delivered the opinion of the Court:
This was an indictment against Edward Cannon, for the murder of Martin Ryan. The evidence shows that death ensued from a wound in the thigh, severing the femoral artery. The evidence leaves no doubt that the wound was inflicted with a pair of shears some time during a personal encounter between the parties, but just how, or in what manner, or by whom, is not affirmatively shoton with any degree of certainty, unless the testimony of the defendant be accepted as true. One theory of the defense was, that Ryan, while under the influence and excitement of liquor, assaulted the defendant after he 'had retired to bed, by kicking him and attempting to strike him with a pair of shears which the deceased held in his hand; that the defendant warded off the blow, caught the deceased by the leg and threw him on the floor, and that the deceased received the wound by falling upon the shears. The defendant denies any knowledge of how the wound was inflicted, and insists that if in the struggle he in fact did inflict the wound, he was acting indiis necessary self-defense. Taking the evidence of the defendant himself, it can not be said that there is no evidence tending to support this theory.
Numerous errors are assigned. The first is, the refusal' of the court to require the State’s attorney to furnish the defendant’s counsel with the minutes of the testimony taken before the grand jury. We have been referred to no authority sustaining the practice insisted upon. Indeed, the practice in this State has been uniformly the reverse. The statute requires that a list of witnesses shall be indorsed on the indictment, a copy of which shall be delivered to the defendant, and this is all that, is required. There was no error in the refusal of the court in the respect indicated.
When the State’s attorney had concluded his opening, the defendant entered a motion for leave to make the opening statement for the defendant.after the close of the testimony for the prosecution, which the court denied, and thereupon defendant’s counsel made his statement before any evidence was introduced. At most, this motion was addressed to the discretion of the court, and as no injury is shown to have resulted from the ruling of the court, it was not error.
On the trial of the cause Dr. Applington was called as a witness by the People, who testified that he assisted at the post mortem examination of the body of the deceased, and described the nature, character and extent of the wounds, and which thereof was the immediate cause of his death. Witness was then shown a pair of shears, and asked this question: “Examine these shears, and tell the jury whether or not the wounds upon the body of Martin Ryan were likely to have been produced with that" instrument.” He answered, “They could have been produced with that instrument,—yes, sir.” The question was clearly improper, and invaded the province of the jury. The question whether the wounds were or were not inflicted in the manner alleged in the indictment, or with the instrument alleged, was one of fact, for the jury to determine from all the evidence, and in no sense was the proper subject of opinion by experts. But the answer of the witness renders the ohjectionable character of the question harmless. Whether the wound could have been produced by a particular, weapon or in a particular way, judging from its nature, character and extent, was a question upon which the witness, if an expert, might be called upon to give an opinion. The jury undoubtedly understood, from the answer, that in the opinion of this witness the wounds on the body of the deceased could have been made with an instrument such as that produced to the witness. Lawson on Expert Evidence, p. 108, secs, 4, 5.
On the examination of Paul Perc, he was asked by the People, “Was he (Ryan) killed in this county and State?” and he answered, “He was.” This was„the only testimony proving the venue. The question was objected to as leading, and is clearly objectionable, and is not justified on the ground that the witness was an" unwilling one, or upon any other ground apparent. This evidence being upon a point practically conceded, and about which there could be no possible controversy, the leading form of the question could not have been prejudicial error.
The same witness, after testifying that Cannon was in the hall at the time of or immediately after the homicide, and his statements there, was asked, “When Cannon was in the hall, and swearing, could you hear Ryan say anything on the inside.” He answered, “All I heard him say was, ‘Keep still.’” The State’s attorney then asked the witness, “Did you hear him (Ryan) say ‘Don’t?’” He answered, “Yes, I heard that, too.” The witness afterwards stated that all he heard Ryan say was “Keep still.” The manner of examination was highly objectionable, and the record leaves a strong impression that the witness, who was evidently ignorant of our language, was led to the use of the word “don’t” as having been used by Ryan, by the -form of the question. In a case involving the life of a defendant the court should always be careful in the admission of evidence, as well as in giving instructions to the jury, and see to it that nothing occurs on the trial to unduly prejudice the defendant. Coon v. The People, 99 Ill. 370.
The witness Perc was also asked what he heard Cannon and Ryan say in the room, if anything, after they came back from town the last time. He answered: “I did not hear for awhile anything said in the room. I dozed off to sleep. My boarders heard it,”—which was objected to by the defendant. The latter part of this testimony was improperly admitted. The effect of it was to strengthen the testimony of others who may have claimed to have heard what was said in the room. It was hearsay, and could only have been based upon the statements of the boarders, some of whom were not called as witnesses in the case.
