delivered the opinion of the Court.
Murder, at common law, embraced murder in the first and murder in the second degrees, as defined in Sections 4598-9 of the Code,' brought forward from the third section of the Act of 1829,- ch. 23. The . statutory distinction is- not only founded in mercy and humanity, but is well fortified by reason. In my opinion, . while an indictment at common law is also good under the statute, it is only good to support a conviction for murder, in the second degree, unless . it contain words of like significant import with those of the statute.
It is the defining words of the statute that make the offenses and the distinction between them, definitions and distinctions in the control of the Legislature— control it has exercised, and the Courts are bound by it.
It is too late, after the words of the Act have been so long, uniformly and plainly construed, to attempt to make any two of its’ words have the same meaning — a meaning of equally forcible import — so as to excuse or do away with the employment of one in an indictment for murder in the first degree.
Each of the words used has been defined by this Court in more than one case, and by that definition *291each has a meaning comprehensive within itself not peculiar to either of the others.
The words are, “willful,” “deliberate,” “malicious,” and “premeditated.” We must presume that the Legislature intended (as this Court has held), that each word had its independent meaning, which was a necessary ingredient in the crime of murder in the first degree. While it has been holden that words of the same import will be sufficient, such holding has gone as far as construction and authority will allow, leaving it still the safer plan to employ the words of the law creating and defining the offense. Certainly we must not go to the extent of dropping' one of the words, nor substituting another of a like import,' and giving to another a meaning .not only broad enough for itself, but also for its co-employee in language.
In Dale v. The State, 10 Yerger, 552, Judge Green says: “The killing must be done willfully — that is, of purpose with intent that the act by which the life of the party is taken should have the effect; deliberately — that is, with cool purpose; maliciously— that is, with malice aforethought; and with premeditation — that is, a design must be formed to kill before the act by which the death is produced is performed. In other words, proof must be adduced to satisfy the mind that the death of the party slain was the ultimate result which the concurring will, deliberation and premeditation of the party accused sought;” making a marked distinction and independ*292ence between tbe tbe terms “ deliberation ” and “ premeditation,” and excluding tbe idea of tbe substitution of tbe one for tbe other, or ‘of tautology in tbeir use.
In tbe case of Luster v. The State, (a case of robbery), 11 Hum., 169, Judge Totten says: “It may indeed be inferred from the averments contained in tbe indictment that tbe goods were taken from tbe person of tbe prosecutor and against bis will, but in criminal prosecutions of the grade of felony, at least, nothing that goes to the substance of tbe offense should be left to intendment — it should be distinctly averred.”
And so we say of tbe indictment in this case, it may be inferred that murder in tbe first degree was committed, but it is not distinctly averred. To infer is to supply by intendment.
In tbe cases of Kirby v. The State, 7 Yerger, 264, and of Mitchell v. The State, 8 Yerger, 514, Judge Green delivered the opinions, which left alone would seem to conflict with tbe ruling here, but as already seen, Judge Green delivered the opinion in Dale v. The State, in which be plainly announces tbe effect of an indictment at common law under our statute. I think his latter bolding is more in accord with tbe intention of tbe Legislature.
In Kirby’s case the indictment, after using the common law language, also uses tbe term, “ murder in tbe first degree,” as descriptive of tbe crime. This fact is noticed in tbe opinion as one of importance.
*293In. tbe case before us there is no word or sentence charging a cool purpose, an indispensable ingredient in murder in the. first degree. Willfulness, malice and premeditation may exist without that cool purpose contemplated by the statute as construed. In this view a majority of the Court does not concur, but adheres to the opinion that an .indictment at common law is sufficient to embrace murder in the first degree.
In the cross-examination of witnesses touching character it is incompetent to prove that the Avitnesses “have heard” certain things or offenses charged to the accused. While it is true that a witness may estimate his own knowledge of the party whose character is in issue, he must do so in connexion with his knowledge of his standing in the community in which he lives and did live at the time in which the inquiry may be made, to legalize testimony of character the witness must have heard a sufficient number of persons speak of the assailed to be able to express the well-founded opinion that he believes he knows what a majority would say if called on to speak. Even so, when it is intended on cross-examination to assail character, the same rule obtains and the things or offenses offered to be proved must constitute a part of general character. To íelax the rule would make it quite easy for malicious persons to say things one hour, and the next to prove by the witness called to sustain character that he had heard them.
The words defining the offense of murder in the *294first degree have a technical meaning, and it is the duty of the Court trying an indictment for the crime to give such meaning to the jury in the charge, and not merely to use the language. The jury is not presumed to understand it any more than it is to understand any other technical term. The fact that there is a difference in the technical and literal . meanings makes it the more important and imperative that they be explained.
It is also the duty of the Court to define in his charge all the offenses embraced in an indictment for this crime. The jury is the exclusive judge of the facts, the Court is ■ a witness to it of the law. When the jury has heard the facts, it is for it to say what offense, if any, has been committed against the law. However plain it may be to the mind of the Court that one certain offense has been committed and none other, he must not confine himself in his charge to that offense. When he does so he invades the province of the jury, whose peculiar duty it is to ascertain the grade of offense. However clear it may be, the Court should never decide the facts, but must leave them unembarrassed to the jury.
The rule that a Court is only required to charge as to such questions as are made by the facts, means simply that if legal questions present themselves by the facts, and which are claimed, either to sustain or refute the charges in the indictment, then it is the duty of the Court to charge upon such questions, but if questions not so raised are urged, it is not *295tbe duty of tbe Court to charge touching them. It was never meant that tbe Court should be excused from defining the- offenses averred or embraced in the indictment.
"While it ■ is not abstract error to say to the jury, “ before you can find the defendants guilty before the law, the testimony must - be sufficient to exclude every other reasonable hypothesis but the guilt of the defendants.” The Court should have explained that the proof must exclude the idea that the deceased might have come to his death in a manner inconsistent with the guilt of the accused; that if the facts generated in its minds a probability that the deceased came to his death by other means they should acquit. That the proof need not show that another was the guilty agent or other means the instrument, but that it would be sufficient if such'tendency in .the proof created a reasonable doubt of the guilt of the accused.
Reverse the judgment and remand the cause.