A man assailed on his own grounds, without provocation, by a
person armed with a deadly weapon and apparently seeking his life
is not obliged to retreat, but may stand his ground and defend
himself with such means as are within his control; and so long as
there is no intent on his part to kill his antagonist, and no
purpose of doing anything beyond what is necessary to save his own
life, is not guilty of murder or manslaughter if death results to
his antagonist from a blow given him under such circumstances.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff in error, a white man, and not an Indian, was
indicted in the Circuit Court of the United States for the
Page 158 U. S. 551
Western District of Arkansas for the crime of having killed and
murdered, in the Indian country, and within that district, one Will
Jones, also a white person, and not an Indian.
He was found guilty of manslaughter, and, a motion for a new
trial having been overruled, it was adjudged that he be imprisoned
in Kings County Penitentiary at Brooklyn, New York, for the term of
eight years, and pay to the United States a fine of five hundred
dollars.
The record contains a bill of exceptions embodying all the
evidence, as well as the charge of the court to the jury and the
requests of the accused for instructions. To certain parts of the
charge, and to the action of the court in refusing instructions
asked by the defendant, exceptions were duly taken.
The principal question in the case arises out of those parts of
the charge in which the court instructed the jury as to the
principles of the law of self-defense.
There was evidence before the jury tending to establish the
following facts:
An angry dispute arose between Beard and three brothers by the
name of Jones -- Will Jones, John Jones, and Edward Jones -- in
reference to a cow, which a few years before that time, and just
after the death of his mother, was set apart to Edward. The
children, being without any means for their support, were
distributed among their relatives, Edward being assigned to Beard,
whose wife was a sister of Mrs. Jones. Beard took him into his
family upon the condition that he should have the right to control
him and the cow as if the lad were one of his own children and the
cow his own property. At the time Edward went to live with Beard,
he was only eight or nine years of age, poorly clad, and not in
good physical condition.
After remaining some years with his aunt and uncle, Edward Jones
left the Beard house and determined, with the aid of his older
brothers, to take the cow with him, each of them knowing that the
accused objected to that's being done.
The Jones brothers, one of them taking a shotgun with him, went
upon the premises of the accused for the purpose of taking the cow
away whether Beard consented or not.
Page 158 U. S. 552
But they were prevented by the accused from accomplishing that
object, and he warned them not to come to his place again for such
a purpose, informing them that if Edward Jones was entitled to the
possession of the cow, he could have it provided his claim was
successfully asserted through legal proceedings instituted by or in
his behalf.
Will Jones, the oldest of the brothers, and about 20 or 21 years
of age, publicly avowed his intention to get the cow away from the
Beard farm or kill Beard, and of that threat the latter was
informed on the day preceding that on which the fatal difficulty in
question occurred.
In the afternoon of the day on which the Jones brothers were
warned by Beard not again to come upon his premises for the cow
unless attended by an officer of the law, and in defiance of that
warning, they again went to his farm, in his absence, one of them,
the deceased, being armed with a concealed deadly weapon, and
attempted to take the cow away, but were prevented from doing so by
Mrs. Beard, who drove it back into the lot from which it was being
taken.
While the Jones brothers were on the defendant's premises in the
afternoon for the purpose of taking the cow away, Beard returned to
his home from a town nearby, having with him a shotgun that he was
in the habit of carrying when absent from home, and went at once
from his dwelling into the lot called the "orchard lot," a distance
of about 50 or 60 yards from his house and near to that part of an
adjoining field or lot where the cow was and in which the Jones
brothers and Mrs. Beard were at the time of the difficulty.
Beard ordered the Jones brothers to leave his premises. They
refused to leave. Thereupon Will Jones, who was on the opposite
side of the orchard fence, ten or fifteen yards only from Beard,
moved towards the latter with an angry manner and in a brisk walk,
having his left hand (he being, as Beard knew, left-handed) in the
left pocket of his trousers. When he got within five or six steps
of Beard, the latter warned him to stop, but he did not do so. As
he approached nearer the accused asked him what he intended to do,
and he replied, "Damn you. I will show you," at the same time
making a
Page 158 U. S. 553
movement with his left hand as if to draw a pistol from his
pocket, whereupon the accused struck him over the head with his
gun, and knocked him down.
