(dissenting).—The defendant was indicted at the April term, 1887, of the Montgomery county circuit court for an assault with intent to kill one George Woods. He was tried at the same term and convicted and his punishment assessed at two years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary. He appealed from the judgment of the circuit court to this court. The indictment was returned to the lower court on the twenty-sixth day of April, 1887, and the trial had at the April adjourned term in June following. The alleged assault was made on the fifth of April, 1887, at the annual school meeting of the district in which the defendant and George Woods resided. The defendant was a member of the board of directors and its president. The father of George Woods, the party charged to have been assaulted, was also a member of the board. The latter’s term expired at that time, and two directors *110were to be elected at- that meeting. Much feeling had been engendered in the district by previous efforts to divide it and to move the schoolhouse site. This feeling had assumed a personal character as between the defendant and the Woods family, father and sons. Other considerations, more purely personal, had caused coolness between the families.
There was a contest at the school meeting over the election of two directors and the opposing interests were known geographically as the northern and southern factions. There was a large attendance at the meeting. One director was elected and two ballots had been taken in an effort to elect the second. During the progress of the third ballot John or Alexander Woods, or both, challenged the vote of one John Rodgers, out of which grew an altercation resulting in an attack upon Rodgers by John Woods, or, as some witnesses say, by both John and Alexander Woods, in which Rodgers was knocked down and severely beaten. During the progress of this fight McNamara, the defendant, drew his pistol. Some witnesses testify that Alexander Woods, during the fight between Rodgers and his brother John, advanced in a threatening manner toward .the defendant, taking off his coat as he went toward him. Others say that he proceeded in the direction of the defendant, but was in reality following his brother, who was bearing Rodgers back and past the defendant, whilst still other testimony is to the effect that he advanced upon McNamara and, upon the latter drawing his pistol, he turned away and joined his brother John in his assault upon Rodgers. The witnesses uniformly agree that defendant made no effort to use his pistol, but stood holding it in his hand.
At this juncture the witnesses all concur in stating that George Woods approached the defendant from behind and clasped his arms around the defendant, pinioning the latter’s arms to his side. The defendant *111struggled until lie succeeded in freeing one band, and, turning partially around, be fired over bis shoulder at bis assailant, tbe bullet passing through' tbe latter’s cap, but doing him no injury. No witness saw George Woods strike tbe defendant before tbe shot was fired. But no one denies that be might have done so. One witness testifies that when tbe shot was fired be saw blood trickling down the back of tbe defendant’s bead, and it is not disputed that there was blood on tbe back of bis bead at tbe close of tbe difficulty, and blood on tbe floor and bench where be was standing when assaulted by George Woods, and that an ugly wound bad been made on tbe back of his head by some instrument. One witness says it was a gash which could have been made with a knife. The defendant himself testifies that be received a blow or cut from some one before be was caught from behind. He did not know who held him. He believed it was Geo. Woods. He tried to look around and, in tbe impulse of self-preservation, be fired tbe shot. And tbe testimony of tbe defendant discloses ample ground for being armed with tbe pistol; but whether be bad such ground or not is immaterial, unless be were indicted for carrying concealed weapons. The evidence shows that defendant, after firing the shot, was borne to tbe floor by Geo. Woods, bis pistol was taken from him by tbe latter and he and bis brother Alex, beat tbe defendant into a dazed condition. Their father made them desist, and himself assisted tbe defendant to rise from tbe floor.
After these two simultaneous difficulties had ceased, George Woods, not satisfied with tbe punishment be and bis brother Alex, bad inflicted upon McNamara, and tbe beating that bis brother John bad given Rodgers, himself became involved in an altercation with Rodgers. Each called the other a coward, and there is evidence that Woods advanced upon Rodgers when tbe latter fired upon him, giving him a mortal *112wound, from which, he died in a few minutes. There was no connection between McNamara and Rodgers, and neither of them had anything to do with the difficulty between the other and the Woods brothers, further than that Rodgers was voting with what was called by some witnesses the McNamara faction. Alexander Woods was very active in canvassing the district for some time before, the meeting, and on the day before told the witness Thorley that if McNamara “did not drive a little slow there to-morrow, there might be a little fun.”
