1 Miss. Dec. 122

F. M. Rosamond v. The State.

Murder — Instructions — Presumption of Malice.

In a prosecution for murder in which it appears that the fatal shot was fired by defendant with a shotgun, it is error to instruct the jury for the State that the presumption of malice arising from the use of a deadly weapon must prevail, unless from other evidence it is shown to the satisfaction of the jury that the killing was not malicious.1

Erroneous Instructions — Prejudice.

An instruction for the State which is erroneous, when taken alone, will not cause a reversal when the instructions given for defendant give him the benefit of the principles of law he is entitled to.2

Appellant, Rosamond, was tried and convicted of tbe murder of James Stephens; be was sentenced to tbe penitentiary for life, •and appeals. Tbe evidence showed that deceased was shot with a shotgun and killed. Defendant admitted that be killed deceased, but claimed it was done in self-defense.

Tbe fourth instruction for tbe State was as follows;

If tbe jury believe from tbe evidence that F. M. Rosamond, on or about tbe 21st day of July, 1883, with a shotgun that *123was a deadly weapon, shot deceased, Stephens, and thereby killed him, then the nse of such deadly weapon is prima facie evidence of malice and an intention to murder and before this presumption is overcome it must be shown or arise out of the evidence in the case to the satisfaction of the jury that at that time the defendant was in immediate, real, or apparent danger of his life, or some great bodily harm from the deceased, and such danger must have been urgent, present, and imminent at the time of the killing.”

Defendant’s motion for a new trial was overruled, and he appeals.

Appealed from Circuit Court, Montgomery county, C. H. Campbell, Judge.

Affirmed,

May 18, 1885.

'Attorneys for appellant, W. S. Hill and B. F. Halloway.

Attorneys for appellee, J. L. Hcunñs and T. 8. Ford.

*124Brief of J. L. Harris:

This cause must be affirmed because tlie bill of exceptions, or what purports to be a bill, was not signed within the time prescribed by law.

The case should be dismissed because the transcript was not filed within the time prescribed by law.

Brief of T. S. Ford :

The first exception taken was to the ruling of the court refusing a continuance on the ground of the absence of Mrs. Stephens. In view of the fact that the witness was not in the State and one continuance had already been granted to procure her attendance, the action of the court was manifestly correct. The second exception was frivolous.

The motion to quash the return of the sheriff because all the jurors were not summoned appears to have been properly denied. The sheriff appears to have found forty-five out of the fifty persons named in the venire facias. No evidence was offered to show that *125the five other persons were, in fact, to be found. The refusal of the court to award an alias venire facias was not error.

Defendant objected to going into trial on the ground that he had been served with a copy of the venire facias containing the name of Granison Crockett whereas, in the original venire, it appeared as Granison K. Crockett. The record shows that the venire facias recited the name of Granison Crockett, and in point of fact, the defendant was mistaken. Besides the record shows that Granison Crockett was not on the jury impaneled to try the cause, and does not show that the defendant was compelled to challenge him.

The ninth and twelfth instructions propounded by defendant were properly refused. The ninth was abstract, and besides incorrect, and the twelfth only a repetition of what had already been several times given in substance, and besides was faulty in not defining in itself what was a legal excuse or justification for taking life.

The instructions given for the State which are complained of in the motion for a new trial have most of them been many times approved by this court. The fourth is a copy mutatis mutandis of the instruction approved in Guico v. The State, 60 Miss. 716. The others do not require comment.

It is respectfully submitted that the verdict of the jury was fully supported by the evidence, and that the jury being very elaborately and correctly instructed as to the law of the case, this verdict ought not to be disturbed.

Brief for appellant not found in record.

Opinion.

Cooper, O. J.:

The fourth instruction given for the State is subject to the criticism that by it the jury is told that presumption of malice arising from the use of a deadly weapon must prevail, unless from other evidence it is shown to the satisfaction of the jury that the killing was not malicious. A defendant is entitled to an acquittal if, on all the testimony, the jury has a reasonable doubt of the malice requisite to constitute murder. It is not true that on the evidence the jury must he satisfied that malice does not exist; it is its duty under the law to acquire if it is not satisfied that it does exist. The very liberal instructions, however, given for the defendant undoubtedly called the attention of the jury to the fact that the real *126meaning of the instruction as granted was tbat, in the absence of other evidence negativing the malice presumed from the use of a deadly weapon, the presumption was sufficient to warrant a conviction.

The judgment is affirmed.

Rosamond v. State
1 Miss. Dec. 122

Case Details

Name
Rosamond v. State
Decision Date
May 18, 1885
Citations

1 Miss. Dec. 122

Jurisdiction
Mississippi

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