Upon the trial of this case, the State, over defendant’s objections, was permitted to introduce and exhibit to the jury a coat and pair of pants which were proved to have been on the person of deceased at the time he was shot. Testimony of this character is oftentimes pertinent, material and admissible. (Hubby v. The State, 8 Texas Ct. App., 806; Early v. The State, 9 Texas Ct. App., 485.) In this instance it is not made to appear by the defendant’s bill of exceptions, or otherwise, that the exhibition of this clothing to the jury was improper and inadmissible. It is disclosed by the evidence that the position of the person who fired the fatal shot, at the time it was fired, was a material inquiry on the trial, and was left in doubt. This being the case, the clothing in question, which probably had been perforated by the leaden messengers which produced the death of deceased, might furnish most convincing proof of the exact position of the slayer when he fired the shot. Viewing the matter as presented by the record, we are not prepared to say that the court erred in admitting the clothing before the jury.
We come now to a consideration of the charge of the court, which is complained of in many particulars by the defendant. It embraces murder in the first degree, self-defense and the defense of insanity. Murder in the second degree and manslaughter are not presented by it. We will first examine that portion of the charge of the court which undertakes to instruct the jury upon the rules governing self-defense, as this will enable us the more readily to dispose of the other questions arising upon the charge.
Self-defense is an issue very clearly raised by the evidence in the case, and it was the right of the defendant to have the law upon this subject explained to the jury fully and correctly, in all *281the phases in which it might be applicable to the facts in proof. (Edwards v. The State, 5 Texas Ct. App., 47.) In undertaking to perform this duty, the learned judge begins his charge upon the subject of self-defense with the following clause:
“A man in his own necessary self-defense has the right to repel unlawful force with that degree of force necessary to efféct the purpose, and, in the exercise of a reasonable discretion, such as would usually influence and govern ordinarily prudent men in like condition and situation as himself, may, in a case of extreme necessity, to prevent the sacrifice of his own life, or serious bodily harm, and as a last resort, take the life of his assailant. But, if his resistance extends beyond that of lawful self-defense for himself, and he seeks to become the executioner of his own vengeance, and the death of his adversary thereby ensues, he then becomes an offender, and the plea of self-defense would not avail him.”
Our Code plainly prescribes the rules governing self-defense, and clearly points out the circumstances under which a homicide will be considered justifiable. (Penal Code, Arts. 569, 570, 571, 572, 573, 574 and 575.) No where in the Code, or in any other law of this State, do we find self-defense limited to a case of extreme necessity, or that a party can only avail himself of it as a last resort. These expressions of the learned judge are unknown to our law, and are certainly too broad and unqualified, when compared with the rules governing self-defense prescribed in the foregoing cited articles of our Penal Code.
Under our law, when the homicide takes place to prevent murder, maiming and certain other offenses named in Article 570 of the Penal Code, and under the circumstances therein mentioned, the assailed party need make no effort at avoidance, but may kill his assailant without retreating or without resorting to other means to avert the danger. This is the plain and well settled law of this State. (Kendall v. The State, 8 Texas Ct. App., 569; Ainsworth v. The State, 8 Texas Ct. App., 532; Blake v. The State, 3 Texas Ct. App., 588; Jordan v. The State, 11 Texas Ct. App., 435.) That the portion of the court’s charge which we have quoted restricts and limits the right of self-defense as guaranteed by the law, there can be no doubt, and it was certainly calculated to have an effect injurious to the rights of the defendant. If there was no evidence in the case raising the issue of self-defense, or if the errors in this clause were corrected and cured by other parts of the - charge, we might treat it *282as immaterial, and insufficient to demand of this court a reversal of the judgment; but such is not the case, and we must hold it to be fatal to the conviction.
In this connection we will also say that in our opinion the court should have given in charge the substance of Article 571 of the Penal Code. It is claimed by the defendant that the deceased, at the time the fatal shot was fired, was pursuing and in the very act of shooting him with a pistol, a deadly weapon. There is evidence in support of this claim. It was therefore his right to have the benefit of an instruction to the jury embodying the provision of the Code last cited. (Kendall v. The State, 8 Texas Ct. App., 569.)
There is another portion of the court’s charge upon the subject of self-defense, which we cannot approve. It reads as follows: “If the defendant and Doctor H. W. Harrington were enemies to each other, and the defendant went to the house or premises of Doctor H. W. Harrington in the night time, armed with a gun, and appeared to said Harrington under circumstancés as required the said Harrington to become the actor in his own defense, and thereby the defendant’s life became imperiled, and in that condition he took the life of the said Harrington, he could not avail himself of the plea of self-defense.”
