78 Ky. 183 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1879
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellant was indicted and tried for the murder of Henry Smith, a porter at the Veranda Hotel at Nicholas-ville. He was found guilty of manslaughter, and sentenced to confinement in the penitentiary for two years. From that judgment he prosecutes this appeal.
The prisoner and his friend George Welch went to the Veranda Hotel after dark on an evening in February. The weather was cold, and there was snow upon the ground. They sat down in the public room and went to sleep. In a short time Welch awoke, and, finding the deceased in the barber’s shop, in the next room, called for a bed for himself and the prisoner, to pay for which he handed the deceased a bill. Welch attempted to awaken the prisoner by shaking him, but failed. He then told the deceased to wake him up. The deceased shook him for some time, and failing to wake him, said he believed he was dead. Welch said no, he is not; wake him up. The deceased shook him harder and harder until the prisoner looked up and asked what he wanted. The deceased said he wanted him to go to bed. The- prisoner said he would not, and told the deceased to go away and let him alone. The deceased said it was getting late, and he wanted to close the house, and still holding the prisoner by the coat, the latter either raised or was lifted up, and, as he arose, he threw his hand to his side as if to draw a weapon. A by stander said to him,
It did not appear that the prisoner knew or had ever seen ¡the deceased before. There was not the slightest evidence •of a motive on his part to injure the deceased, nor does there ¡appear to have been anything in what the deceased did or • the manner of doing it which, the facts being understood, was calculated to excite anger, much less a desire to kill him. .At that time the prisoner was about thirty-three years of age, and he introduced evidence to show that he had been a man ■of'good character and of peaceable and orderly habits.
He also offered to prove that he had been a sleep-walker ■from his infancy; that he had to be watched to prevent injury to himself; that he was put to sleep in a lower room, near that of his parents, and a servant-man was required to •sleep in the room to watch him; that frequently, when ¡aroused from sleep, he seemed frightened, and attempted
He also offered to prove by medical experts that persons • asleep sometimes act as if awake; that they walk, talk, answer questions, and do many other things, and yet are-unconscious of what they do; that with many persons there ■ is a period between sleeping and waking in which they are-unconscious, though they seem to be awake; that loss of' sleep, and other causes which produce nervous depression or-mental anxiety, may produce such a state of unconsciousness. between sleep and waking; and that for some days previous ■ his children had been afflicted with a dangerous disease, and he had, in consequence, lost much sleep.
He likewise offered to prove that his life had been threatened by a person living near where he had been on business. during the day, and that he had on that morning borrowed the pistol with which he shot the deceased, and had stated at. the time that he was required to go near to where the person-lived who had threatened him, and he wanted the pistol to defend himself in case he was attacked.
The court rejected all this proffered evidence, and the. prisoner excepted.
All the modern medico-legal -waiters to whose writings we-have had access, recognize a species of mental unsoundness, connected with sleep, which they commonly treat of under-the general head of Somnambulism.
In speaking of this peculiar affection, Dr. Ray says:
“Not only is the power of locomotion enjoyed, as the-etymology of the term signifies, but the voluntary muscles..
Under the general head of mental unsoundness connected with sleep, Wharton & Stille group somnolentia, somnambulism, and nightmare.
They define somnolentia “to be. the lapping over of a. profound sleep'into the domain of apparent wakefulness,”' and say that it produces a state of involuntary intoxication, which for the time destroys moral agency. (Med. Jur., section 151.)
The writings of medical and medico-legal authors contain accounts of many well-authenticated cases in which homicides have been committed while the perpetrator was either asleep or just being aroused from sleep, and in commenting on these cases, Brown, in his Medical Jurisprudence of Insanity, uses this language:
Sec. 338. “Indeed, there are very many cases in which the confused thoughts of awakening consciousness have led to disastrous consequences. And this is to be accounted for by the fact that there is a state between sleeping and waking when the thoughts of the dreamer have as much reality as. the facts he is assured of by his senses. ”
Taylor recognizes the existence in many persons of a half conscious state when suddenly aroused from sleep, and says.
These authorities, corroborated as they are by common ■observation, are sufficient to prove that it is possible for one, «either in sleep or between sleeping and waking, to commit homicide, either unconsciously or under the influence of hallucination or illusion resulting from an abnormal condition of the physical system.
Í'» Ray says: “As the somnambulist does not enjoy the free and rational exercise of his understanding, and is more or ,. less unconscious of his outward relations, none of his acts ■during the paroxysms can rightfully be imputed to him as crimes.” (Med. Jur., sec. 508.)
Brown, and Wharton & Stifle express substantially the •same views.
