DocketNumber: No. 20773
Judges: McFarland
Filed Date: 6/22/1891
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The appellant was convicted of an assault with a deadly weapon; and the main point upon which he relies for a reversal is the omission of the court to charge the jury fully enough on the subject of self-defense.
Neither party asked any instruction upon any subject. The charge of the court given on its own motion was brief, and what is contained on the subject of self-defense
At the conclusion of the charge, the court, turning to counsel, said: “ Anything further than that?” Counsel made no answer.
The point made by appellant is, that the charge ignored the doctrine of “apparent necessity,” and excluded the jury from considering that defendant, as a reasonable man, might have believed himself in danger, although as a matter of fact there was no real danger. But it is not true that the charge of the court excludes the consideration of apparent necessity. “Necessary self-defense,” as explained in the text-books, as defined in our Penal Code, and, indeed, as generally understood by laymen as well as by lawyers, includes every case where “there is reasonable ground to apprehend a design to commit a felony or to do some great bodily injury,” and where the circumstances are “ sufficient to excite the fears of a reasonable man.” If a defendant were charged with injuring or killing a man who was apparently about to shoot him, no jury would convict because it turned out afterwards that the fire-arm used was not loaded,—whether the court instructed on the subject or not. The cases cited by appellant’s counsel are not in point. They were cases where the express language of the instructions excluded the doctrine of apparent necessity. In. the main case relied on (People v. Anderson, 44 Cal. 65), the trial court, in defining self-defense to the jury, told them that the right “cannot be exercised in any case, or to any extent not necessary. The party making the defense is permitted to use no instrument
The sections of Wharton’s Criminal Law referred to merely state the general doctrine, nowhere disputed, that apparent danger is sufficient. There are no other citations; and in all the cases cited the error of the instruction was one of commission, and not of omission. No doubt, in a case where the evidence at all warrants it, the court should instruct about apparent necessity when counsel for defendant requests it; and perhaps it is possible to imagine a peculiar case where it would be error for the court not to do so on its own motion; certainly it should not use express language which excludes that doctrine. In the case at bar there was no question before the jury as between real and apparent danger. According to the evidence of the prosecution, defendant made an entirely unjustifiable attack on the injured party, and said afterwards that he wanted to kill him. Defendant testified that the injured party first struck him; that he grabbed defendant by a handkerchief which was around his neck, and hit him several times with "a rock which he had in his hand; that defendant told him that if he did not let go he would cut him; that he would not let go; that he cut him in the arm, to make him let
2. The other error assigned is the refusal of the court to strike out the answer of the witness Olie, on his redirect examination, that he had known the defendant “ since he was at San Quentin.” But this error is not material, because the witness had said the same thing on his cross-examination by defendant’s counsel, without any objection being made to it.
The judgment and order denying a new trial are affirmed.
Shaepstein, J., and De Haven, J.} concurred.