This is a criminal action in which the defendant was tried under a bill of indictment charging him with the capital felony of murder.
The defendant and his wife had separated. On 14 September, 1937, the defendant went to the Central Sandwich Shop looking for his wife. She was sitting on one of the stools at the counter with Ozzie Collins. The deceased was sitting on a stool next to the defendant's wife. When the defendant walked in he remarked: "I have run down on you all again." He then called to his wife and she went to him. In the conversation which followed she remarked to the defendant: "Melvin, this man is nothing to me." The deceased then said: "No sir, mister, that lady ain't nothing to me." The defendant then shot twice. One bullet struck the deceased back of the left ear, causing almost instant death. All of the evidence other than that of the defendant tends to show that the deceased did not get up from the stool on which he was sitting until he was shot. The defendant, however, testified that the deceased arose and started towards him, making a motion as if to put his right hand in his hip pocket, and that he, the defendant, then shot.
There was a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree. From judgment pronounced thereon the defendant appealed. In his brief filed on this appeal the defendant contends that there are three questions of law presented for determination, to wit:
"(1) Was there sufficient evidence of premeditation and deliberation to warrant submission of murder in the first degree? *Page 787
"(2) Did the court err in its charge of premeditation and deliberation in failing to apply the law to the particular facts of this case?
"(3) Did the court err in applying the law to the facts relative to the defendant's plea of self-defense?"
There is no exceptive assignment of error in the record which presents either one of these questions for determination. There was no motion for judgment as of nonsuit. Therefore, the sufficiency of the evidence is not challenged. However, it is not inappropriate to say that the evidence is amply sufficient to be submitted to a jury on the question of defendant's guilt or innocence on the charge contained in the bill of indictment. There are certain exceptions to portions of the charge of the court. Neither one of these exceptions involves either the alleged failure of the court to properly charge the jury on premeditation and deliberation, or on the defendant's plea of self-defense. Nor do they present the alleged failure of the court to properly apply the law to the facts developed by the evidence.
Exception No. 1 is to the following portion of the charge:
"It is not necessary, Gentlemen of the Jury, to show a motive for the commission of a crime, where motive is not of its essence, but the jury may consider the presence or absence of motive as established by the evidence as tending to establish or negative malice or deliberation or premeditation."
This assignment of error cannot be sustained. The court fully charged the jury as to the law on the burden of proof and it was not required to repeat "beyond a reasonable doubt" in that portion of the charge excepted to.
Exception No. 2 is to the following portion of the charge:
"Court further charges you, Gentlemen of the Jury, if the defendant in this case fixed in his mind prior to the killing the firm, fixed design and intention to kill and after doing so, he premeditated within the meaning of the law and deliberated within the meaning of the law, and with malice he killed, and did it on account of his wife, it still would be murder in the first degree."
This portion of the charge contains a correct statement of the law.
Exception No. 3 is directed to a portion of the charge which reads as follows:
"If you find from the evidence and beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant shot and killed the deceased with malice and with premeditation and deliberation, as heretofore defined and explained to you by the court, then, Gentlemen of the Jury, it would be your duty to return a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree, and that would be your verdict. If you fail to find the defendant guilty of the capital crime of murder in the first degree, then by your verdict say whether you find the defendant guilty of murder in the second degree, which is *Page 788 the unlawful killing of a human being by another with malice, but without premeditation and deliberation. If you find the defendant guilty of murder in the second degree, that would be your verdict. If you fail to find the defendant guilty of murder in the first degree or murder in the second degree but do find that the defendant unlawfully killed the deceased, not with malice, not with premeditation, not with deliberation, but unlawfully killed him, then your verdict would be guilty of manslaughter."
In this statement of the law we can see no error.
Exception No. 4 is as follows:
"But, on the other hand, if you find from the evidence in the case, Gentlemen of the Jury, that the defendant neither killed with malice, nor with premeditation, nor with deliberation, nor unlawfully, but that the defendant killed in proper self-defense of his life and person, as heretofore defined and explained to you by the court, the, Gentlemen of the Jury, your verdict would be not guilty."
We are unable to discover any merit in this exception.
Defendant's other exceptions are formal.
We have carefully examined the record proper and find no error therein. Defendant's exceptive assignments of error as herein set forth in detail present no meritorious cause for disturbing the verdict. It follows that there was no error in the trial and the judgment is affirmed.
No error.