DocketNumber: No. 5023
Citation Numbers: 204 S.W. 225
Judges: Davidson
Filed Date: 5/15/1918
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
This conviction was for assault to murder, the punishment being assessed at three years’ confinement in the penitentiary.
Appellant shot Dave Williams, his father-in-law. Appellant’s wife had left him and gone to her father’s home, where she had been for some time. He visited the place oc-. casionally, seeking to induce his wife to return, but she had declined. Otherwise matters had been going on peaceably between the parties up to the night of this shooting. Appellant went to Williams’ house on this particular night and carried a loaded shotgun. He went in the house and was talking to his wife seeking to induce her to return. However, she would not so agree. Williams told him not to raise any disturbance in the house; . while the girl was his wife, he did not want any row in his house; that they must get outside in the road or away from the house if they wanted to have trouble. Appellant left the room and went outside the house. Williams remarked, after appellant went ,out, that he was a good, hard-working boy, but squandered his money, and some of the testimony goes to show that Williams said appellant squandered it on other women. Appellant, on the outside, overheard this remark and said it “was a damn lie,” or “a God
“If a deadly weapon is used in a deadly manner, the inference is almost conclusive that he intended to kill; on the other hand, if the weapon was not a dangerous one, or was not used in a deadly manner, the intention must be established by other facts. But it would be a monstrous doctrine to hold that, because in fact the accused did not have the ability to kill, therefore he did not intend to kill. A. attempts to rape B., but fails, because physically unable to accomplish his purpose. A. shoots at B. with intent to kill. He fails because his gun was not true to the mark, or because his shot were not large enough to effect his purpose. To this doctrine we cannot assent.”
In this ease, from the state’s standpoint, appellant fired both barrels of his gun at his father-in-law at from 30 to 40 yards. Under appellant’s contention he only fired one shot from a distance of 50 to 60 yards. The intent will be gathered from the facts, and there is sufficient evidence on this question to justify the jury to reach the conclusion that his purpose was to kill. He may have made a bad shot, as Judge Hurt says, but the shots were fired and quite a number of them found embedded in different parts of the house, evidently passing through the open door into the house. There were other people in the room at the time.
We think the facts are sufficient, and the jury was authorized under the evidence to convict of assault to murder or aggravated assault. We do not feel justified in disturbing their finding, and the judgment will be affirmed.
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