The defendant testified that he saw Rodgers challenged and knocked down, and Alex. Woods pulling off Ips coat and advancing toward him (defendant) when he drew his pistol and stood on the defensive, making no offensive demonstration. He was then struck from behind and clasped around the arms, when he fired back over his shoulder. While Alex. Woods denies making any demonstrations against McNamara and denies that he struck or beat him after he was knocked down by Geo. Woods, and the other evidence for the state generally tends negatively to show that neither of the Woods brothers made any demonstration against the defendant previous to the firing, of the shot by the latter, witnesses for the defense testify positively that Alex, was advancing threateningly upon McNamara when the latter drew his pistol, apparently for the purpose 'of stopping the advance of Woods. It was shown that Alex. Woods was a man of medium size; George would weigh one hundred and seventy-five or one hundred and eighty pounds, and John two hundred and forty or two hundred and fifty pounds, while McNamara, the defendant, was under the medium size, a little and an old man. Geo. Woods was about nineteen years of age, and not a voter at the school meeting.
A number of witnesses testified to the good character of the defendant, which was not controverted. *113The court refused the following instruction upon the subject of good character asked by defendant:
“ If the jury from all the evidence in this case have any doubt of defendant’s guilt, and further believe from the evidence that the defendant has for a long time, and now possesses, a good moral character for peace, sobriety and honesty, then such fact of good character coupled with the presumption of innocence which the law invokes is sufficient upon which to find a verdict of not guilty, and the jury may then acquit the defendant.” No instruction upon the subject of good character was given.
The defendant in support of his motion for new trial filed the affidavit of Wm. E. Owens, one of the jurors who tried the cause, in which he says that he found the defendant guilty of carrying a concealed weapon to the school meeting, and was induced to do so by the closing argument of Judge Robinson. The state called Owens for the purpose of explaining his affidavit, and at the close of a long and close oral examination and after the whole of the affidavit had been read to him he was asked the following question: “Now you have heard the whole of it read, I wish you would state whether you intended to convict McNamara for carrying concealed weapons to the schoolhouse or not?” He answered : “Yes, sir, I did.” The remarks made by counsel for the state will be quoted later on.
I have deemed it proper to make a statement of the testimony in this cause, because I do not regard the statement made in the majority opinion as a full and ■ fair statement of the facts in evidence; and upon that evidence, of course, depends the question of defendant’s guilt or innocence, and the question as to whether he was fairly tried. I have given what I deem a correct resumé of that evidence as,a basis for the following remarks:
*114I. -The great preponderance of the testimony establishes to my entire satisfaction that Alex. Woods was the aggressor, and brought on the state of affairs which led to the firing of the shot by the defendant. Although the threats made by Alex. Woods on the day before, against the defendant, were not communicated to the latter, yet the fact that they were made was competent and very cogent evidence that Alex. Woods was the aggressor and promoter of the strife, and caused the defendant to draw his pistol for his own protection. The authorities in this state fully sustain the position, as to the competency of such evidence. State v. Alexander, 66 Mo. 148, and cases cited; State v. Downs, 91 Mo. 19; State v. McNally, 87 Mo. 644; State v. Sloan, 47 Mo. 604. In the case last cited an approving quotation is made from Campbell v. People, 16 Ill. 17, where it is said, touching the inference to be drawn from previous threats as to who the aggressor was, that ‘ ‘ if he had made threats against the defendant it would be a reasonable inference that he sought him for the purpose of executing those threats, and thus they would serve to characterize his conduct towards the prisoner at the time of their meeting and of the affray.”
