The counsel for the defendant, who tried this cause in the circuit court, and are, therefore, presumed to be somewhat conversant with the facts therein, have not seen fit to furnish us with a statement of those facts. I will, therefore, have to wade through this voluminous record in order to become acquainted with them.
The homicide, which caused this appeal, occurred December 31, 1881, in the town of La Belle, Clark county, Missouri. On that day, about dark, Stoddard, the landlord of the hotel, on going into the office, saw sitting there by the stove the defendant in his socks. Several others were present, among them the deceased, a negro named Andy Roan, who was engaged in carrying water, when one Yates came in and asked Roan to pay a small debt he owed him; this was spoken in pleasantry, and was repeated, whereupon the defendant rose to his feet, and with the exclamation, “ I will make him pay it,” drew his pistol and shot Roan in the *560abdomen, from which, wound he died within a few days. The landlord, after a struggle, took Lowe ’ s pistol from him; he then tried to make his escape from the room, but the landlord threatened to shoot him, and on the second threat he returned and seated himself in the chair from which he had arisen. The sheriff of the county then went into the office, when the landlord handed the pistol to him, and he asked the defendant why he had shot Roan, and he replied, “That is my business.” Asked also, by the sheriff, why he carried the pistol, he replied in the same language.
Just before the shooting, the defendant had asked to be shown to his room, and when the landlord went to see about the room for him, and returning told him he was ready to show him to his room, he replied that he did not believe he would go. Yery soon thereafter the shooting occurred. It seems the defendant was a stranger to the landlord, and he certainly was to Yates, who had never seen him before that afternoon. Yates, story of the affair, in brief, is, that a little while before the shooting the defendant, who had his overcoat on and in his sock feet, and appeared to be drinking, hunched him with his elbow and said, “I am drunk-pretty d — d drunk, don’t give me away ;” that he then handed a bottle of whiskey to Yates and Hinson and asked them to take a drink with him, but they refused, when the defendant said, ‘ ‘ That leaves that much more-for me.” Yates also stated that the defendant, after telling the sheriff, “that’s my business,” immediately thereafter said, “I submit, gentlemen; let me get my boots on.” Yates also said that the defendant looked like and hiccoughed like a drunken man, and his tongue seemed to be thick. Wilson was also present when the shooting occurred. Wilson had seen the defendant about a year before, when he and his nephew hired a horse and buggy from Wilson, who kept a livery-stable. Wilson states that when the defendant shot Roan, he *561then made toward the door, after the pistol was taken from him, when Stoddard told him to stop or he would shoot him, and Wilson then took hold of the defendant and told him to stop or Stoddard would shoot him, and that thereupon the defendant sat down in a chair and said nothing.
Prior to the time of going to the hotel the defendant had been at Wilson’s livery-stable about 2 o’clock, when he made inquiry about feeding his horse and about a hotel; that he looked like a man who was cold, not drunk, but this was some three hours before the fatal occurrence. Medical testimony was introduced showing that the death of Roan was caused by the pistol shot.
Sommers, the sheriff, who arrested the defendant, had also seen him a couple of hours prior to the shooting in the room in which it took place. Lowe spoke' to him and called him “Doctor,” and asked him what was the matter with him (Lowe), and asked him to feel his pulse; that Lowe had a bottle of whiskey, drank from it and asked him to drink; wanted Sommers to tell him what was good for him; Sommers thought he was drunk, felt of his pulse and told him to take some coal oil.
Nunn corroborates the testimony of Sommers in most particulars. In addition he says that Lowe told Sommers he was drunk, and the latter, replied, “I think you are,” and prescribed coal oil; that Lowe had taken a drink from his bottle; he came back, took a seat and said he was “sanctified;” that Lowe, after saying he was drunk, repeated the remark with the qualification, that he was “pretty d — d drunk;” said he was raised in Kentucky; was raising a crop at Williamstown; said he would not tell where he got his whiskey ; that he was able to take care of himself; had bought his whiskey and paid for it; could take care of himself ; but did not want to be given away, and was down on his way below *562La Belle. This witness says also that Lowe appeared, to be somewhat under the influence of liquor; not exactly steady on his feet; his articulation not very good ; seemed like a man who had been riding in the cold and stunned. His son, also a witness on behalf of the state, testified to seeing Lowe drink, and that he appeared to be drunk. This witness confirms the statement of Yates that Lowe, when they refused to drink with him, said: “ There will be that much more left for me.”
