King v. State

Mansfield, J.

1 The appellant, King, was jointly indicted with Tom Brown for the murder of J. N. Jones. On a arate trial he was convicted of murder in the second degree and has appealed. The circumstances of the homicide are fully stated in the case of Brown v. State, decided at the present term. The theory of Brown’s defense was that Jones was killed while endeavoring in a violent manner to enter the dwelling house of Mrs. Ratliff for the purpose of assaulting him with a deadly weapon. He and King both shot the deceased from within the house and at the same moment. In this case, as in Brown’s, it was proved that the reputation of the deceased was that of a revengeful and. dangerous man. And several witnesses testified that when he was killed he was within a few feet of the door of the house and was advancing towards it with an axe drawn in a. threatening manner.

The house consisted of a single room, and this could only be entered through the door in front of which the body of Jones was found immediately after the shooting. There-was testimony to show that King and Brown were the guests of Mrs. Ratliff on the day of the killing. A few days previous to that time an angry controversy had occurred be-between King and Jones; and from statements made by King as a witness in his own behalf it would seem that he was apprehensive that Jones would attack him. And the-instructions to the jury which he requested the court to give indicate that he sought to justify his participation in the homicide as well on the ground of self-defense as that in shooting the deceased he was resisting an assault upon Mrs. Ratliff’s house.

Where a violent attempt to enter a dwelling house is resisted as a means of self-defense and the aggressor is slain, the ground on which the homicide may be justified, according to our view of the law, is stated in Brown’s case and need not be repeated here. King’s first instruction appears to have been requested with the view of presenting to the jury the theory that his act in shooting the deceased was a measure necessary to his personal safety. It does not meet all the requirements of the law ; but so much of it as told the jury that the law did not require King to abandon the protection which the house afforded or to expose himself to increased danger by attempting to leave it was proper.

As the guest of Mrs. Ratliff, King could lawfully resist a violent attempt by Jones to enter her house for the purpose of assaulting “any person dwelling or being therein.” Mansf. Dig., sec. 1551; Brown v. State, ante p. 593; Wright v. Commonwealth, 2 S. W. Rep, 908. In defending the house when thus assailed it was his duty to avoid a resort to fatal means if he could do so without exposing himself to ■ the danger of losing his life or of receiving great bodily injury. But he could rightfully employ such force as reasonably appeared to him necessary to repel- the assault. And whether he was justified in shooting Jones to prevent the entry of the latter into the house was a question which it was his right to have submitted to the jury upon a correct charge as to both of the theories on which he relied for an acquittal. As applicable to a defense under section 1551 of the digest, his second instruction was substantially correct to the extent that it goes. - It was not sufficiently full and contained some verbal inaccuracies. But the court should have relieved it of these defects and embraced it in the charge to the jury.

As the appellant did not rest his cause solely on the ground that he shot the deceased in self-defense, the second clause of the court’s third instruction was not correct, for the reason that it excluded from the jury’s consideration the question whether the homicide was justifiable on the ground that it was done in defense of the house.

2. Instruction as to deceased’s character considered. By the last clause of the fifth instruction, the jury were told that the testimony as to the character of the deceased for violence was not .to be considered if they found that, at the time he was killed, he was making no effort to assault King. This instruction, like the third, erroneously leaves out of view the right of King to repel an assault upon the house.

8. when evidence of threats admissible, As it was lawful for King to resist by proper means a violent attempt by Jones to enter the house of Mrs. Ratliff for the purpose of assaulting Brown, any evidence was admissible which went to show that such an attempt was made. As tending to prove that fact, the testimony of Pyle and Mrs. Ratliff that Jones had frequently threatened to take the life of Brown was competent, and it was error to exclude it. Brown v. State, ante, p. 593, and authorities cited.

4. Evidence of post mortem examination, About ten days after the homicide, and after the arrest of the defendant, the body of the deceased was exhumed and examined by Dr. Ruff as a medical expert by request of the attorney for the State, and without notice to the defendant or his attorney. The evidence of Dr. Ruff giving the result of this examination was objected to by the defendant. A post mortem examination made after a prosecution has been commenced and without notice to the accused rests under a suspicion of unfairness. But while the fact that the examination was made ex parte may affect the weight of the evidence thus obtained, it does not render it incompetent. Wharton, Crim. Ev., secs. 421, 422.

For the errors indicated the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.