On the trial, a witness for the People, a police officer, was asked, “Why did you tell Cannon to go home and go to bed?” This was after the difficulty at the boarding-house, but on the same night, when Cannon had gone to the Harrison House and wanted to surrender himself to an officer. The witness answered, “Well, we had often had him under arrest before.” The defendant objected to both the question and the answer. The court overruled the objection, and permitted the evidence to go to the jury. In this we think there was manifest error. The fact that the defendant had been arrested several times before the night he sought to deliver himself up to the officers of the law, is not evidence tending to show his guilt of the homicide charged. The only effect the evidence could have had was to prejudice the defendant with the jury, and if they found that he was a flagrant violator of the law, and had frequently been under arrest, it can scarcely be doubted that the jury would inflict severer punishment than they would otherwise be inclined to do. That would be its evident tendency, and may have induced the infliction of the extreme penalty of the law instead of a lesser penalty, which the jury might have inflicted.
It will not be necessary to discuss the other errors in the admission of testimony before alluded to, further than to say that they are errors which, while perhaps not sufficient of themselves to warrant a reversal, should be avoided on a retrial of the cause.
We are of the opinion that the court did not err in its refusal to admit evidence of the disposition of the deceased as to violence, etc., when intoxicated. The evidence shows that the deceased was, at the time of the homicide, much under the influence of intoxicants. The defendant sought to show that during the three months he and Ryan boarded at the Sullivan House the latter was in the habit of getting intoxicated, and that when under the influence of liquor he was quarrelsome, vicious and dangerous. It is said that the reason given by the court for the exclusion of this evidence was, that there was no evidence tending to show that the deceased was the assailant in the affray. The defendant was a competent witness in his own behalf. No one was present but himself and Ryan during the affray which resulted in the death of Ryan. His testimony was competent to be considered by the jury, and given such weight as in their judgment, in view of all the facts and circumstances proved, it was entitled to. He testified, that after he had gone to bed Ryan entered his room, kicked him, and assaulted him with the shears, with an expressed determination to take his life. The wounds on the defendant’s person would clearly indicate that there was a hostile struggle between them, if the jury believed, from the evidence, there were such wounds. When one is attacked by another in a manner and with a weapon evincing a purpose to take life or to do great bodily harm, the person assaulted is required to judge and determine, by means within his knowledge or such as are apparent, of the necessity of resorting to force in self-defense, and in determining the. extent and amount of force required to repel the. assault. If the assailant is known to be a dangerous and vicious person, it requires no argument to show that the reasonable fears of an ordinarily prudent man would be aroused more readily and to a much greater extent than if the person was known to-be of a quiet and peaceable disposition. So it is the settled rule of law, that where it is shown that the deceased made an assault upon the defendant, the temper and disposition of the party who is the assailant may be shown,—and especially is this so where the assailant was a violent and dangerous man, and such disposition was, at the time of the assault, known to the accused. We are of opinion that the evidence should have been admitted if it had been offered after the introduction of the evidence of the defendant. If the jury believed the defendant, it became highly important that they should be apprised of all the circumstances, real or apparent, surrounding the defendant at the time of the alleged homicide, from which he was called upon to determine the necessity of resorting to force in defense of his life or person. Wharton on Crim. Law, (7th rev. ed.) sec. 641; 2 Bishop on Crim. Proc. sec. 62; Queensbury v. State, 3 Stew. & Port. 308 ; Oliver v. State, 17 Ala. 587; Pritchett v. State, 22 id. 39; Monroe v. State, 5 Ga. 85; Wharton on Crim. Evidence, sec. 69; State v. Zellars, 2 Halst. 230; State v. Smith, 12 Rich. 430.
Wharton, in his work on Criminal Evidence, (sec. 84,) says t “Taking the authorities as a whole, therefore, we may hold that it is admissible for the defendant, after having first established that he was assailed by the deceased, and in apparent danger, to prove that the deceased was a person of ferocity, brutality, vindictiveness and excessive strength, such evidence-being offered for the purpose of showing either (1) that the-defendant was acting in terror, and hence incapable of that specific malice necessary to constitute murder in the first degree, or (2) that he was in such apparent extremity as to make out a case of self-defense, or (3) that the deceased’s purpose in encountering the defendant was deadly.”