"Believing," the defendant testified,
"from his demonstrations just mentioned that he intended to
shoot me, I struck him over the head with my gun, to prevent him
killing me. As soon as I struck him, his brother John, who was a
few steps behind him, started towards me with his hand in his
pocket. Believing that he intended to take part in the difficulty,
and was also armed, I struck him, and he stopped. I then at once
jumped over the fence, caught Will Jones by the lapel of the coat,
turned him rather to one side, and pulled his left hand out of his
pocket. He had a pistol, which I found in his pocket, grasped in
his left hand, and I pulled his pistol and his left hand out
together. My purpose in doing this was to disarm him, to prevent
him from shooting me, as I did not know how badly he was hurt. My
gun was loaded, having ten cartridges in the magazine. I could have
shot him, but did not want to kill him, believing that I could
knock him down with the gun and disarm him, and protect myself
without shooting him. After getting his pistol, John Jones said
something to me about killing him, to which I replied that I had
not killed him, and did not try to do so, for if I had I could have
shot him. He said my gun was not loaded. Thereupon I shot the gun
in the air to show him that it was loaded."
Dr. Howard Hunt, a witness, on behalf of the government,
testified that he called to see Will Jones soon after he was hurt,
and found him in a serious condition; that he died from the effects
of a wound given by the defendant; that the wound was across the
head, rather on the right side, the skull being crushed by the
blow. He saw the defendant soon after dressing the wound, and told
him that the deceased's condition was serious, and that he, the
witness, was sorry the occurrence had happened. The witness
suggested to the accused that perhaps he had better get out of the
way. The latter replied that he was sorry that it had happened, but
that he acted in self-defense, and would not go away. Beard
seemed
Page 158 U. S. 554
a little offended at the suggestion that he should run off, and
observed to the witness that the latter could not scare him, for he
was perfectly justified in what he did. This witness further
testified that he had known the defendant four or five years, was
well acquainted in the neighborhood in which he lived, and knew his
general reputation, which was that of a peaceable law-abiding
man.
The account we have given of the difficulty is not in harmony in
every particular with the testimony of some of the witnesses, but
it is sustained by what the accused and others testified to at the
trial, so that if the jury had found the facts to be as we have
detailed them, it could not have been said that their finding was
contrary to the evidence. At any rate, it was the duty of the court
to tell the jury by what principles of law they should be guided in
the event they found the facts to be as stated by the accused.
Assuming, then, that the facts were as we have represented them
to be, we are to inquire whether the court erred in its charge to
the jury. In the view we take of the case, it will be necessary to
refer to those parts only of the charge relating to the law of
self-defense.
The court stated at considerable length the general rules that
determine whether the killing of a human being is murder or
manslaughter, and, among other things, said to the jury:
"If these boys, or young men, or whatever you may consider them,
went down there and they were there unlawfully -- if they had no
right to go there -- you naturally inquire whether the defendant
was placed in such a situation as that he could kill for that
reason. Of course, he could not. He could not kill them because
they were upon his place. . . . And if these young men were there
in the act of attempting the larceny of this cow and calf, and the
defendant killed because of that, because his mind was inflamed for
the reason that they were seeking to do an act of that kind, that
is manslaughter. That is all it is. There is nothing else in it.
That is considered so far provocative as that it reduces the grade
of the crime to manslaughter, and no further. If they had no intent
to commit a larceny; if it was a bare, naked trespass; if they were
there
Page 158 U. S. 555
under a claim of right to get this cow, though they may not have
had any right to it, but in good faith they were exercising their
claim of that kind, and Will Jones was killed by the defendant for
that reason -- that would be murder, because you cannot kill a man
for bare trespass -- you cannot take his life for a bare trespass
-- and say the act is mitigated."