And there is sufficient evidence to show that Alex. Woods, the threatener of the defendant, and Geo. Woods, who seized the defendant from behind, were acting in concert and were both the aggressors in the assault made on the defendant. It cannot be doubted that Alex. Woods, advancing on the defendant and drawing his coat as he came, was only balked for the moment in his previously expressed purpose to make the defendant “ drive a little slow ” by the latter drawing his pistol and standing in a posture of defense. But he made no attempt to use the pistol, as all the witnesses agree, and, therefore, the only conceivable purpose of George Woods, in slipping up and “grabbing” McNamara from behind, was bo enable *115his brother Alex., without danger of personal injury, to have “a little fun” This “fun” began by a violent cut or blow which George Woods dealt the defendant on the back of the head at the instant he seized him; and which blow split the defendant’s scalp open, and caused the blood to flow freely; a wound of so severe a nature as to be plainly visible at the time of the trial, several months thereafter. That George Woods struck the blow cannot well be questioned, seeing that he and his brothers were the only ones engaged in promoting the disturbance which they themselves set in motion, and seeing further, that Geo. Woods was behind the defendant, and Alex, was not. And the “little fion” went on by the Woods brothers hurling the little old man on the floor, and there brutally beating him almost to the verge of his existence; beating him so unmercifully, that even their own father interfered and rescued him from the miorderous hands of his sons !
But it is quite immaterial who struck the defendant on the back of the head; that he was so struck before he fired the shot, or made any attempt to do so, is abundantly shown by the testimony of a disinterested witness, and by 'the uncontradicted testimony of the defendant himself. He sees the vote of John Rodgers, who voted with him on the school question, and who had voted three times that morning without objection challenged, and then Rodgers knocked down by John Woods; he sees Alex. Woods, with whom he was not on speaking terms, advancing towards him in an excited and threatening manner, and drawing his coat as he came; then the defendant drew his pistol as he had a right to do, but did not attempt to use it; then he was seized from behind, and struck a violent blow, and then turning his head partially around, and unable to see who had seized him or' who was his assailant, in the impulse of self-preservation, he threw up his pistol and *116fired the shot for firing which he has been tried, con-meted and branded as a felon. If these facts, too, do not constitute a clear.and indubitable case of self-defense, then I must confess my utter ignorance of the meaning of that term. If, in the facts stated, the elements of an abundant and plenary self-defense do not exist, then the sooner all expressions and definitions touching the '•'first law of nature” are eliminated as useless from our legal vocabularies the better.
“ When a person apprehends that some one is about to do him great bodily harm, and there is reasonable ground for believing the danger imminent that such design will be accomplished, he may safely act upon appearances, and even kill the assailant if that be necessary to avoid the apprehended danger; and the killing will be justifiable, although it may afterward turn out that the appearances were false, and there was, in fact, neither design to do him serious injury nor danger that it would be done. He must decide at his peril upon the force of the circumstances in which he is placed, for that is a matter which will be subject to judicial review. But he will not act at his peril of malting that guilt, if appearances prove false, which would be ..innocence had they proved true.” State v. Sloan, 47 Mo. 604, an indictment for murder in the first degree. In State v. Palmer, 88 Mo. 568, also a prosecution for murder in the first degree, where the deceased, unarmed, advanced, upon the defendant in a threatening manner, whereupon the defendant threw a weight at, and killed, him with it, this court said: “If the defendant acted in a moment of apparently impending peril, it was not for him to nicely guage the proper quantum of force necessary to repel the assault of the deceased.” To the same effect are Nichols v. Winfrey, 79 Mo. 544; Morgan v. Durfee, 69 Mo. 469; State v. Eaton, 75 Mo. 591. All our reports speak in the same way on this point, and so do the authorities elsewhere. Besides, it must not be forgotten *117that the defendant was a member of the board of school directors, and its president. He had a right, therefore, to be there, and to maintain order; that school room was for the time being his dwelling house, his domicil, his office. 2 R. S. 1889, secs. 7978, 7979, 7988. His duty commanded him to be there, and, therefore, he was in a better plight than an individual in ordinary circumstances requiring self-defense, since he was engaged in a lawful act, and, when unduly assaulted, he only did what the apparent necessity of the case demanded, and whether justifiable or excusable the verdict should have been for him. Morgan v. Durfee, 69 Mo. 469.