The state here rested, and evidence was introduced for the defence. It consisted, in part, of numerous depositions taken in Kentucky. I will give the substance of four of these depositions and let them stand as types of the others. The deposition of McSpeak, taken in July, 1882, in Boone county, Kentucky, was to the effect that he became acquainted with the defendant in 1864, in Grant county, Kentucky, where Lowe and witness lived; that his full name was William Morehead Lowe; some called him “Moses” Lowe; knew him personally and intimately ; had worked for him in Kentucky some five or six years, till Lowe moved to Missouri; that, in June or July of said year, while the witness lived with Lowe and slept in the same room with him, Lowe left home directly after dinner, and returned in the evening just before supper, ate supper, when witness and others present tried to Induce Lowe to go bed, but he refused, stating that he was afraid; dare not sleep in the room, but went down into the orchard, and that was the last seen of him until morning, when witness, on getting up, saw Lowe coming up from the orchard, and asked him where he stayed the previous night, when he replied: “I dozed there, and they did not get me.” Witness then asked him “who,” and he said, “them fellows,” .and that was all the reply he would make; that after breakfast Lowe would work a few minutes, and then ■dodge off at something else; did not work at regular work, as he usually did ; that he looked wild out of his *563eyes the evening he came home, seemed excited and scared all the time, and remained in that condition some four or five days. Witness further stated that, in June, in the year 1866, he was at work in his own cornfield close to where Lowe lived, when the latter called him by name to come to him, the sound of the voice indicating he was in some brush; that witness called to him to come to witness, but Lowe replied, “I can’t, you must come to me.” Witness then started in the direction from which the voice proceeded and found Lowe crouched down behind a stump in some brush, looking wild out of his eyes, and afraid of something or somebody. Witness then spoke to him, and asked him what he was doing there, when he replied, “them fellows are after meand when witness asked him what fellows, Lowe said, “them fellows; they were after me all night, and they are still after me to-day,” and witness could not persuade Lowe to the contrary. Witness further stated that on 'that occasion Lowe insisted on witness going with him to “Dry Ridge,” saying that if witness would go “them fellows would not hurt him.”
Witness thereupon went with him to Dry Ridge, stayed with him all day, and returned with him to witness’ house, where he stayed all night; in the morning seemed better, but still looked wild out of his eyes when he went home ; that, on these occasions, though he was in the habit of taking his dram like other citizens, yet that he was not, in the opinion of witness, drunk or under the influence of whiskey, nor did witness see him drink any liquor during these times, and that witness would have known it had he done so. Witness further stated that, in 1866 or 1867, Lowe and witness still living in Grant county and in the same neighborhood, and about one and one-half miles apart, Lowe disappeared from home for about three weeks, none of the neighbors knowing what had become of him. Witness then went to Covington, Kentucky, and stopped at the *564Drovers’ hotel. Lowe called on him there, having seen him in the barroom, and looked more wild and excited ont of his eyes than on the former occasions; asked witness to take a walk with him, and on going ont on. the pavement, urged witness to goto McLaughlin’s with him and get supper. Witness urged him to stay and eat supper with him at the hotel, but Lowe said : “I can’t stay here,” and being asked why, replied : “ They were after me all night, and they are still after me.” Witness then asked him “ who,” and the only reply he could get out of him was “themfellows,” and told witness that if he would go down with him to McLaughlin’s that “them fellows -would not bother him; that they were afraid of witness.” Witness went with him and took supper at McLaughlin’s and they went to bed, but Lowe slept none that night; had three pistols on a stand near his bed, and was up and down every ten minutes through the night; when he would jump up he would pick up a pistol and present it at the window as though he were going to shoot some one, and when witness would tell him to come back to bed, that nobody would hurt him, he would come, only to repeat the same movement again and again through the night, and during the night he would frequently break out into a long, dry, and unnatural laugh, and. when asked what he was laughing about, would make no answer.