After restating the proposition that a man cannot take life
because of mere fear on his part, or in order that he may prevent
the commission of a bare trespass, the court proceeded:
"Now a word further upon the proposition that I have already
adverted to as to what was his duty at the time. If that danger was
real, coming from the hands of Will Jones, or it was apparent as
coming from his hands and as affecting this defendant by some overt
act at the time, was the defendant called upon to avoid that danger
by getting out of the way of it if he could? The court
says he was. The court tells you that he was. There is but one
place where he need not retreat any further, where he need not go
away from the danger, and that is in his dwelling house. He may be
upon his own premises, and if a man, while so situated, and upon
his own premises, can do that which would reasonably put aside the
danger short of taking life, if he can do that, I say, he is called
upon to do so by retreating,
by getting out of the way if
he can, by avoiding a conflict that may be about to come upon him,
and the law says that he must do so, and
the fact that he is
standing upon his own premises away from his own dwelling
house does not take away from him the exercise of the duty of
avoiding the danger if he can with a due regard to his own safety
by getting away from there or by resorting to some other
means of less violence than those resorted to. Now the rule as
applicable to a man of that kind upon his own premises -- upon his
own property,
but outside of his dwelling house -- is as I
have just stated."
Again:
"You are to bear in mind that the first proposition of the law
of self-defense was that the defendant in this case was in the
lawful pursuit of his business -- that is to say, he was doing what
he had a right to do at the time. If he was not, he deprives
himself of the right of self-defense, and no matter what his
adversary may do, if he,
Page 158 U. S. 556
by his own conduct, creates certain conditions by his own
wrongful conduct, he cannot take advantage of such conditions,
created by his own wrongful act or acts. . . . Again, going to the
place where the person slain is, with a deadly weapon,
for the
purpose of provoking a difficulty or with the intent of having an
affray. Now, if a man does that, he is in the wrong, and he is
cut off from the right of self-defense, no matter what his
adversary may do, because the law says in the very language of
these propositions relating to the law of self-defense that he must
avoid taking life if he can with due regard to his own safety.
Whenever he can do that, he must do it. Therefore, if he has an
adversary, and he knows that there is a bitter feeling -- that
there is a state of feeling that may precipitate a deadly conflict
-- between himself and his adversary, while he has a right to
pursue his usual daily avocations that are right and proper, going
about his business, to go and do what is necessary to be done in
that way, yet if he knows that condition I have named to exist, and
he goes to the place where the slain person is with a deadly weapon
for the purpose of provoking a difficulty or with the intent of
having an affray -- if it comes up, he is there to have it -- and
he acts for that purpose, the law says there is no self-defense for
him. . . . If he went to the place where that young man was, armed
with a deadly weapon, even if it was upon his own premises, with
the purpose of provoking a difficulty with him in which he might
use that deadly weapon, or of having a deadly affray with him, it
does not make any difference what was done by the young man; there
is no self-defense for the defendant. The law of self-defense does
not apply to a case of that kind, because he cannot be the creator
of a wrong -- of a wrong state of case -- and then act upon it. Now
if either one of these conditions exists, I say, the law of
self-defense does not apply in this case."
Later in the charge, the court recurred to the inquiry as to
what the law demanded of Beard before striking the deceased with
his gun, and said:
"If at the time of this killing it be true that the deceased was
doing an act of apparent or real deadly violence, and that state of
case existed, and yet that
Page 158 U. S. 557
the defendant at the time could have avoided the necessity of
taking his life by the exercise of any other reasonable means, and
he did not do that, because he did not exercise other reasonable
means that would have with equal certainty saved his life, but
resorted to this dernier remedy, under those facts and
circumstances the law says he is guilty of manslaughter. Now let us
see what that requires. It requires first that the proof must show
that Will Jones was doing an act of violence or about to do it, or
apparently doing it or about to do it, but that it was an act that
the defendant could have escaped from by doing something else other
than taking the life of Jones,
by getting out of the way of
that danger, as he was called upon to do, as I have already
told you,
for he could not stand there as he could stand in his
own dwelling house, and he must have reasonably sought to
avoid that danger before he took the life of Jones, and if he did
not do that, if you find that to be Jones' position from this
testimony, and he could have done so, but did not do it, the
defendant would be guilty of manslaughter when he took the life of
Jones, because in that kind of a case the law says that the conduct
of Jones would be so provocative as to reduce the grade of crime.
Yet at the same time, it was a state of case that the defendant
could have avoided without taking his life, and because he did not
do it he is guilty of the crime of manslaughter."
