The evidence which the prisoner’s counsel seek to introduce, is not claimed to establish a defense to the charge of homicide, but simply to bear upon the question of the degree of his crime; that is, whether it was committed with the deliberate and premeditated design which the statute requires to justify the infliction of the penalty of death.
The case presents many singular features. In the first place it is conceded by a majority of my brethren, that no adequate motive appears for the commission of the crime. The prisoner and the deceased were on friendly terms. She was his wife’s sister, and was a young married woman about nineteen years of age, who with her husband lived with the prisoner and his wife. As the sister of the deceased testified, the- deceased had always been very kind to the prisoner, and the prisoner testified that he regarded her as his best friend. They lived on the second floor, the prisoner and his wife occupying the front hall bedroom, and the deceased and her husband occupying the back bedroom on the same floor, there being a middle room between, which was occupied by a different family. JSfo eye-witness of the homicide was examined. One of the strong points made against *480the prisoner is, that although his wife was present, her testimony was excluded on the objection of the prisoner’s counsel.
The prisoner appears to have been a worthless character,, who had been three times in prison for stealing, and he was defended by counsel assigned to him by the court. The testimony on the part of the prosecution was very brief. The leading facts proved, immediately relating to the killing, were, that on the morning of the 26th of April, 1882, he went out between eight and nine o’clock, after breakfast. He returned to dinner between twelve and one, went out again about two, and returned at six in the evening, when lie went into the. room of deceased, where his wife also was, and a few moments after he entered, the deceased, accompanied by prisoner’s wife, ran out of the room, vomiting blood and calling for help, and ran down stairs to the room of Mrs. Byrnes, who occupied a store and back room on the first floor, where she died, having been shot through the heart. After the shooting, and after deceased had run down stairs, the prisoner stood outside of the door of the room of deceased, where the shooting had taken placo, and Miss McCullough, another sister of deceased, testified that she asked him what he had done, and he said, “Nothing.” He still held in his hand the pistol with 'which deceased had been shot. He was then about to sit down in the room of deceased, when the witness ordered him out, and he then went across the hall to his own room, where his baby was lying ill. Witness told him not to touch the baby, when with an opprobrious epithet he ordered her out of that room, threatening that if she did not go he would kill her too. He then hid himself under the bed, where he was soon after arrested, his pistol being found lying on the floor.
The officer who arrested him took him down stairs to the room where deceased was dying, and being told to look at what he had done, he laughed.
Ho admitted he had killed deceased with the pistol shown him, but on the trial he testified that the killing was accidental.
The only provocation shown was that in the morning, before he went out, he asked his wife to wash his feet, and the deceased interposed, telling him that he ought to think more of his dying baby, to which he replied, “ You are getting *481too God-damned high-toned.” The sister of deceased who testified to this, stated that these are the only angry words she ever heard pass between them.
The facts bearing upon the question of deliberation and premeditation were, that the prisoner had always been in the habit of carrying a pistol, which he was accustomed to give the deceased to keep for him when he came home at night. The night before the homicide, she had put the pistol away, and in the morning her brother, William McCullough, took it from the place where she had concealed it, and took it away from the house. On the day of the homicide, being without a pistol, he pawned his coat and bought another, and the theory of the prosecution is, that this was done with the intention of killing the deceased. On the other hand, the father and sister of the prisoner, who were the only witnesses called in his behalf, testified that it had been his habit from boyhood always to carry a pistol, and if it was taken away from him, immediately to procure another. His habit of always carrying a pistol was corroborated by Miss McCullough.
