The defendant stands indicted for an assault with a deadly weapon upon P. B. Kirby. The defendant and Kirby had been *Page 540 unfriendly for a year or more. After some words, the defendant walked away to his cart and Kirby followed, and was advancing, twenty or thirty yards off, toward the defendant with his hand on his hip pocket when the defendant shot him. This is defendant's testimony, which is in some respects denied by Kirby, the prosecutor and other eye witnesses. The defendant also said he was afraid of the prosecutor (862) and thought he was going to attack him, when he shot. His Honor charged the jury that if they believed the testimony the defendant was guilty, that the defendant was guilty on his own testimony. Whether the defendant had reasonable ground to believe that the prosecutor was going to attack him, was a question of fact for the jury to consider, and not for the defendant or his Honor, who committed error in his instruction to the jury. The case should have been submitted to the consideration of the jury with appropriate instructions by the Court. We express no opinion on the evidence. The rule governing the proper instructions is well laid down in S. v. Harris, 46 N.C. 190, and S. v.Dixon, 75 N.C. 275. As the case must be tried again, we deem it unnecessary to repeat the reasoning in those cases.
NEW TRIAL.
Cited: S. v. Kimball, 151 N.C. 710; S. v. Johnson, 166 N.C. 396.