The next morning Lowe looked as wild and excited as he did the night before, but went with witness to Cincinnati; walked around all day ; stayed with witness that night at the Drovers’ hotel; the next morning seemed better and returned with witness to his home in Grant county ; that on this last occasion Lowe was not drinking, nor under the influence of liquor; that during these three “spells,” and the most of the time, Lowe was melancholy, moody, and despondent, and when standing would repeatedly drop his head as though in a deep study and trouble, and while standing or sitting *565•would often break out into an unnatural laugh, as before stated, and when asked the cause would either say, “Oh, nothing,” or else would make no answer, and that Lowe’s conduct was about the same from the time witness first became acquainted with him until he went to Missouri, and that witness noticed Lowe’s conduct all the more closely because of having been informed by the neighbors that, in 1868, the year before the witness moved to the neighborhood, Lowe had run off into the woods and remained some time, giving as a reason for his absence that he was afraid to stay at home. Witness concluded by stating that in his opinion, that from the time witness first became acquainted with him up to the time he moved to Missouri Lowe was of unsound mind.
The depositions of Beard, J. G. Green, and D. Green, Dry Ridge, Grant county, Kentucky, taken in July, 1882, were next read in evidence. Beard’s deposition was to the effect that he worked with Lowe pretty much all the time during the years 1870, ’71, and ’72 ; worked with him some six or eight months before discovering something wrong in his. conduct; while at work he would suddenly become wild and would not appear to know what he was doing; sometimes the spells would come on suddenly and sometimes gradually; would commence talking on one subject, become excited and change to another subject, without finishing the first conversation. While in one of those “spells” Lowe would say some persons wanted to kill him, or were watching for him, and would fire his pistol or gun into the trees or up into the air; sometimes, while in one of those “spells,” would leave the place and be gone several days; during those “spells” would frequently say, “them fellows are after me;” sometimes in those “spells” would leave the house after night, take his gun and fire it off after leaving the house. At other times, when Lowe would say some persons were after him trying to kill him, he would get down on his *566hands and knees and crawl into the weeds, and sometimes crawl along the fence, as if he were trying to hide-from somebody; would become dissatisfied with his best friends and tell them they were trying to betray him. Other instances were given by this witness tending to prove insanity, and the opinion of the witness was that Lowe was of unsound mind.
The deposition of W. J. Green was much to the same effect as that of the preceding witnesses. He gives an instance that when he and his wife were riding by a house where Lowe- was, when Lowe ran out into the front yard, and when about twenty steps distant he began firing his pistol towards them, causing witness’ wife’s horse to throw her, but never stopped for that, but kept on-firing until he got through, when he gave a dry laugh and hastily walked back to the house. In his deposition, D. Green confirms the testimony of the other witnesses and testifies to Lowe having, without any apparent cause, shot at Nix, a blacksmith, while Nix was conversing with others, and Lowe was sitting down on a bench apart from the rest and saying nothing. This witness also testifies to seeing Lowe hiding around in the bushes, and saying “they are after me that this occurrence took place in 1862, but after the death of his two nephews in 1866, to whom Lowe seemed much attached, he seemed to take their deaths very hard, and his mind seemed to grow worse, and his bad spells became more frequent and more noticeable. In the spring of 1870 this witness discovered Lowe hiding around in his cornfield, and when discovered Lowe ran off into the woods and brush, but after two or three hours returned, appearing wild and excited, but upon being asked what was the matter, made no reply. This witness states that from that time on Lowe was frequently in this same condition of mind until he left for Missouri, the “spells” averaging once a month. In the opinion of this witness, the mind of Lowe was unsound.