Further:
"If it be true that Will Jones at the time he was killed, was
exercising deadly violence, or about to do so, or apparently
exercising it, or apparently about to do so, and the defendant
could have paralyzed the effect of that violence without taking the
life of Jones, but he did not do it, but resorted to this deadly
violence, when he could have protected his own life without
resorting to that dernier remedy -- if that be the state of the
case -- the law says he is guilty of manslaughter, because he is
doing that which he had no right to do. This great law of
self-defense commands him at all times to do that which he can do
under the circumstances, to-wit, exercise reasonable care to avoid
the danger
by getting out of the way of it, or by
exercising less violence than that which will produce death, and
yet will be equally effective to secure his own life. If either
of
Page 158 U. S. 558
these propositions exist -- and they must exist to the extent I
have defined to you, and the defendant took the life of Jones under
these circumstances, the defendant would be guilty of
manslaughter."
We are of opinion that the charge of the court to the jury was
objectionable in point of law on several grounds.
There was no evidence tending to show that Beard went from his
dwelling house to the orchard fence
for the purpose of
provoking a difficulty, or with
the intent of having an
affray with the Jones brothers, or with either of them. On the
contrary, from the outset of the dispute, he evinced a purpose to
avoid a difficulty or an affray. He expressed his willingness to
abide by the law in respect to his right to retain the cow in his
possession. He warned the Jones brothers, as he had a legal right
to do, against coming upon his premises for the purpose of taking
the cow away. They disregarded this warning, and determined to take
the law into their own hands, whatever might be the consequences of
such a course. Nevertheless, when Beard came to where they were,
near the orchard fence, he did nothing to provoke a difficulty, and
prior to the moment when he struck Will Jones with his gun he made
no demonstration that indicated any desire whatever on his part to
engage in an affray, or to have an angry controversy. He only
commanded them, as he had the legal right to do, to leave his
premises. He neither used, nor threatened to use, force against
them.
The court several times, in its charge, raised or suggested the
inquiry whether Beard was in the lawful pursuit of his business --
that is, doing what he had a right to do -- when, after returning
home in the afternoon, he went from his dwelling house to a part of
his premises near the orchard fence, just outside of which his wife
and the Jones brothers were engaged in a dispute; the former
endeavoring to prevent the cow from being taken away, the latter
trying to drive it off the premises. Was he not doing what he had
the legal right to do, when, keeping within his own premises, and
near his dwelling, he joined his wife, who was in dispute with
others, one of whom, as he had been informed, had already
threatened to take
Page 158 U. S. 559
the cow away or kill him? We have no hesitation in answering
this question in the affirmative.
The court also said:
"The use of provoking language, or, it seems, resorting to any
other device, in order to get another to commence an assault so as
to have a pretext for taking his life, agreeing with another to
fight him with a deadly weapon, either one of these cases, if they
exist as the facts in this case, puts the case in such an attitude
that there is no self-defense in it."
We are at a loss to understand why any such hypothetical cases
were put before the jury. The jury must have supposed that, in the
opinion of the court, there was evidence showing that Beard sought
an opportunity to do physical harm to the Jones boys, or to some
one of them. There was not the slightest foundation in the evidence
for the intimation that Beard had used provoking language, or
resorted to any device, in order to have a pretext to take the life
of either of the brothers. Much less was there any reason to
believe that there was an agreement to fight with deadly
weapons.
But the court below committed an error of a more serious
character when it told the jury, as in effect it did by different
forms of expression, that if the accused could have saved his own
life and avoided the taking of the life of Will Jones by retreating
from and getting out of the way of the latter as he advanced upon
him, the law made it his duty to do so, and if he did not, when it
was in his power to do so without putting his own life or body in
imminent peril, he was guilty of manslaughter. The court seemed to
think, if the deceased had advanced upon the accused while the
latter was in his dwelling house, and under such circumstances as
indicated the intention of the former to take life or inflict great
bodily injury, and if, without retreating, the accused had taken
the life of his assailant, having at the time reasonable grounds to
believe, and in good faith believing, that his own life would be
taken, or great bodily harm done him, unless he killed the accused,
the case would have been one of justifiable homicide. To that
proposition we give our entire assent. But we cannot agree that the
accused was under any greater obligation when on his own premises,
near his dwelling house, to retreat or run away
Page 158 U. S. 560
from his assailant, than he would have been if attacked within
his dwelling house. The accused being where he had a right to be,
on his own premises, constituting a part of his residence and home
at the time the deceased approached him in a threatening manner,
and not having by language or by conduct provoked the deceased to
assault him, the question for the jury was whether, without fleeing
from his adversary, he had at the moment he struck the deceased,
reasonable grounds to believe, and in good faith believed, that he
could not save his life or protect himself from great bodily harm
except by doing what he did, namely, strike the deceased with his
gun, and thus prevent his further advance upon him. Even if the
jury had been prepared to answer this question in the affirmative
-- and if it had been so answered the defendant should have been
acquitted -- they were instructed that the accused could not
properly be acquitted on the ground of self-defense if they
believed that by retreating from his adversary, by "getting out of
the way," he could have avoided taking life. We cannot give our
assent to this doctrine.
