1. The plaintiff in error shot deceased with a pistol, which he had concealed upon his person, a short distance from the home of deceased—so near that his voice could be heard calling upon his little daughter, Alice, to bring him his pistol, and so near that his agonizing cry, on being 'shot, “Oh, Lordy! Oh, Lordy! ” was heard by his wife in his house. There are no mitigating circumstance^. A flask of whiskey in the pocket of the murderer, and a pistol concealed upon his person, ready for any murderous use, tell the usual tale when one man hurries his neighbor’s soul into eternity. These, so far from mitigating, only tend to increase the enormity of the crime. The concealed pistol on the person is a defiance of law, a sort of deliberate preparation beforehand to kill, if he met in any rencontre, a fellowman,—an evidence of general disregard of human life and of misanthropic malice towards the race. The flask of whiskey indicates the habitual use of an intoxicating beverage, whose effect is to inflame passion and unhinge reason to the extent that the outlaw, defiant of the prohibition of his country against the carrying of concealed weapons, and bad enough in such defiance, seems unwilling to be governed by the little reason kept cool, which such a man possesses, but appears determined to deprive himself of that little from the flask worn close by the pistol. What, can such a man expect but to reach Rie gallows, unless the mercy of jurors confine him for life in the penitentiary ?
Even conceding that the version given of the transac*575tion by the companion of this outlaw be the truth of the case, the murde- er shot the deceased, when he must have known he was unarmed, for he had not time for the little girl ,to bring his pistol, and with no provocation, except possibly the call for the pistol and the seizure of his person. That seizure amounted to nothing, for but a moment before he had seized the other and had loosed him without hurting him at all; and of course, the two men could have defended themselves against one without killing that one.
But the jury believed the dying declarations of the deceased, spoken by him where he fell, and within so short a time, and in a place which make the declarations not only the utterance of a dying man, hastening to the bar of judgment, but make the words then spoken acts as part of the res gestee'; and those declarations make murder without any provocation at all, from his dying lips, according to what two or three testified they heard him say, and unprovoked, naked, deliberate murder, according to what he narrated with a gasping breath to another who leaned over him to catch his words. ■
2. The charge of the court, like the usual utterances of Judge Simmons from the bench to the jury, is full, clear and apposite, giving every possible phase of the evidence under the law,—not only fair, but favorable to the plaintiff in error.
The single extract excepted to by his counsel, and made one ground in the motion for a new trial,* is, as we think, even standing alone, sound law, but when read with all the rest of the charge on the same subject, it is impossible to detect any shadow of error therein. That extract is, “ If Daniel was cursing Phelps, and called for his pistol, and Phelps pulled his pistol out and shot him, that would not reduce the crime from murder to manslaughter.” In another part of the charge, the law, in respect to conduct exciting the fears of a reasonable man of serious injury to himself, is fully given.
3. The case should not have been continued on the *576ground stated. It was the absence of a witness, just heard of that morning, who would swear to certain statements of the wife of deceased, without showing that the wife would not swear on the stand what she stated to the witness, either by her evidence on the committing trial or otherwise.
4. When the jury request the court to re-charge them on any point, it is the duty of the court to do so, and the consent thereto of defendant’s counsel is not necessary. Counsel and prisoner were present, and no objection was made or exception taken. Nor is there error in the court’s telling the jury the punishment of different grades of homicide, especially when it is for them to fix the punishment in one of the grades. To act with the absolute power which the law gives the jury judiciously, it is well that they should know, not only all the grades of homicide, but the punishment of each. It does not appear, and therefore did not exist as true, that the judge did not tell them the correct law, and that they had no discretion or right of interference except in murder. Certainly the information given by the court to the jury, at their request, did no harm; for we close with the remark that the plaintiff in error is wonderfully, almost marvelously fortunate, that the verdict spared his life.
Judgment affirmed.,