DocketNumber: No. 40260
Citation Numbers: 229 Miss. 430, 90 So. 2d 859, 1956 Miss. LEXIS 622
Judges: Arrington, Hall, Holmes, Lee, McGehee
Filed Date: 12/3/1956
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Appellant was convicted of the crime of assault and battery with intent to kill and murder and was sentenced to the penitentiary for a term of ten years, from which he appeals.
Appellant contends that the verdict of the jury is contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence but admits in his argument that if the weight of the evidence shows as many of the State witnesses testified, then the defendant was properly convicted.
Nine witnesses testified for the State. The shooting occurred at about 2:30 A. M. on September 17,1954, at a night club and liquor joint called the Oasis, which is situated on the north side of Highway 80 about five and a half miles east of Vicksburg. The evidence shows that the appellant was operating another night club called the Rendezvous and that he closed for the night at about 1:00 A. M. and took all the money and put it in a money sack which he carried in his left pants pocket, and that he also carried with him a 38 caliber Smith and Wesson pistol in the right pocket of his pants. He drove to the Oasis and had been there about one and a half hours when the shooting occurred. He had had some drinks before he left the Rendezvous and had also had some drinks at the Oasis. The victim, Billy Joe McFatter, went to the Oasis with his cousin Louis McFatter and his former wife who was then Mrs. Lavonne Beard. The entrance to the Oasis leads into a bar and they passed through it to the west and entered a room where there were a number of tables, all of which were filled, and they went from this room, through a double door,
Taken as a whole the testimoney for the State shows that the appellant shot the victim deliberately and without any cause whatsoever. There was a wall about four feet high around the patio and the appellant threw the pistol over the wall and into the woods. As soon as the appellant learned that McFatter was wounded he readily admitted that he did the shooting and, when the sheriff
Appellant also contends that he should not have been convicted of assault and battery with intent to kill and murder, but should only have been convicted under Section 2013, Code of 1942, for pointing and aiming a gun, yet at the trial appellant vigorously denied that he either pointed or aimed the gun at McFatter. There being ample testimony to the effect that the appellant deliberately shot McFatter for no reason whatsoever, we think that he was correctly charged with and convicted of assault and battery with intent to kill and murder.
The first instruction for the State of which the appellant complains is to the effect that voluntary drunkenness is no excuse or justification for the commission of a crime and that one cannot take advantage of a sitúa
Appellant also complains of the granting to the State of an instruction on the question of malice aforethought, which is almost an exact copy of one which was approved in Huddleston v. State, 134 Miss. 382, 98 So. 839, and which appears in Section 3146 and Section 2492 of Alexander’s Mississippi Jury Instructions. We are therefore of the opinion that the trial court committed no error in the granting of these instructions.
The appellant lastly complains at the refusal of the following instruction: “The Court instructs the jury for the defendant that if you find from the evidence that the defendant was intoxicated at the time of the difficulty, you must be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that such intoxication did not incapacitate him from forming a deliberate design to kill McFatter; and if you have
Without our so deciding, it may be that in a case where the evidence justifies it this instruction should have been given, but the appellant’s own testimony shows that he was not entitled to it in the case at bar. He was asked: “ * * were you drunk on that occasion to the extent you didn’t know the consequence of your acts? A. I wouldn’t say that I don’t remember what I done. Q. Do you remember what you did that night? A. Yes, sir. Q. You weren’t drunk? A. I said before I took some drinks. Q. In other words, you don’t tell the jury that you are now asking them to turn you loose because you were drunk? You don’t ask them to do that? A. No, sir. Q. You are relying on the theory of an accidental shooting? A. It was an accident. I didn’t mean to shoot anybody in all of my life and I never have been in trouble before.”
In the case of Denham v. State, 218 Miss. 423, 67 So. 2d 445, the defendant requested an instruction on the theory of self-defense which was refused by the court, and in upholding such refusal we said: ‘ ‘ Since the evidence and the logical inferences therefrom afford no basis on which to predicate self-defense instructions so far as the killing of Mrs. Denham was concerned, the refusal of those instructions did not constitute error.”
We conclude that there was no error in the refusal of the above instruction in this case and that the judgment of the lower court should be affirmed.
Affirmed.