Bude language, indicative of a violent disposition, addressed • after his arrest to Mrs. Byrnes, to the officer who arrested him, and to the sergeant of police, was testified to on the trial, and was denied or explained by the prisoner. The only witnesses called in his behalf were himself, his father, and his sister. The sole defense set up was that the pistol was accidentally discharged while taking it out of his pocket, when he came home in the evening. There was no evidence tending to show that he was not in the full possession of his faculties and fully conscious of all -that he was doing, and capable of forming and carrying out the deliberate plan imputed to him, or that his actions should not be judged by the same rules and standard which would ordinarily be applied to a sober, cool man, free from all influence affecting his judgment and reasoning powers. Mrs. Byrnes testified that he was perfectly sober. Mr. Bryte said that he would not swear that the prisoner had been drinking, but thought he had, and should say he had been imbibing slightly. Miss McCullough said she noticed no effects of liquor upon him. The case presented before the jury by the witnesses for the prosecution was therefore that of a sober man *482in the full exercise of his mental powers. Notwithstanding the singularity of his actions, the monstrosity of his deliberately forming a plan to kill a young woman with whom he always' had been on friendly terms, without any provocation except the few words that have been detailed, the fact that after that occurrence he had been home to dinner, when no quarrel or anger seems to have been manifested, his attempting at first to remain in the very room where he had committed the homicide, and when ordered out of that, instead of leaving the house and endeavoring to escape, childishly attempting to conceal himself by hiding under the bed in his own room in the presence of the sister of the deceased, leaving his pistol beside him on the floor, laughing when his' deadly work was exhibited to him; notwithstanding all these extraordinary actions, there was absolutely nothing in the evidence before the jury which authorized them to infer that they could be attributed to anything but depravity and natural malignity, and the jury were reduced to considering whether he told the truth in testifying that the killing was accidental, on which statement he wholly rested his defense, and which, if credited, would have wholly acquitted him.
But if the evidence which his counsel now seek to introduce, had been before the jury, I think it is impossible to say that it would not have created in their minds such a doubt as to the physical condition of the prisoner and the deliberate premeditation of bis' act, a.s would have induced them, although they disbelieved his allegation of accident, to find that the homicide was committed on the spur of the moment, from an i over-excited brain or a diseased condition of his system, caused-by the excessive use of alcohol and opiates. The evidence of his mental condition, as shown by Dr. Hardy in his affidavit, would tend to reconcile many of the incongruities in the testimony. Dr. Hardy examined him in his cell- the day after the homicide, when only a night had intervened, and treated him medically for two weeks for nervousness and insomnia produced by the abuse of alcohol and the habit of using opium, chloral, and bromide of potassium, to which he was accustomed, and' the deprivation of which rendered him unable, to control himself. That he was satisfied that the prisoner had been addicted *483for some time to the use of these sedatives, and that the result of his examination, and his opinion as an expert was that the day after the homicide his mind was in such a condition that he was oblivious of his actions during the week previous to that day.
This evidence might well have been considered as bearing upon the condition of his mind on the day of the homicide, for the purpose of determining the degree of his crime.
The objection of the prisoner to the examination of his wife as a witness for the prosecution, does not necessarily imply that her testimony would have tended to show premeditation. The most that could be said is, that he may have apprehended that it would conflict with his defense of accident, on which he depended for full acquittal.
As the objection of laches, Dr. Hardy swears that he communicated the facts which he could prove, for the first time, to the prisoner’s counsel, in the prison, on the 27th of June, 1883. The motion was noticed on the 11th of July.
Officer Baker’s affidavit shows that on the 15th of April, 1882, shortly before the homicide, the prisoner was arrested for intoxication and committed to prison, where he remained some days and was very violent in his conduct. La Faye, one of the keepei’s, testified that while in prison he was so violent that it was necessary to confine him with iron handcuffs and a leather belt, to prevent him from doing harm to' himself and others. These facts were unknown to the prisoner’s counsel until the latter part of June, 1883. It does not appear that even the prisoner himself knew what Dr. Hardy would testify to. He unadvisedly sought to obtain an entire acquittal on the ground of accident, and did not instruct his counsel as to matters which would have conflicted with that defense, and weakened the force of his own testimony, by which alone it was supported ; and in a capital ease the rule of diligence should not be too strictly applied. The courts, as well as the prisoner, are interested in not inflicting the extreme penalty of the law, unless the facts of the case fully warrant it; and although the matters, now sought to be shown, do not shield the prisoner from the consequences of his crime, they might well be considered by *484the jury in passing upon the question whether it was committed with deliberation and premeditation.
Millee and Finch, JJ., concur.