*567All of the witnesses bore testimony to Lowe’s good reputation, for being’ peaceable and orderly, and the other depositions are of the same general tenor and effect as those already set forth. Witnesses were also introduced, the general purport of whose testimony was the same as that already gathered from the depositions. Dr. Yincent, one of these witnesses, became acquainted with Lowe in the spring of 1881; testified to the peculiarities of Lowe’s conversation; how he would flit from one subject to another wholly foreign to it; would engage in a conversation with the witness, suddenly stop, nudge witness and take him off to one side, tell him something; then would say to him, “you know all about that,” and when witness would say “what?” Lowe would reply, “ never mind, I will tell you some other time,” and that Lowe had a number of such interviews with him, about once a month, or oftener. On one occasion this witness relates, that when Lowe was at the postoffice in Steffen,sville, two boys got into a scuffle,' when Lowe pulled out his pistol and said, “I can settle that d — d quick,” and when witness told him to put up his pistol he did so, remarking, “just as you say.” This witness says that on another occasion he met Lowe in the road driving two horses ; had hay on the wagon; he stopped, showed witness a shotgun hid under the hay, and said: “I will fix them fellows this time,” and would point to his dog and say something about “them fellows.” These remarks Lowe repeated several times. This witness also spoke of Lowe using liquor frequently, but not in sufficient quantities to produce the results already stated ; and that Lowe seemed to have “ emotional insanity ” with “ melancholia.” He also testified that, in his opinion, Lowe, when he met him in the road on the occasion referred to, was not conscious of what he was doing. He further said that, in his opinion, Lowe was in an unsound condition of mind on the Friday next preceding the Saturday of the homicide.
*568Nicols testified that Lowe was thrown from his mare in Grant county, Kentucky, about 1861 or ’ 62, and badly hurt about the head and neck, confined to the bed for about a month, and for a long time thereafter could not straighten his neck or turn his head; that witness first noticed his peculiarities of conduct in 1862, after he received that hurt. Those peculiarities this witness relates in much the same way that the other witnesses do ; that he would get off to himself, sit down as though in a deep study, head leaning forwards, then spring up and walk off rapidly and break out into a laugh; at other times, and frequently, would say to witness, “them fellows are after me,” and would ask witness if he “did not see them fellows after him.” This witness states that, at one of these times, when Lowe lived with him on his home farm in Kentucky, in the fall of 1862, Lowe went out into the yard one night, and calling witness out there, told him: “I told you them fellows were after me; don’t you see them up yonder above the barn?” that witness made light of him and proposed to him to go up there and convince him that there was nobody there; they accordingly went, but found nobody, and Lowe then said to witness: “I reckon you are right, George; I must be crazy.” Frequent instances of this sort were related by this witness, who also stated that though Lowe used whiskey, he never did it to excess to witness’ knowledge, and that save when in those spells, he attended to his business. In the opinion of witness, Lowe, when in óne of these “spells,” was not in his right mind. According to this witness, those peculiarities of conduct, and fears of persons being after him to kill him, extended down to the fall of 1881, and that he complained of his head down to that time. This witness was also of the opinion that Lowe was not of sound mind at the time of' the homicide.
There was much other testimony of this sort introduced. There was some testimony offered by the state *569in rebuttal, but from many considerations it did not equal in force or directness that offered on behalf of the defendant, the witnesses for the state not possessing equal opportunities with those who testified in his behalf. There was testimony offered oh behalf of the state, also, to the effect that Lowe was a man of dissipated habits, and the testimony of most of the medical experts was to the effect that Lowe’s mental condition was owing to those habits, superinduced, perhaps, to some extent, by the hurt he received when thrown from his mare in Kentucky. With one exception, however, all the experts pronounced Lowe insane at the time- he fired the shot, and incapable of distinguishing- right from wrong in that particular act. One of the physicians thought Lowe was sane, but drank at the time of the homicide. Another physician thought the mental condition of the defendant was the result, not of dipsomania, or alcoholism, but of the hurt he had received.