The application of the doctrine of "retreating to the wall" was
carefully examined by the Supreme Court of Ohio in
Erwin v.
State, 29 Ohio St. 186, 193, 199. That was an indictment for
murder; the defendant being found guilty. The trial court charged
the jury that if the defendant was in the lawful pursuit of his
business at the time the fatal shot was fired, and was attacked by
the deceased under circumstances denoting an intention to take life
or do great bodily harm, he could lawfully kill his assailant,
provided he used all means "in his power" otherwise to save his own
life or prevent the intended harm, "such as retreating as far as he
can, or disabling his adversary without killing him,
if it be
in his power;" that if the attack was so sudden, fierce, and
violent that a retreat would not diminish, but increase, the
defendant's danger, he might kill his adversary without retreating;
and, further that if from the character of the attack there was
reasonable ground for the defendant to believe, and he did honestly
believe, that his life was about to be taken, or he was to suffer
great bodily harm, and that he believed honestly that he would be
in equal danger
Page 158 U. S. 561
by retreating, then, if he took the life of the assailant, he
was excused. Of this charge the accused complained.
Upon a full review of the authorities and looking to the
principles of the common law as expounded by writers and courts of
high authority, the Supreme Court of Ohio held that the charge was
erroneous, saying:
"It is true that all authorities agree that the taking of life
in defense of one's person cannot be either justified or excused
except on the ground of
necessity, and that such necessity
must be imminent at the time, and they also agree that no man can
avail himself of such necessity if he brings it upon himself. The
question, then, is simply this: does the law hold a man who is
violently and feloniously assaulted responsible for having brought
such necessity upon himself on the sole ground that he failed to
fly from his assailant when he might safely have done so? The law,
out of tenderness for human life and the frailties of human nature,
will not permit the taking of it to repel a mere trespass, or even
to save life where the assault is provoked; but a true man, who is
without fault, is not obliged to fly from an assailant, who by
violence or surprise maliciously seeks to take his life, or to do
him enormous bodily harm. Now under the charge below,
notwithstanding the defendant may have been without fault, and, so
assaulted, with the necessity of taking life to save his own upon
him, still the jury could not have acquitted if they found he
failed to do all in his power otherwise to save his own life, or
prevent the intended harm, as retreating as far as he could, etc.
In this case, we think, the law was not correctly stated."
In
Runyan v. State, 57 Ind. 80, 83, which was an
indictment for murder, and where the instructions of the trial
court involved the present question, the court said:
"A very brief examination of the American authorities makes it
evident that the ancient doctrine as to the duty of a person
assailed to retreat as far as he can before he is justified in
repelling force by force has been greatly modified in this country,
and has with us a much narrower application than formerly. Indeed,
the tendency of the American mind seems to be very strongly against
the enforcement of any rule which
Page 158 U. S. 562
requires a person to flee when assailed, to avoid chastisement,
or even to save human life, and that tendency is well illustrated
by the recent decisions of our courts bearing on the general
subject of the right of self-defense. The weight of modern
authority, in our judgment, establishes the doctrine that when a
person, being without fault and in a place where he has a right to
be, is violently assaulted, he may, without retreating, repel force
by force, and if, in the reasonable exercise of his right of
self-defense, his assailant is killed, he is justifiable. . . . It
seems to us that the real question in the case, when it was given
to the jury, was whether the defendant, under all the
circumstances, was justified in the use of a deadly weapon in
repelling the assault of the deceased. We mean by this did the
defendant have reason to believe, and did he in fact believe, that
what he did was necessary for the safety of his own life, or to
protect him from great bodily harm? On that question, the law is
simple and easy of solution, as has been already seen from the
authorities cited above."
