Vaughan v. State

Thacher, J.:

This case comes into this court by writ of error to the circuit court of Lowndes county.

*246It was an indictment nnder the statute for shooting with intent to kill, and upon trial resulted in a verdict of guilty.

We shall notice two grounds upon which the judgment of the court below must be reversed.

The record does not show that the offense was committed in the county of Lowndes. The bill of exceptions is certified by the court below to contain all the evidence adduced upon the trial. It is to that alone, therefore, that we can look for the evidence. The bill of exceptions contains nothing that sufficiently meets the requirements of the law, as proof of the venue. It is scarcely necessary to add, that the offense must be proved to have been committed in the county, as charged in the indictment, in order to bring it within the jurisdiction of the court.

Again, from the evidence, as detailed in the bill of exceptions serious doubts arise in our minds that the defendant below entertained felonious intentions at the time of the alleged assault. A dispute had existed between the defendant below and his .neighbors about the right of the latter to use a part of his lands as a highway for travel. Upon the day mentioned in the indictment, certain boys, returning from school, undertook this road, not without some design, as they themselves confess, to annoy the defendant below. They were pursued by the defendant, who, when at the distance of sixty yards from one of the boys, who was then getting over a fence, discharged his gun. The boy against whom the gun is alleged to have been discharged, was uninjured, and no marks of shot could be discovered in the immediate neighborhood of the place where he was at the time. Subsequently, marks of shot were found in some bushes, and traced to a sapling in a somewhat different direction from that which the boy had occupied, and were discovered to be small bird shot. There was other testimony that went to prove that the bird shot were most probably the contents of the gun which was discharged. If they were not so, there is no evidence that the gun contained anything more than a charge of powder. It has been held, in cases decided under statutes similar to our own, that it must appear that the firearms were loaded, so as to be capable of doing the mischief intended. If loaded with powder and wadding only, but if fired so near an individual and in such *247a direction that it would probably till him, it would como within the statute. But it would be absurd to say that the discharging a gun, even loaded with ball, at so great a distance as could not possibly effect injury to the person against whom it was directed, evinced an intention to kill; and the same may be said of anything else wherewith the gun may be loaded. There was evidence before the jury of experiments having been made with the gun used by the defendant, that went to show that at the same distance at which he stood from the boy when the gun was discharged, and with a charge of the same kind of bird shot, the gun was incapable of taking life. Now, as a man’s motives and intentions are to be inferred from the means which he uses, and the acts which he does, we are inclined to the belief that no serious damage was intended by the defendant, but that his object was rather to alarm than to injure.

The judgment of the court below must be reversed, and a new trial awarded by the circuit court of Lowndes county.