I am persuaded that no one with unbiased mind can carefully read this record without being constrained by the evidence alone to say that a great wrong has been done to the defendant. What little evidence is to be found which bears against the defendant’s innocence is of so slight, inconsequential and negative nature, as to warrant the confident belief that the verdict of the jury was not the result of calm deliberation, but of prejudice, passion or partiality. And this court uniformly interferes in such circumstances, even in civil actions (Spohn v. Railroad, 87 Mo. 74; Whitsett v. Ransom, 79 Mo. 258; Baker v. Stonebraker's Adm'r, 36 Mo. 345; Price v. Evans, 49 Mo. 396; Garrett v. Greenwell, 92 Mo. 120); and in criminal causes we have never yet abdicated the right we possess, and the duty we owe the accused to overturn verdicts which are not based upon the corner stone ' of substantial justice. State v. Packwood, 26 Mo. 340; State v. Burgdorf, 53 Mo. 65; State v. Mansfield, 41 Mo. 470; State v. Daubert, 42 Mo. 238; State v. Brosius, 39 Mo. 534; State v. Jaeger, 66 Mo. 173; State v. Castor, 93 Mo. 242; State v. Primm, 98 Mo. 368.
On this branch of the cause, therefore, Í am. in favor of reversing the judgment and discharging the prisoner; and I cannot but think that, had my associates *118scrutinized the evidence more closely, they would have reached the same conclusion.
II. But there are other reasons, now to be presented, ample reasons why the judgment herein should be reversed. I refer to the refusal of the court properly to instruct the jury, and to improper remarks made on behalf of the state.
The defendant established, by his neighbors, a most excellent character as a quiet, peaceable man; and there was no testimony to the contrary. This evidence called for an instruction as to the probative force of the good character of the defendant; but. no instruction at all was given on the subject, though an instruction on that point was asked by the defendants counsel. This instruction was faulty, and was, therefore, properly refused; but it was the plain duty of the trial court, an improper instruction having been asked, to have given & proper one on that subject. The reports of this court with unvarying uniformity announce the doctrine that where an improper instruction is asked on behalf of the defence, upon the facts adduced in evidence, a proper one should be given in its stead. State v. Matthews, 20 Mo. 55; State v. Jones, 61 Mo. 232; State v. Kilgore, 70 Mo. 546; State v. Lowe, 93 Mo. 547; State v. Christopher Young, 99 Mo. 666; State v. Hickam, 95 Mo. loc. cit. 332 (Brace, J.).
“I cannot, in principle,” said Mr. Justice Pattbson, “make any distinction between evidence of fact and evidence of character. The latter is equally laid before the jury, as the former, as being relevant to the question of guilty or not guilty. The object of laying it before the jury is to induce them to believe, from the improbability that a person of good character should have conducted himself as alleged, that there is some mistake or misrepresentation in the evidence on the part of the prosecution, and it is strictly evidence in the case. The admissibility of this evidence has sometimes *119been restricted to doubtful cases; but it is conceived that, if the evidence' is at all relevant to the issue, it is not for the judge to decide, before the evidence is all exhibited, whether the case is, in fact, doubtful, or not; nor, indeed, afterwards; the weight of the evidence being a question for the jury alone. His duty seems to be to leave the jury to decide, upon the whole evidence, whether an individual, whose character was previously unblemished, is, or is not, guilty of the crime of which he is'accused.” 3 Greenl. Ev., sec. 25; 7 C. & P. 673.
It is said, however, in the majority opinion: “But we do not understand any of the cases to go to the extent of holding that the omission of the court to give an instruction upon the subject of character is ground for reversal; the extent to which they can be held to go is that, if the defendant asks for an instruction on that subject, if it is not a proper one, of course, it must be refused. He has no cause of complaint that thereupon the court gives no instruction upon the subject. The law requiring the court to declare the law applicable to the case, whether proper instructions are asked, or not, does not comprehend such merely collateral matters. State v. Brooks, 92 Mo. 542.”