I. I have set out the evidence at so great a length for two purposes: (1) Because it is claimed that the verdict is so palpably wrong and against the evidence as to indicate that the jury were actuated by prejudice; and (2) in order to a better understanding of the instructions given and refused. I do not regard the evidence tending to show the defendant’s guilt, of such a character, and as lacking so much in probative force, when considered in connection with that offered on the part of the defendant, as would authorize this court in interfering with the verdict of the jury, and in saying this I do but follow frequent adjudications of this court. State v. Cook, 58 Mo. 548; State v. Musick, 71 Mo. 401. Here the point sharply made and contested was, whether the homicidal act was the result of a disordered brain by reason of drunkenness or by reason of insanity, and the verdict of the jury has sanctioned the latter conclusion, a conclusion which should not be disturbed if proper instructions were given.
*570II. I am thus brought to consider the instructions given and refused. They will accompany the report of this c ase. Of those instructions which were given for the state, speaking of them .in a general way, they are unobjectionable, announcing as they do the well-settled law of this court. Some of those given on behalf of the defendant are, perhaps, too favorable to' him, but there is no call to discuss them, as he cannot complain. The fifth instruction, given at the instance of the state, contains no error, for the reason that there was evidence tending to show that the defendant’s condition was the immediate result of drunkenness, and such a condition, as a matter of course, could afford no extenuation of a crime committed whilst under such influence. But I have been in doubt as to the propriety of the refusal to give the eighteenth instruction asked by the defendant. It was as follows :
“18. If the jury shall believe, from the evidence, that defendant was insane when he left the state of Kentucky in the year A. X)., 1877, then the presumption of the law, that he was sane and of sound mind at the time he shot the negro, is removed and repelled, and in case they shall believe that he was insane or of unsound mind when he left Kentucky in 1877, as aforesaid, then and in that case the law presumes that such insanity continued up to and existed at the very time he shot the negro, and in that case the defendant is not required to prove that he was insane or of unsound mind at the time he shot the negro. But it devolves upon the.state, in that case, to prove that, at the time defendant shot the negro, he was sane or knew the right from the wrong.”
■ The rule of law, as I understand it to be, is, that, where insanity is the result of some temporary cause, as a fit of sickness or the like, that then no presumptions of continuity flow from such temporary cause ; but, on the other hand, when you establish, as the evidence tended *571to do in this case, an insane condition of mind, existing- and exhibiting its peculiarities for a long period of years, I incline to think that an instruction embodying the principle evidently intended to be contained in the one asked should have-been given. 1 Greenl. Evid., sec. 42; 2 Bishop Crim. Proc., sec. 674; 2 Greenl. Evid., sec. 689; 1 Whart. Crim. Law, sec. 63; People v. Francis, 38 Cal. 183; 1 Whart. & Stille Med. Jur., sec. 61; Crouse v. Holman, 19 Ind. 30; Armstrong v. Timmons, 3 Harr. (Del.) 342. If the instruction was not properly worded, it was the duty of the court, under our practice, to give a correct instruction on the point. This habitual, permanent, or chronic state of insanity being shown to exist, its continued existence will be presumed, and the burden of establishing a subsequent lucid interval at the time of the act, either civil or criminal, being done, lies on him who asserts it. Chamberlayne’s Best’s Evid., sec. 405; Menkins v. Lightner, 18 Ill. 282; Whart. Crim. Evid., sec. 730, and cases above cited; Att'y Gen'l v. Parnther, 3 Bro. C. C., s. p. 441. Indeed the bare assertion that a man has lucid intervals is tantamount to the assertion that he is not cured of his lunacy, but has intervals of reason. Saxon v. Whitaker, 30 Ala. 237; Ripley v. Babcock, 13 Wis. 425. In State v. Wilner, 40 Wis. 304, where the circumstances tending to show insanity or delusion were not nearly so strong as in the case at bar, it was held error to refuse an instruction similar to the one under discussion.
For the reasons stated, error was committed in giving the seventh instruction on behalf of the state, which was as follows:
c£7. If the jury shall believe, from the evidence in the cause, that from, the year 1862, up to the time of the killing of the deceased, Andrew Roan, the defendant was for certain periods insane, and for certain other periods sane, then before the jury can acquit the defendant they must be satisfied, from the evidence in the *572cause, that defendant was insane at the time of the killing, and the burden of establishing such insanity rests upon the defendant.”
