delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellant, a fifteen year old boy, was convicted by a jury in the Criminal Court of Baltimore City of assault with intent to murder. His appeal relies on the claim that the trial court erred in refusing to charge the jury that to convict, it must find the existence of malice, or in other words, must find that if death had followed the assault, the crime committed would have been murder and not manslaughter.
The State produced testimony which showed that on a February afternoon, Tommy Davis, the appellant, with his brother and another boy, went to the movies and then to a vacant lot to shoot a pistol Tommy had had for three weeks but had never fired. Tommy, described as “a seriously maladjusted- and warped . . . individual” with poor control of his “anti-social hostile impulses”, and as one who reminded you “of a wandering dog that had been severely beaten”, carried the pistol because, in his words, he felt he had “a little power” behind him with a gun and did not have “to take a lot of stuff off a lot of people”. His intelligence is normal and in the eye of the law, he is.a responsible agent.
The boys went into an East Baltimore back yard to get coats two of them had left there earlier in the day. Sergeant Urban of the Baltimore police, off duty and not in uniform, noticed the boys. Thinking they were
The testimony produced on behalf of the appellant included the following — Tommy had never been in the yard before and did not know whose it was. The boys went in only to get the coats. When they told Sergeant Urban this, he called them little liars and accused them
The appellant had presented five prayers. The court’s original charge to the jury was very brief and included none of the requested instructions. The jury was told it was the judge of law and fact, the instructions advisory only. The state must establish guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Credibility of witnesses is for the jury. Duty must be done “regardless of how distressing you may feel it is to the individual who stands . . . before you.” This was all. At the urging of the appellant, the court then added to its charge the substance of two of the prayers, namely, that to find a verdict of guilty of assault with intent to murder, there must be “. . . a felonious intent which occurred at the same time” and that the state must prove satisfactorily all the elements of the crime.
1. The circumstances must be such that if death had resulted, the homicide would have been murder and, in addition to this, there must be the specific intent to murder.
2. If the assailant acted without malice aforethought, the verdict of the jury must be not guilty.
3. To find a verdict of guilty of assault with intent to murder, the circumstances must be such that if death had resulted, the homicide would have been murder, and that an assault is not an assault with intent to murder if the actual killing would be manslaughter only.
We think the court was right in refusing to grant the first of the three prayers, but that it erred to the prejudice of the appellant in not instructing the jury that the applicable law was substantially as set forth in the second and third. Rule 6 (b) of the Criminal Rules of Practice and Procedure says that at the request of any party, the court: “. . . shall grant such advisory instructions to the jury as may correctly state the applicable law”. Paragraph (g) of Rule 6 makes it plain that failure to give requested instructions shall be considered by this Court on appeal.
Hendrix v. State,
The appellant said at the argument that the first prayer was intended to, and did mean, that the law is that there can only be assault with intent to murder if there existed a specific wilful, deliberate and premeditated intent to kill. The prayer meant to instruct the jury that it could convict only if it found that, had death resulted, the homicide would have been murder in the first degree. This is not the law. In
Webb v. State,
Webb v. State, supra,
reiterated the established rule that to support a charge of assault with intent to murder, there must be proven not only the assault but also the intent, an essential element of the crime — the intent to do that which would be murder in either the first or second degree if the one assailed should die. Since malice is an essential element of the crime of murder, and without it a homicide is, at most, manslaughter, we have no doubt that the appellant was entitled to the requested instructions as to the necessity of finding by the jury that the crime would have been murder if the policeman had died, and so, of a finding of malice.
Chisley v. State,
Since intent is subjective and, without the cooperation of the accused, cannot be directly and objectively proven, its presence must be shown by established facts which permit a proper inference of its existence. Malice and, so intent to murder, may be inferred from all the facts and circumstances of the occurrence. The deliberate selection and use of a deadly weapon directed at a vital part of the body is a circumstance which indicates a design to kill, since in the absence of evidence to the contrary, the law presumes that one intends the natural and probable consequenpes of his act.
Chisley v. State, supra,
at p. 105 of 202 Md., and cases there cited.
State v. Litman
(Conn.), supra;
Redd v. State
(Ala.)
supra; Harvell v. State
(Fla.),
supra; People v. Herbert
(Ill.)
Plainly the evidence introduced by the state was sufficient to justify a finding by the jury that the assault was with intent to commit murder. Yet the evidence is also sufficient to have justified a finding that malice did not exist, so that the killing, if death had ensued, would have been manslaughter. This could have been found on either of two points; one, the direct evidence of intent by the appellant himself; and the other, the fact that the shooting occurred in resisting an illegal arrest.
As to the first point, Tommy testified flatly that he did not intend to kill the policeman, but merely to scare him, and that prior to the scuffle, he shot only at the ground. • His sole intent, he claims, was to escape. The competency of the accused to testify as to his intent is generally recognized, as Webb v. State, supra, noted. If the jury had been instructed as to the necessity of proof of malice, it might have looked at the testimony of Tommy and his friends (with such slight corroboration as came from the testimony of Sergeant Urban, that all Tommy said was that he wanted to get out of there) in a different light.
On the second point, Tommy and his companions were neither accused nor suspected of the commission of a felony and had committed no misdemeanor in the presence of Sergeant Urban or Mrs. Fallon. The reason given for their detention and the attempt to arrest them, is that they were dirty and unkempt — scarcely the basis for a legal arrest. In
Sugarman v. State,
1 There are two major lines of judicial reasoning in case of a killing in resisting an illegal arrest. One says that once the illegality of the arrest is established, the degree of homicide cannot be greater than manslaughter unless express malice is proven. This is said to be the view of the English courts.
Wharton’s Criminal Law,
12th Ed., Sec. 542;
Law of Homicide, Moreland,
p. 78; and Dickey,
Culpable Homicide in Resisting Arrest,
18 Cornell Law Quarterly, 373, 380. It is also the rule of some of the states.
Commonwealth v. Carey,
The second major line of cases recognizes the wisdom and necessity of the social policy but refuses to permit a reduction of. the grade of the homicide to come about automatically. These cases apply a subjective standard and hold that the accused must in fact have been filled with passion aroused by the illegal. arrest sufficient to meet the usual provocation tests, if murder is to be reduced to manslaughter. The courts following this line usually classify illegal arrest with sudden combat, assault and battery upon one’s person, and the sight of one’s wife in the act of adultery, as the standard situations in which a homicide arising out of the agitation stirred up in ordinary men by them will be manslaughter, rather than murder.
Bishop on Criminal Law,
9th Ed., Vol. 2, Section 699, paragraphs 1 and 2;
Law of Homicide, Moreland, supra,
p. 81;
Culpable Homicide in Resisting Arrest, supra,
p. 384,
et seq..;
8
Md. L. R., supra,
p. 58;
Calvin v. State,
In our view, the rule just discussed best serves the sound and necessary balance between the right to freedom of the citizen and the duty of those who must enforce the law, and is the rule to be followed. In this case, the appellant was entitled to have the jury decide whether the shooting was a result of passion or sudden heat agitated in him by. the provocation of the illegal arrest, or whether it was with malice; if the former, there would be no intent to murdér; if the latter, such ‘ intent could follow the inference of malice.) lUA
~~ Thé indictment charging assault with intent to murder Sergeant Urban was number 995. ' The appellant was convicted also on indictment number 994, for simple assault on Evelyn Fallon, and on indictment number
Judgments in numbers 994 and 996 affirmed,, and judgment in number 995 ■ reversed and case remanded for new ‘ trial.