This statement is grossly erroneous in two particulars and for two reasons: In State v. Swain, 68 Mo. 615, an instruction as to good character had been asked by the defendant but refused by the court, and such refusal, and the failure to give a proper instruction on that subject, was one of the grounds for reversal in that ease (q. v.). Now if it be the law as asserted by the authorities, and by this court in a number of instances, that evidence of fact and evidence of character rest upon the same basis; that there is no distinction to be taken between them; that the j ury, in making up their verdict as to the guilt or innocence of the accused, must consider good character “just like any other fact in the *120causé” (State v. McNally, 87 Mo. 644; State v. Alexander, 66 Mo. 148; State v. Swain, supra), why is it not as much a reversible error in the trial court to refuse to give a proper instruction as to good character where an improper one is asked by the defendant, as it is to refuse to give a proper instruction on ‘ ‘ any other fact in the cause f ” And yet this court, as shown by cases already cited, has always ruled and invariably held that the asking of an improper instruction by the accused on the evidence, i. e., the facts in the cause, and the failure of the trial court to give a prop>er one, was a conclusive and undebatable ground for reversal. How the duty of the trial court to give a proper instruction can be set in motion or called forth, by the asking of an improper instruction, unless it be the duty of the trial court to give a proper instruction whether ashed or not, as' the statute in plain terms provides, I leave this court to determine and settle to their own satisfaction, if they can!
Equally unfortunate and equally unfounded is the concluding portion of the statement already quoted: ‘ ‘ The law requiring the court to declare the law applicable to the case, whether proper instructions are asked or not, does not comprehend such merely collateral matters. State v. Brooks, 92 Mo. 542.” In the first place, evidence of good character is not a collateral matter ;” it is “just like any other fact in the cause.” Authorities supra. It is vital, it is essential, it is material. How, then, can it be termed “collateral ?” Its efficacy has been exhibited on many occasions, where but for its presence conviction of the crime charged must have resulted. Talrourd, J., says : “It is a petitio principii to say that evidence as to character is entitled to weight only in doubtful cases, when really it is to make the case doubtful that such evidence is offered. In some instance in which guilt would otherwise be established beyond a reasonable doubt, *121evidence of good character may justly produce an acquittal B Cited Whart. Crim. Ev. [9 Ed.] sec. 67. This view of the subject is well illustrated and expressed in Heine v. Com., 91 Pa. St. 145, where Cordon, J., said:
“Furthermore, the learned judge of the court below committed an error in saying to the jury: ‘ If a man is guilty, his previous good character has nothing to do with the case; but, if you have doubt as to his guilt, then character steps in and aids in determining that doubt.’ The effect of this was to give the evidence of good character no weight whatever, for if the other testimony left, in the minds of the jury, a reasonable doubt of .the defendant’s guilt, this, of itself, without more, entitled him to an acquittal. Evidence of good character is not a mere malce-weight thrown in to assist in the production of a result that would happen at all events, but it is positive evidence, and may, of itself, by the creation of a reasonable doubt, produce an acquittal.”
Now, how can testimony of good character, which is “positive evidence,” which has the power to combat, countervail and overthrow the otherwise conclusive evidence of the prosecution; which may create "of itself ” a reasonable doubt and thus "produce an acquittal,” be deemed a "merely collateral matterf” The human mind must change in its whole functions, structure and organization before it can, from such premises, draw or accept such an unwarranted and unfounded conclusion. But the State v. Broolcs, (“G-od save the mark!”) only decides that if no instruction at all is asked by the accused on a collateral matter that then there will be no error in failing to give one on such subject; but it does not decide that if an improper instruction be asked on a collateral matter that the trial court would not commit reversible error in failing to give a proper instruction; on the contrary, the clear ruling is the other way, for Kilgore! s *122case, 70 Mo. 546, is cited and quoted with approbation where it is said:—“If it (the instruction) had been asked, in this case, it should have been given, or if one, objectionable in its phraseology had been asked and refused, the court should have given a proper instruction on the subject!’’ So that even the Brooks case is no authority in support of the majority opinion here; but is directly against it, conceding for the nonce that evidence of good character is a “collateral matter,” which, as already demonstrated, it is not, nor indeed can be.
