247 Mass. 573 | Mass. | 1924
This is an indictment charging the defendant with murder. He was convicted of murder in the second degree. The case is before us on his exceptions to the exclusion of two questions put by his counsel to a witness called by him, and to the charge “in so far as it stated that the intentional unlawful killing of one human being by another carries with it malice, and in so far as it stated that if the killing was proved to be intentional that, in and of itself, imported malice.”
There was evidence that the defendant had stated that, while he was in the company of the deceased in the woods, they had been set upon by four young men accompanied by
“ Does your report, the nature of your report, of the case in the Lowell Sun have any effect on your being sure, or otherwise, as to whether this conversation actually occurred or not? ”
“ Did you write an account of this conversation which — rather did you write an account of the statement which you. have testified to that officer Lynch made, in the Lowell Sun on the day that you were, — you made this investigation? ”
The exceptions to the exclusion of the questions must be overruled. “ The witness could not carry his testimony higher than to state.what, as he said, he remembered specifically concerning the particular occasion. That was final, if believed. It was a matter of discretion whether and how far the court should allow the witness to give further testimony also depending, of course, upon his truthfulness in order to render credible a statement which, if he was truthful, was enough in itself.” McCooe v. Dighton, Somerset, &
The portions of the charge excepted to were correct statements of the law. Murder in the first degree is murder committed with, deliberately premeditated malice aforethought. Murder in the second degree is unlawful killing with malice aforethought. It has repeatedly been held by this court that malice in this connection means every unlawful motive that may be inferred from unlawful killing, and when there are no circumstances disclosed tending to show justification or excuse, there is nothing to rebut the' natural presumption of malice. . “ Malice ” as here used does not necessarily imply ill will toward the person killed, but has a more comprehensive meaning, including any intent to inflict injury upon another without legal excuse or palliation. The jury were correctly instructed in substance that, if the defendant intentionally and unlawfully killed the deceased, malice was presumed, unless by the circumstances of the homicide it was disproved. In other words, if there was an intention to inflict injury upon the deceased which was not justified on any lawful ground or palliated by the existence of any mitigating circumstances, that intention was malicious within the meaning of the law. Commonwealth v. York, 9 Met. 93. Commonwealth v. Webster, 5 Cush. 295, 304. Commonwealth v. Hawkins, 3 Gray, 463, 465. Commonwealth v. Pemberton, 118 Mass. 36, 39, 43. Commonwealth v. Chance, 174 Mass. 245.
Exceptions overruled.