Appellant was convicted of murder in the second degree, and his punishment assessed at confinement in the penitentiary for fifty years.
Appellant, a negro, an employee of W.E. Bonner, a white man, and one Oscar Kelton, a white man, on the evening before the homicide had a difficulty in which both drew pistols but neither fired. Two or three weeks before the homicide appellant received a letter in which it was stated: "You wind up your business, in short, and get away from here," which was signed "Committee." This letter appellant *Page 203 showed to the sheriff of Madison County and asked his advice thereon. The sheriff told him he did not think there would be any trouble, and just to go and say nothing to anybody, and that if Ben Ford went with him to buy timber he (the sheriff) didn't think there would be anybody to bother him. On the same evening after the trouble with Oscar Kelton, appellant sought again the advice of the sheriff and of his employer W.E. Bonner, and wanted to leave town, as he feared trouble, but as his employer insisted on his remaining until to-morrow, because he could not spare him, as he (Bonner) did not know anything about the timber, and Bonner and the sheriff both told him that they did not think he would have any trouble, if he remained quietly at his boarding place. He went to his boarding place, and was working at his account book at end of the dining room table, and was there at the time of the homicide. In the house with appellant were Biggers, Carter, Johnson and Wilson, who were working for appellant at the time in the timber business. All were negroes. The deceased, Sam Seay, Tom and Ed Bozeman, Joe Floyd, and John Brownlee, and others, all armed with pistols, and Oscar Kelton with a shotgun, about 9 o'clock at night went to the boarding house of defendant, as the State witnesses put it, "for the purpose of giving the negro a talk and informing him that he had to put a stop to that or leave the country." The State's testimony shows that deceased walked up to appellant's boarding house and asked for appellant; some one replied that he was not there. Deceased said "Yes, he is here; these negroes said he is here, and tell him to come out here, I want to see him a few minutes." The door was closed and deceased said "Tell him to come out here, we don't want to hurt him; we just want to talk to him." Then deceased stepped on the gallery and the shooting commenced from the inside of the house. Deceased jumped off the end of the gallery about the time the shooting commenced, and appellant jumped out on the gallery and threw his gun on deceased and shot him, from which wound he died in a short while. This is in substance the State's case.
Appellant's testimony shows that deceased called for appellant to come out, he wanted to see him a minute and talk with him. Appellant did not answer and deceased called him again, and remarked "Tillman, if you don't come out here, I will blow that God damn thing up." Appellant did not come out, but a negro preacher named Carter partly opened the door and said: "Tillman is not here," which the deceased contradicted. The preacher reiterated it, to which deceased replied: "You are a God damned old lying son-of-a-bitch; he is there." The negro again denied and deceased said, "We will have to get him out of there," and deceased and witness named Bruce got upon the gallery, and deceased said: "We are going to have the negro," and both run against the door of the boarding house, and knocked it open, and when they got inside of the house deceased pulled his pistol and shot, and the negroes immediately fired after said shot, and they run *Page 204 out of the room, and just as they got off the edge of the gallery deceased fell. The firing then became general between the parties in the house, and deceased's party on the outside of the house. One negro, Lige Biggers, was shot back in the hip with about nine buckshot; there were eight shot holes showing they came from the outside; two in the bedstead, eight or nine buckshot in the middle of the door facing, and a lot of buckshot which went into and clean through the chimney. There were one or two shots fired from the inside of the house on the other side of the house which went out. All the parties were armed at the negro's home either with pistols or shotguns.
Paragraph 35 of the court's charge is as follows: "Should you believe from the evidence that deceased, Sam Seay, accompanied by others, went armed at night, on a peaceful mission to the house occupied by the defendant, Berry Tillman, for the purpose only of remonstrating with him, said defendant, about his alleged conduct, and with no intent to inflict any serious bodily injury upon the defendant, and that while on said premises, the said Sam Seay and those accompanying him made no demonstration or committed no act or spoke no words evidencing an intention on their part or the part of any of them to commit any unlawful act or to inflict serious bodily injury upon the defendant, and you further believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant, Berry Tillman, shot and killed the deceased, as charged in the indictment, and that such killing was not in defense of himself, against an unlawful attack reasonably threatening death or serious bodily injury, viewed alone from his standpoint at the time, and you further find that the same was done with malice, you will find the defendant guilty of murder, either in the first degree or second degree accordingly as you find the malice to have existed, or to be implied as hereinbefore defined." This charge is clearly erroneous for many reasons. In the first place there was no evidence in this record that the parties went to the defendant's home on a peaceful mission; in the second place there is no evidence in this record showing that defendant knew that they were coming positively but merely apprehended the danger from unknown parties. The court should not have permitted the State's witnesses to testify what was their motive in going to the house. Their motive though, as stated, by themselves was intensely reprehensible and unlawful, and there is no evidence in the record of any peaceful purpose. Before a defendant can be bound by the acts of the party that he kills he must know of said acts, and also of said intentions. The defendant here was at his home peacefully pursuing his legitimate vocation unaware of the approaching danger, not knowing the purpose, object and intent of the parties that surrounded his little boarding house. This being true, how could appellant be bound by the intent of the parties, which intent he knew nothing of? The evidence in this case does not suggest either murder in the first or second degree; since there is nothing in this record to show that appellant knew any of the parties, but *Page 205 the uncontradicted testimony is that he apprehended harm from unknown parties, and this record shows that these parties were unknown to appellant, or at least does not show that he did know them, and where parties go to one's house at night time, all armed, upon what appears to appellant a mission to do him harm, and laboring under a degree of anger or fear or resentment, which renders his mind incapable of cool reflection, if he shot said parties for said purpose alone, he would not be guilty of any higher offense than manslaughter. However much the distinction of race is observed in society, no distinction of race, color or previous condition is made by the law of this State, and we understand, under the circumstances above detailed, appellant evidently was laboring under intense excitement and fear either for his life or that he apprehended the most serious bodily injury would be inflicted upon him. If he was merely prompted by fear in doing the shooting, he might be guilty of manslaughter. If he apprehended, at the time, that his life was in danger or his person in danger of serious bodily injury by the peculiar menacing attitude and circumstances then surrounding him, and so apprehending harm he shot and killed, it occurs to us the jury would be warranted in believing that from his standpoint he had a right to do so, and he would not be guilty of any offense at all, but the same would be self-defense.
Various errors are alleged in appellant's motion for a new trial, but in view of the remarks heretofore made, we do not feel called upon to review same. But for the errors pointed out, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.