III. Having successfully shown that the trial court erred in failing properly to instruct the .jury as to the good character of th¿ defendant, and the effect thereof, I now turn my attention to other errors. In his closing argument for the state Judge Robinson said: “The only object of the law in. allowing evidence of the defendant’s good character is to show that a man did not do the act. Where there is a doubt about the act, only in such cases as these (here selecting one of the jury as an example): Suppose you had a horse stolen (or taken), and that the horse is afterwards found in my possession, I would then have the right to introduce evidence to show my good character in order to rebut the presumption that I had taken or stolen the horse, and evidence of good character cannot do this defendant any good.” During which argument counselor John M. Barker, for defendant, to the court objected to counselor Robinson as stating the law of the case to the jury, and asked the court to intercede its authority in that behalf for defendant, which request was unheeded, and counselor Robinson was directed by the court to proceed with his argument, to which action-of the court the defendant’s counsel excepted at the time. Whereupon he continued, saying: “I think I understand the law as well as Mr. Barker.”
The affidavits or oral testimony in respect to such remarks cannot be heard to countervail what the bill of *123exceptions recites as true or to act as a substitute therefor {State v. Hayes, 81 Mo. 574), and I will not, therefore, consider them.
Judge Robinson had recently been judge of that court, and, of course, “spo7ce as one having authority f and was doubtless listened to by the jury with a degree of attention proportionate to his former, judicial position. His remarks must, therefore, have had great weight in swaying the minds of the jury; but, unfortunately for the cause of law and of justice, his remarks were only too well calculated to sway the minds of the jury in the wrong direction, and no doubt did so. Prom the quotations already made heretofore from the authorities, it will be readily perceived that those remarks, as to the effect of evidence of good character, werenot law; and that the only effect of them was to deceive and mislead the jury, and cause them to regard the evidence of the good character of the defendant as incapable of doing him any good, so long as it was clear who fired the shot. But, of course, this left out of view the intent with which, and the circumstances in which, the shot was fired, and allowed the fact of a previously blameless life to have no weight with the jury, and to go for nothing. And the trial court, instead of interposing its authority upon objection taken to such unwarranted remarks, not only refused to do so, but told Judge Robinson to proceed. This was equivalent to sanctioning the grievous error into which counsel had fallen, and thus duplicated the error which the trial court had already committed, of failing to give a proper instruction as to good character. State v. Rothschild, 68 Mo. 52; State v. Jaeger, 66 Mo. 173; State v. Martin, 74 Mo. 547.
This court has so often condemned the failure of trial courts properly to instruct the jury, and of the attempts made by prosecuting counsel to supplement such failure by instructions of their own, framed in the heat of argument, and contrary to law when addressing *124the jury, that it is only deemed necessary to cite some of those cases, where the judgments of conviction were reversed, bécause of such like and other improper remarks. State v. Reed, 71 Mo. 200; State v. Mahly, 68 Mo. 315; State v. Lee, 66 Mo. 165; State v. Kring, 64 Mo. 591; State v. Jackson, 95 Mo. 623; State v. Young, 99 Mo. 666.
IV. Under our repeated rulings, the affidavit or the testimony of William E. Owen was, of course, incompetent to impeach his verdict; but, though incompetent for this. purpose, yet it may serve to show how widely the jury were led astray'by the closing argument for the prosecution. This, however, is a matter which might prove worthy of consideration by another department of the government. And, on rising from a perusal of this record, I am profoundly impressed with the idea that, if by reason of blunders committed by the trial court, and blunders affirmed by this court, whereby rank and palpable injustice has been done an innocent man, executive clemency should ever interpose its beneficent hand in his behalf, it is in this case. I, therefore, dissent in toto from the majority opinion.