III. I now proceed to examine the indictment,. the insufficiency of which has been questioned : It employs neither the words, “deliberately,” nor “premeditatedly,” but charges the homicidal act to have been done “feloniously, wilfully, and with malice aforethought.” The'point is whether the indictment sufficiently charges the offence of which the defendant stands convicted ; i. e., murder in the second degree. Our statute provides that, “Every murder which shall be committed by means of poison, or by lying in wait, or by any other kind of wilful, deliberate, and premeditated killing, or which shall be committed in the perpetration, or attempt to perpetrate, any arson, rape, robbery, burglary, or mayhem, shall be deemed murder in the first degree.” R. S., 1879, sec. ,1232.
The next succeeding section says : “All other kinds of murder at common law, not herein declared to be manslaughter, or justifiable or excusable homicide, shall be deemed murder in the second degree.” R. S., sec. 1233. This is a well-bethumbed statute, and a great deal has been written concerning it. Prior to 1531, when the statute of 23 Hen. VIII., c. 1, section 3, was passed, only one form of felonious homicide was known ; that was known as manslaughter, and that form necessarily included those malicious killings since denominated murder. All homicides were then punishable with death; but clergy was allowed for all. But that statute, according to its express terms, took away clergy in all cases where the homicide was committed “wilfully and of malice aforethought,” and to that class of offences thus particularly designated, the name of murder was subsequently given. This statute sharply defined the distinction, which still remains, between mur*573der and manslaughter, as well in England as in this country.
After that statute went into operation, in order to set forth every allegation of the fact pertaining to the punishment, and thus comply with a well-known rule of criminal pleading, the old form of indictment was expanded so as to include the words, “wilfully and of malice aforethought.” Indictments thus expanded con-. tained the operative words of the statute referred to, thus : “That A, at, etc., on, etc., in and upon B, feloniously, wilfully, and with malice aforethought, did make an assault,” etc., etc. Our statute, above quoted, having divided murder into two degrees, designating murder in the first degree as a deliberate and premeditated killing, and providing that “all other kinds of murder at common law not herein, etc., * * shall be deemed murder in the second degree,” it became necessary under the rules of good pleading, in • order to charge murder in the first degree, to expand the old common-law form of indictment for murder, by adding the operative words of our statute to the old common-law form, and leaving murder in the second degree to be described under the old form, just as manslaughter continued to be described under the old form after the change in form necessitated by the enactment of 23 Hen. VIII. Murder in the second degree is murder at common law, bereft of all the aggravating incidents designated in section 1232. In a word, murder in the first degree, under our statute, is, in one sense, the subtrahend of murder at common law, and murder in the second degree, the remainder. Since murder in the second degree is murder at common law, its only appropriate description is to be found in the old common-law form of indictment for murder after the change made by 23 Hen. VIII. These views will be found fully supported. 2 Bishop Crim. Proc., secs. 498, 499, 541, 563, and 564; Bower v. State, 5 Mo. 364; State v. Jones, 20 Mo. 58; Fouts v. State, 4 G. Greene (Iowa) *574500; State v. McCormick, 27 Iowa, 402, and cas. cit.; State v. Brown, 21 Kan. 38.
The words, “with malice aforethought,” are the legal equivalents of “with malice and premeditation.” State v. Curtis, 70 Mo. 594; People v. Vance, 21 Cal. 400.
IV. It is claimed that a reversal of the judgment must occur because the evidence shows a case of murder in the first degree, or of manslaughter in the fourth degree. Under the provisions of section 1654, Revised Statutes, 1879, it constitutes no ground of objection that a person is found guilty of an offence less in degree than that of which he is really guilty. It seems singular, however, that the indictment was not drawn for murder in the first degree. The defendant, if not insane, was clearly guilty of that degree of crime.
Por the errors mentioned, the judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded.
All concur.