opposite direction from my home when I went where Coyle was. I went there because I heard one of the Still boys and Coyle was in a fuss. I went there because I heard Coyle was down there. I bought this stick that night before I went to where Coyle was. The stick had a metal head, and is a tolerable heavy stick. You could brain a man with it if you hit him hard enough. I struck Coyle with that stick before he cut me, but he was coming toward me with a knife."

Dr. R.B. Epting testifying as to the wounds received by the prosecutor, found that he was pretty badly injured with the twelve or fifteen cuts on him, some cuts entering the cavity of the lungs.

Dr. J.B. Owens testified that he next day dressed a wound on side of the defendant's head across the ear, and that it looked like a pretty severe lick. *Page 84

The testimony for the defense was as follows:

Jeff Coyle: "I am the defendant in this case. I was on my way home that night. I had a quart and a pint of whiskey in a basket, and Julian Still overtook me and asked me to give him some of the whiskey, and I told him I could not give it to him because it wasn't mine, and he says, No, you are too damned stingy — those are the words he used. I says, If it was my liquor I would give it to you; you would be welcome to it. He says, I haven't forgot about how you treated my father three or four years ago, by whipping him over at the old mill. I says, me and your father has done settled that long ago. And he stepped back from me with his stick and says, I have never settled it with you, and knocked me down with the stick. He didn't give me a moment's warning. After he knocked me down I couldn't tell what happened. He knocked me crazy. I couldn't give account of anything after he hit me with the stick. I will be honest, before God in heaven, he knocked me so crazy I didn't know anything. I don't know what I did. He struck me on the left side of my head. I never had a cross word with Julian Still in my life, and had nothing at all against him. I do not know whether I cut him or not. My physical condition is very weak. I have kidney trouble and lung trouble. Doctors have treated me for three years. I suffered with the wound I received from this stick for two weeks, and I felt as if I would die from it. After I came to my senses I went and surrendered to the sheriff, when I was told what had happened."

Cross-examination: "When I came to myself I was at home. I have no idea how I got home. I might have run this boy around and cut him up for all I know. My wife took me over to her sister's after I came to myself, at her suggestion. I was not drunk, I can prove by the officers of this town I don't get drunk. My wife's brother came over and told me the next morning about Julian Still being cut, *Page 85 and said they accused me of doing it, and I came and gave up, and that is the first I knew of it."

Redirect examination: "I was not drinking that night. I drank a bottle of beer that afternoon about four o'clock. That is all I drank. I did not cut at Still before he struck me with the stick. I carried the stick off with me, I suppose, I had it at home the next morning, but I didn't know anything about having the stick until my wife asked me where I got it."

In charging the law as to self-defense, the Court said:

"Now, there is involved in here the law as to self-defense and the law upon that point is, that where any one undertakes to escape responsibility for cutting or shooting a man or otherwise injuring him, on the ground of self-defense, the law requires him to satisfy the jury by the greater weight of the testimony; first, that he was free from fault in bringing on the difficulty; second, that he could not have retreated from the difficulty without probably endangering his safety; and third, that it was necessary for him to use such force as he did use in order to protect himself from the loss of life or from serious bodily harm, and that from the standpoint of a man of ordinary firmness and courage — you place the defendant, the man seeking to escape on the ground of self-defense, when you are considering that plea in this case, you place in his position a man of ordinary firmness and courage, the standard which the law gives you to measure a man by, and you say what he would have done and should have done, under the circumstances, from the dangers by which he was surrounded, either real dangers or appearances of danger — whether he would have been justified in believing that he was in danger of the loss of his life or serious bodily harm, and therefore, was justified in doing as he did do."

The specifications of error are:

(a) "In instructing the jury that the law of self-defense was involved in this case when the defendant made no such *Page 86 plea, nor did the testimony involve such plea; on the contrary, the plea being not guilty by reason of irresponsibility on account of such a dethronement of his reason as to render him incapable of distinguishing between right and wrong or knowing what he was doing at the time of the alleged assault and battery.

(b) "By charging on the facts in telling the jury that the defendant was seeking to escape on the plea of self-defense, which was tantamount to telling them that he admitted the assault and battery, and that in order to escape, he must prove what is required to establish such plea, by the greater weight of the evidence, in order that he might be justified in doing what he did do.

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Related

State v. Price
294 S.E.2d 426 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1982)
Watkins v. People
408 P.2d 425 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1965)
State v. Gardner
64 S.E.2d 130 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1951)
State v. Wallace
131 P.2d 222 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 S.E. 24, 86 S.C. 81, 1910 S.C. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-coyle-sc-1910.