State v. Gandy
Decision Date | 22 December 1919 |
Docket Number | 10311. |
Citation | 101 S.E. 644,113 S.C. 147 |
Parties | STATE v. GANDY. |
Court | South Carolina Supreme Court |
Appeal from General Sessions Circuit Court of Darlington County; T S. Sease, Judge.
Bud Gandy was convicted of manslaughter, and appeals. Affirmed.
E. C Dennis, of Darlington, for appellant.
J Monroe Spears, Sol., of Darlington, for the State.
On indictment for murder, defendant set up self-defense, and was convicted of manslaughter.
In declaring the law of self-defense to the jury, after saying that defendant must prove that he was without fault in bringing on the difficulty, the court continued:
Exception is taken to the words italicized, on the ground that the court thereby imposed upon defendant a greater burden than the law required. The law imposes on a defendant the burden of proving, not that the necessity did in fact exist, but that the circumstances were such as to warrant a man of ordinary reason and courage in concluding that it did exist, and that defendant himself did in fact so believe, and no doubt that is really what the court intended to say.
Standing alone, the instruction complained of would be erroneous; but when it is read in connection with the preceding and following sentences, we are satisfied the jury were not misled, especially when it is considered in connection with what immediately follows it, in which the jury were told that defendant had the right to act upon appearances, and if they were such that a man of...
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State v. Starnes
...would have entertained the same belief. State v. Fuller, supra 297 S.C. at 443-444, 377 S.E.2d at 331; see also State v. Gandy, 113 S.C. 147, 148, 101 S.E. 644 (1919) ("A man may act, however, from appearance, and if it turns out, if the appearances are such that a man of ordinary courage, ......