This makes the defendant’s right, of self-defense depend alone upon the impression made by his conduct upon the mind of Harrington. No matter how innocent his intentions might be in going upon Harrington’s premises in the night and armed, the rule prescribed by the court would deprive him, absolutely and entirely, of the right of defending himself against any assault, however deadly it might be, which Harrington might make upon him. We cannot give our sanction to this doctrine to its full extent, and in the shape in which it is presented in this charge. Our understanding of the law is different. “The accused is always guilty or innocent from his own standpoint, that is, his personal, individual acts with relation to the matter charged.” (Reed v. The State, 11 Texas Ct. App., 509.) In the case last cited, in treating of self-defense, the court says: “It may be divided into two general classes, to-wit, perfect and imperfect right of self-defense. A perfect right of self-defense can only obtain and avail where the party pleading it acted from necessity, and was wholly free from wrong or blame in occasioning or producing the necessity which required his action. If, however, he was in the wrong—if he was himself violating, or in the *283act of violating, the law—and on account of his own wrong was placed in a situation wherein it became necessary for him to defend himself against an attack made upon himself, which was superinduced or created by his own wrong, then the law justly limits his right of self-defense, and regulates it according to the magnitude of his own wrong. Such a state of case may be said to illustrate and determine what, in law, would be denominated the imperfect right of self-defense. Whenever a party, by his own wrongful act, produces a condition of things wherein it becomes necessa,ry, for his own safety, that he should take life or do serious bodily harm, then, indeed, the law wisely imputes to him his own wrong and its consequences to the extent that they may and should be considered in determining the grade of offense which, but for such acts, would never have been occasioned.”
Now, in the case at bar, suppose the defendant went upon the premises of the deceased in the night time and armed, and yet without any intention to commit a felony, or without any intention to do any injury to Harrington or his property, or without any intention to provoke a conflict with Harrington—that he was merely a trespasser upon the premises, and that Harrington, seeing him there, made a deadly assault upon him, and the defendant, in protecting his life against such assault, slew Harrington, would he be guilty of murder in the first degree? Would he be deprived entirely of the shield of self-defense ? Would he not, at least, be entitled to have the circumstances considered in determining the grade of homicide of which he would be guilty? Under the authority of Reed v. The State, supra, and which case we think announces the correct doctrine, the defendant was entitled to have an instruction from the court applicable to this phase of the case. Being a trespasser upon another person’s premises, he would be a wrong doer, and if his wrongful act produced the occasion which made it necessary for him, in order-to protect his own life, to slay his assailant, his self-defense would not be perfect; that is, he could not thereby wholly justify his act, which was occasioned by his own wrong, but still, in our opinion, there would be a partial or imperfect self-defense, which might reduce the homicide to manslaughter. We think this view of the law is in harmony with our code, and with the decisions construing it. It is not in conflict with the well settled doctrine that he who seeks and brings on a difficulty cannot avail himself of the right of self-defense in order to shield him*284self from the consequences of killing his adversary. In fact, it is the same doctrine, and is recognized and maintained by the best authority. Horrigan & Thompson, in their Oases on Self-Defense, in a note to Stoffer v. The State, page 227, state the doctrine as follows:
“ 1. If he (the slayer) provoked the combat or produced the occasion, in order to have a pretext for killing his adversary, or doing him great bodily harm, the killing will be murder, no matter to what extremity he may have been reduced in the combat.
“ 2. But, if he provoked the combat or produced the occasion without any felonious intent—intending, for instance, an ordinary battery merely, the final killing in self-defense will be manslaughter only.”
How, apply these rules to the case before us. If the defendant went upon the premises of deceased for the purpose of killing the deceased, or doing him great bodily harm, or for the purpose of committing any felony, and thereby produced the occasion of the killing, he cannot to any extent avail himself of the plea of self-defense, and the homicide would be murder of the first or second degree, according to the other facts in evidence. If, on the other hand, his presence upon the premises was only casual, without any intent on his part to injure Harrington or his property, or to commit any felony, and his presence produced the occasion which made it necessary for him to kill Harrington to save his own life, or to protect himself from serious bodily harm, then he would not be guilty of murder in the first degree; but his presence upon Harrington’s premises without Harrington’s consent being a trespass, was a wrongful act on the part of defendant, and his right of self-defense would therefore be partial and imperfect, not affording a complete justification of the homicide, but having the effect only to reduce the grade of it from murder to manslaughter.
" It may be supposed that the views we have announced are not in accordance with the doctrine enunciated in Gilleland v. The State, 44 Texas, 356. We must consider that case with reference to the facts upon which the opinion was based, and when this is done it will be perceived that the rules applicable to self-defense therein declared are in harmony with those we have herein expressed. Such, at least, is our understanding of that case.
Our conclusions, therefore, in regard to the charge of the court upon self-defense are as follows:
*2851. There was error in the two clauses of the charge we have quoted.
2. Every phase of self-defense, perfect and imperfect, called for by the evidence, should have been explained and presented by the charge, for the consideration of the jury.
3. The effect of imperfect self-defense in determining the grade of the homicide should have been explained. We also
conclude that, under the evidence, the court should have charged upon manslaughter, in view of the issue presented by the plea of self-defense.
In regard to the defense of insanity, while the charge of the court upon this subject is perhaps unnecessarily voluminous, and not as clear and perspicuous as it might be, still we think it sufficiently presents the correct rules for the determination of that issue. (Webb v. The State, 9 Texas Ct. App., 490; King v. The State, Id., 515, the last named case being this same case on a former appeal.)
Other questions presented in the record are not determined because they are of that character not likely to occur on another trial. Because the court erred in its charge to the jury in the particulars we have mentioned, the judgment is reversed and-the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
Opinion delivered November 22, 1882.