In East's Pleas of the Crown, the author, considering what sort
of an attack it was lawful and justifiable to resist even by the
death of the assailant, says:
"A man may repel force by force in defense of his person,
habitation, or property against one who manifestly intends and
endeavors,
by violence or surprise, to commit a known
felony, such as murder, rape, robbery, arson, burglary, and the
like, upon either. In these cases he is not obliged
to
retreat, but may pursue his adversary until he has secured
himself from all danger, and if he kill him in so doing, it is
called justifiable self-defense, as, on the other hand, the killing
by such felon of any person so lawfully defending himself will be
murder. But a bare fear of any of these offenses, however well
grounded -- as that another lies in wait to take away the party's
life -- unaccompanied with any overt act indicative of such an
intention, will not warrant in killing that other by way of
prevention. There must be an actual danger at the time."
P. 271. So in Foster's Crown Cases:
"In the case of justifiable self-defense, the injured party may
repel force with force in defense of his person,
Page 158 U. S. 563
habitation, or property against one who manifestly intendeth and
endeavoreth, with violence or surprise, to commit a known felony
upon either. In these cases he is not obliged to retreat, but may
pursue his adversary till he findeth himself out of danger, and if,
in a conflict between them, he happeneth to kill, such killing is
justifiable."
C. 3, p. 273.
In Bishop's New Criminal Law, the author, after observing that
cases of mere assault and of mutual quarrel, where the attacking
party has not the purpose of murder in his heart, are those to
which is applied the doctrine of the books that one cannot justify
the killing of another, though apparently in self-defense, unless
he retreat to the wall or other interposing obstacle before
resorting to this extreme right, says that:
"Where an attack is made with murderous intent, there being
sufficient overt act, the person attacked is under no duty to fly.
He may stand his ground, and, if need be, kill his adversary.
And it is the same where the attack is with a deadly
weapon, for in this case a person attacked may well assume
that the other intends murder, whether he does in fact or not."
Vol. 1, § 850. The rule is thus expressed by Wharton:
"A man may repel force by force in defense of his person,
habitation, or property against anyone or many who manifestly
intend and endeavor to commit a known felony by violence or
surprise or either. In such case he is not compelled to retreat,
but may pursue his adversary until he finds himself out of danger,
and if, in the conflict between them he happen to kill him, such
killing is justifiable."
2 Whart. Crim.Law, § 1019, 7th rev. ed. Phila. 1874.
See also Gallagher v. State, 3 Minn. 270, 273;
Pond v.
People, 8 Mich. 150, 177;
State v. Dixon, 75 N.C.
275, 279;
State v. Sherman, 16 R.I. 631;
Fields v.
State, 32 N.E. 780;
Eversole v. Commonwealth, 26 S.W.
816;
Haynes v. State, 17 Ga. 465, 483;
Long v.
State, 52 Miss. 23, 35;
State v. Tweedy, 5 Ia. 433;
Baker v. Commonwealth, 19 S.W. 975;
Tingle v.
Commonwealth, 11 S.W. 812; 3 Rice's Ev. § 360.
In our opinion, the court below erred in holding that the
accused, while on his premises, outside of his dwelling house, was
under a legal duty to get out of the way, if he could, of
Page 158 U. S. 564
his assailant, who, according to one view of the evidence, had
threatened to kill the defendant, in execution of that purpose had
armed himself with a deadly weapon, with that weapon concealed upon
his person went to the defendant's premises, despite the warning of
the latter to keep away, and by word and act indicated his purpose
to attack the accused. The defendant was where he had the right to
be, when the deceased advanced upon him in a threatening manner and
with a deadly weapon, and if the accused did not provoke the
assault, and had at the time reasonable grounds to believe, and in
good faith believed, that the deceased intended to take his life,
or do him great bodily harm, he was not obliged to retreat nor to
consider whether he could safely retreat, but was entitled to stand
his ground and meet any attack made upon him with a deadly weapon
in such way and with such force as, under all the circumstances, he
at the moment, honestly believed, and had reasonable grounds to
believe, were necessary to save his own life or to protect himself
from great bodily injury.
As the proceedings below were not conducted in accordance with
these principles, the judgment must be reversed, and the cause
remanded, with directions to grant a new trial.
Other objections to the charge of the court are raised by the
assignments of error, but, as the questions which they present may
not arise upon another trial, they will not be now examined.
Judgment reversed.