The malice which is an essential element in the. offense of murder has always been described as “malice aforethought.” It is descriptive of the state of the mind of the slayer preceding and at the instant of the unlawful act of the killing. Although, for the existence of the malice no definite or appreciable space of time in law is required to be shown, yet it must be “aforethought”; that is, it must be related to *31the unlawful act, in the nature of cause and effect. In Ward’s Case, 96 Ala. 100, where it was held that the indictment was unobjectionable as charging murder in the second degree, the averment in the indictment was that the killing was done “unlawfully and with malice aforethought, but without deliberation or premeditation,” etc. In the case before us, the indictment omits the word aforethought after malice. No special form for indictment for murder in the second degree is prescribed in our Code forms; but the one given for murder in the first degree, (Criminal Code, page 333, form No. (53), in describing the malice required to be averred, describes it as malice aforethought. It would hardly be contended in an indictment for murder in the first degree*, that the omission of the qualifying word aforethought after the word malice, would not be a material omission, constituting a fatal variance from the prescribed form in the Code. — Griffith v. State, 90 Ala. 583. And if this be true, it would logically follow that such omission in an indictment for murder in the second degree would be equally as fatal to the validity of the indictment, since the only distinguishing feature between an indictment in Code form for murder in the first degree, and an indictment for murder in the second degree, such as was held sufficient in Ward’s Gase, supra-, is the additional averment in the latter negativing deliberation and premeditation — essential elements under our statutes for murder in the first degree. We think the omission rendered the indictment objectionable, and the demurrer should have been sustained. See-2 Bishop’s New Criminal Procedure, §§ 562-4.
There was evidence on the part of the defendant tending to show that the defendant acted in self-defense. The written charge requested by the defendant and which, the court refused, correctly stated the law as to the burden of proof, and, in the opinion of the writer of this opinion, this was all it purported to- do, and when referred to the evidence in the case, was a proper charge and should have been given. — Gibson v. State, 89 Ala. 121. The other members of the court, however, hold that the charge was misleading, and for this reason was properly refused.
*32Títere were several exceptions reserved to the rulings of the court below on the introduction of the evidence, but we deem it unnecessary to discuss these exceptions, further than to say we have examined them and consider them without merit.
For the error pointed out, the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.