When the defendant is the assailant or commences the affray, he will not be entitled to show in defense the vicious or wicked disposition of the person whom he has slain. Having sought and brought on the affray he can not shield himself from punishment for the homicide by showing that he aroused the vicious or wicked passions of the party killed. But when evidence is submitted from which the court can see that the jury may, if they give it credence, find that the party killed was the assailant, and that the defendant acted in self-defense, such evidence becomes admissible, as tending to show the circumstances by which the defendant was surrounded, and the-extent of the apparent danger to his life or person, and from which he might be justified in believing that his life was in danger, or that he was in danger of suffering great bodily harm at the hands of the assailant, and illustrating to the jury the motive by which he was influenced. It appears, however, that the evidence was offered before the defendant testified, and was rejected, and that it was not again offered after his-testimony. At the time it was offered there was no evidence-showing that the deceased was the assailant, and the evidence-was then properly excluded. If the defendant desired the evidence to go to the jury, it should have been offered after the= Introduction of the evidence tending to show the assault by "the deceased.
The third instruction given at the instance of the People was as follows:
“The court instructs the jury, that in considering whether the killing was in self-defense, the jury should consider all the circumstances attending the killing, the conduct of the parties at the time and immediately prior thereto, and the degree of force used by the prisoner in making what is claimed to be his self-defense, as bearing upon the question as to whether the blows, cuts and wounds given the deceased were actually given in self-defense, or whether they were given in carrying out an unlawful purpose; and if the jury believe, from the evidence, that the force used was unreasonable in amount and character, and such as a reasonable mind would have so considered under the circumstances, it is proper for the jury to consider that fact in determining whether the killing was in self-defense or not.”
This instruction assumes the killing of the deceased, and that the defendant gave the blows, cuts and wounds from which he died. It is true that the interposition of the defense, of self-defense, presupposes that the defendant may have taken the life of the person killed; but in this case no living person saw or knew of the manner of the assault but the defendant. He as we have seen, denies the use of the deadly weapon, or that he inflicted any blows, cuts or wounds therewith. He admits having the deadly weapon in his hand, but insists that if any blow was struck by him of the-character producing the fatal wound he has no knowledge of it, and that all he did, at any time, was in his necessary self-defense, to repel the assault made upon him by Ryan. Under these circumstances the instruction should have been so drawn as not to foreclose the consideration by the jury of this evidence, as was done by the assumption of the instruction that the blows, cuts and wounds were inflicted by the defendant. It can be justly said that the fact was controverted, and that the instruction was calculated to withdraw from the jury a just consideration of the evidence. We have had frequent occasion to condemn instructions of like character. Eames v. Blackhart, 12 Ill. 195 ; Sherman v. Dutch, 16 id. 286; Hopkinson v. The People, 18 id. 264; Bond v. The People, 39 id. 27; Hoge v. The People, 117 id. 46.
The fifth of the People’s instructions was as follows:
“The court instructs the jury, as a matter of law, that a person has no right to use any more force in self-defense than a person of ordinary prudence would deem necessary under the circumstances. If he is struck with the naked hand, and there is no reason to believe that it is designed to do him great bodily harm, he will not be justified in returning blows with a dangerous weapon. And if the jury believe, from the evidence in this case, that Martin Ryan did strike or slap the defendant with his naked hand, without any design to do him great bodily harm, and they further find, from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant then assaulted the said Martin Eyan with a deadly weapon, inflicting serious and fatal wounds upon his person, thereby causing his death, then the jury should find the defendant guilty.”
There was no evidence of any blows struck by the deceased, except that of the defendant, and no evidence whatever that he struck a blow with his naked hand, but, on the contrary, the only evidence of an assault by the deceased was with a deadly weapon, accompanied with a threat against the life of the defendant. The only direct evidence, therefore, upon this subject, tended to show a violent assault with a deadly weapon, and with an expressed murderous intent. There was no evidence upon which this instruction could be based. It was therefore improperly given, and is prejudicial error. Belk v. The People, 125 Ill. 584; Sanders v. The People, 124 id. 227; Stern v. The People, 102 id. 540 ; Hansberg v. The People, 120 id. 21; Hoge v. The People, 117 id. 46. The instruction is otherwise inaccurate, in excluding the consideration of the apparent conditions surrounding the defendant. Campbell v. The People, 16 Ill. 17; Maher v. The People, 24 id. 241.
We do not deem it necessary to pursue the investigation further. Exceptions are taken to other rulings of the court, which will probably be corrected upon another trial, and we do not consider them of sufficient moment to warrant discussion.
For the reasons already given, the judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause remanded for re-trial.
Judgment reversed.