But we are not under the necessity of relying wholly upon writers on medical jurisprudence as authority upon this point. ,lt is one of the .fundamental principles of the criminal law ^ that Inhere can be no criminality in the absence of criminal intentionX and when we ascertain from medical experts or ■otherwise Jthat there is such a thing in nature as somnolentia and somnambulism, the task of the jurist is ended, so far as •relates to the right of one accused of crime to offer evidence conducing to prove that he committed the act imputed to him as a crime while in a paroxysm of somnolentia or somnambulism. In criminal trials, the jury must try every pertinent question of fact the evidence conduces to prove. When evidence is offered, the sole question for the court is, will it conduce to prove any fact material in the case ? and if the law gives an affirmative response, the evidence must
The evidence conducing to prove that the appellant’s children had been sick, and that he had recently lost considerable sleep, should have been admitted as conducing to show.that, at the moment of being aroused, he may have been unconscious, or partly so, and, therefore, unable readily to understand the real circumstances of his situation.
The physicians introduced would have proved, as the appellant avowed, that loss of sleep and mental anxiety each has a tendency to develop a' predisposition to somnolentia, or sleep drunkenness, as it is otherwise called, and in this they would but corroborate the opinions of medical jurists.
The central position of the defense was, that the prisoner ■fired the fatal shots while partially or wholly unconscious, under the false impression that he was being assaulted by the deceased.
His effort was to show that he was subject to a peculiar ■ affection which made him imagine, when suddenly aroused from sleep, that he was being assaulted by the person • arousing him, and that under that impression he was accustomed to make unconsciously violent resistance; that at such times he mistook the mere creatures of his imagination for real facts and circumstances.
If he had been threatened, it was natural, or at least not unnatural, especially while near to the, person who had threatened him, that the threat should make such an impression on his mind as would contribute to develop with more than ordinary force the predisposition to imagine him■-self assaulted and to make resistance, and particularly so when, on being aroused, he found himself in the hands of a stranger, by whom he was being persistently and violently • shaken.
We do not see any legitimate bearing the fact that he borrowed the pistol could have upon any of the issues in the case, and what he said was not admissible to prove that he had been threatened.
As the case must go back for a new trial, and it is, in : some of its features, one of first impression, we will, at the risk of being prolix, consider the law applicable to it somewhat in detail.
1. If the prisoner, when he shot the deceased, was uncon.scious, or so nearly so that he did not comprehend his own .situation and the circumstances surrounding him, or that he ¡supposed he was being assailed, and that he was merely resisting an attempt to take his life or do him great bodily 'injury, he should be acquitted — in one case, because he ■was not legally responsible for any act done while in that -condition, and in the other, because he is excusable on the .ground of self-defense; for although it is clear that he was not in danger, and had no reasonable grounds to believe he was, yet if, through derangement of his perceptive faculties, it appeared to him that he was in danger, he is as free from punishable guilt as if .the facts had been as he supposed them to be.
2. If he was so far unconscious when he fired the first shot, -or the first and second, that he supposed he was defending himself against a dangerous assault, and regained consciousness before he fired the second or third shot, the question of _guilt or innocence will depend upon whether he then believed in good faith that he was in danger of losing his life or of .sustaining great bodily injury.
It was not necessary, under the circumstances, that he ¡should have reasonable grounds to believe he was in danger. In the view we are now taking of the case we are supposing .he was unconscious or partly so when he fired the first shot. .If so, when he regained consciousness and found himself ¡seized and held by a stranger who was struggling to over’power him, it would be unreasonable to expect him to wait umtil he could discover the purpose lor apparent purpose of Tis antagonist, as it might have appeared to those who, in
But if he fired after he became conscious, and did not at the time in good faith believe he was in danger of loss of life or great personal injury, he is guilty of either murder or manslaughter — murder if he was actuated by malice, manslaughter if he acted without malice.
3. Although he may have been so far conscious when he-fired the first shot as to understand what he was doing, yet, if he did not understand the purpose of his assailant, and believed he was attempting to inflict on him great personal injury, he should be acquitted, for, as already remarked, if, in consequence of a derangement of his perceptive faculties, or from being suddenly aroused from sleep and finding the-deceased holding and shaking him, he believed he was in great danger of losing his life or suffering great personal injury, although there was in fact no danger, and, those who had witnessed the affair, had no reason to apprehend danger, he is no more guilty than if there had been actual danger. Such a case admits of no other test than the good faith of the prisoner, to be judged of by the jury.
4. If the prisoner was conscious of what he was himself doing, and that the purpose of the deceased was merely to-wake him up, and the prisoner shot him simply because he did so, he is guilty of either murder or manslaughter: murder if the shooting was malicious, manslaughter if without malice.
If the prisoner is and has been afflicted in the manner-claimed, and knew, as he no doubt did, his propensity to do acts of violence when aroused from sleep, he was guilty of a grave breach of social duty in going to sleep in the public room of a hotel with a deadly weapon on his person, and
^ Instructions two and three, given by the court, are inconsistent with the foregoing views, and should not have been given.
For the errors indicated, the judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial upon principles not inconsistent with this opinion.