Fields v. State

52 Ala. 348 | Ala. | 1875

BRICKELL, C. J.

The statute of December 11, 1874 (Paanph. Acts 1874-5, p 209), required the judge of the 9th judicial circuit to hold a special term of the circuit court for Russell county, on the second Monday in January, 1875, continuing for three weeks, “ for the trial and disposal of all criminal and civil business left unfinished at the last regular term of said court.” If a doubt could exist as to the character of business over which the court at this special term had authority and jurisdiction, — or, rather the character of the business, intended to be designated as “ business left unfinished at the last regular term,” — it is removed by the subsequent provisions of the statute. First, the court is expressly clothed “ with full, complete, and plenary jurisdiction in and over all unfinished business, to the same extent and in the same manner as if said special term, herein provided for, was a regular term of said court.” Grand and petit juries are to be drawn and summoned to attend its sitting. All bail pieces and bonds for the appearance of parties are made answerable to this special term ; and then, as if to render “ assurance doubly sure,” as to criminal causes, it is declared, “ that in all indictments heretofore found in said circuit court, and when the parties shall have been arrested before said special term, or during the term thereof, the same shall stand for trial at said special term.” We cannot doubt, nor do we see how it could have been more clearly expressed, that it was intended that the court, at this special term, should have over the business pending, not complete and put an end to by final judgment, the jurisdiction and authority it could exercise at a regular term. The competency of the general assembly to authorize special terms, and to compel the appearance of parties in civil or criminal causes, at its sitting, cannot now be questioned. It is a power of frequent exercise since the formation of the state government, and its existence is now beyond the pale of controversy. The objection of appellant to a trial, resting solely on the ground of the want of authority in the court, because it was a special term, was properly disallowed.

2. The several motions to quash the venire were properly overruled. The want of requisite qualifications in any of the persons summoned as jurors is matter of challenge for cause, which must be disclosed in a case of this kind before a person can be put on the State or the accused for acceptance or rejection, and would lead to his exclusion by the court, ex mero motu. The summoning of such persons must sometimes occur from the inadvertence, or ignorance of facts, in the officer charged v;ith *352the duty of summoning, and is not ground for setting aside the venire. Hall v. State, 40 Ala. 705.

Nor was it cause for quashing the venire that one or more of the persons named in it were designated only by their initial letters, instead of their full Christian names. Aiken v. State, 35 Ala. 399 ; Bill v. State, 29 Ala. 38; R. C. § 4175. We do not approve the practice of using initials only, to designate Christian names, in any paper pertaining to judicial proceedings, but it has prevailed too long to be be treated as vicious. No good reason could be assigned for sustaining the objection made on this ground to the venire; it was not alleged the appellant had been misled or deceived as to the person intended to be designated; and it did appear he was generally known by the use of initials.

3. The defendant was properly put on trial for murder in the second degree, and not for murder in the first degree. The court, in its general charge, gave the following definition of murder in the second degree: “ Every homicide which the evidence establishing it fails to show to be murder in the first degree, but which the evidence does show to be murder at common law, is murder in the second degree in Alabama. Murder in the second degree may be defined the unlawful killing of a reasonable person, with malice aforethought, either express or implied. Without malice there cannot be murder. With malice as the prompting motive there is always murder.” This charge was followed by a correct definition of malice, and a to statement of the evidence of it. The appellant excepted so much of the charge as defined murder in the second degree, and requested the court to charge: “ That murder in the second degree, under our statute, includes those cases of constructive murder which are not accompanied with the intent to take life, but are committed by gross carelessness, or in the commission or attempt to commit some other crime than arson, rape, robbery, or burglary; and that if they believe, from the evidence, that the killing was malicious, or was not committed in the commission or attempt to commit some other crime than the above specified, they cannot convict the prisoner of murder in the second degree.” This charge was refused and an exception reserved.

4. Murder was defined, or rather described by Sir Edward Coke, in these words: “ When a person of sound memory and discretion unlawfully killeth any reasonable creature in being, and únder the king’s peace, with malice aforethought, express or implied.” The description was adopted by Blackstone. 4 Black. 195. There were degrees of criminal homicide at common law, but malice was the distinguishing characteristic of murder. A malicious killing, whether the malice was express *353or implied, — whether it was the result of a sedate, deliberate mind, and formed design; or whether malice was implied from the circumstances attending the killing, — was murder, of equal criminality, and subjected to the same punishment. The assassin who lay in wait with a murderous weapon, and by surprise or stealth took the life of his victim, was not deemed more criminal than he who, without adequate provocation, in unbridled passion, took human life. The one only furnished more indisputable evidence of his guilt than the other. The mind could not resist the conviction that they were not equally criminal, and should not be subjected to the same severity of punishment. The statutes of this State, without changing the common law definition of murder, without adding to or taking away any of its ingredients, as known to the common law, for the purpose of punishment only, have divided it into murder in the first and murder in the second degree. The malignity with which the crime is perpetrated is the criterion by which the one is distinguished from the other degree. “ Every homicide perpetrated by poison, lying in wait, or any other kind of wilful, deliberate, malicious, and premeditated killing; or committed in the perpetration of or the attempt to perpetrate any arson, rape, robbery, or burglary ,• or perpetrated from a premeditated design, unlawfully and maliciously to effect the death of any human being, other than him who is killed; or perpetrated by any act greatly dangerous to the lives of others, and evidencing a depraved mind, regardless of human life, although without any preconceived purpose to deprive any particular person of life, is murder in the first degree; and every other homicide committed under such circumstances as would have constituted murder at common law is murder in the second degree.” B. C. § 3653. The killing in any sudden rencounter or affray, by the assailant, with a deadly weapon, which was concealed before the fight, the adversary having no deadly weapon drawn, is murder in the second degree, and may, according to the circumstances, be murder in the first degree. B. C. § 3656. A careful analysis of murder in the first degree, as described in the statute, resolves it into three characteristic ingredients. The first is a specific intention to take life, whether it be the life of the person slain, or of some other human being, deliberately formed and acted upon. The sedate and deliberate mind and formed design of the common law, manifested by lying in wait, or by poisoning, or by any other evidences of wilfulness, deliberation, premeditation, and malice. What these evidences may be, cannot be defined. They spring from the particular facts and circumstances attending the killing. When the killing is perpetrated in the committing or the attempt to commit the *354crime of arson, rape, robbery, or burglary, it is murder in tbe first degree. The criminal intent which is involved in these offences gives complexion to the unlawful killing perpetrated in their commission. It supplies the malice of the common law, and the specific intention to take life, involved in the other homicides mentioned in the statute. Then, the reckless depravity which at common law imported malice, and which is the equivalent of malice, directed to a particular person, illustrations of which are given in the cqmmon law books, “ as the going deliberately, and with intent to do mischief, upon a horse used to strike, or coolly discharging a gun among a multitude of people, is presumed to exist.” 4 Black. 200.

All other unlawful and malicious killings the statute denominates murder in the second degree. They embrace the homicides in which malice was implied at common law. An affray may have occurred, or a provocation been given, which if acted on in the heat of the passion it would suddenly produce, the law, in tenderness to human frailty, would receive as mitigating an unlawful killing to manslaughter. If, however, the provocation, however sudden, was not of that character which would in the mind of a just and reasonable man stir resentment to violence endangering life; or if between the time it was given and the killing, “ cooling time,” as it is quaintly and forcibly expressed in the older books, — time in which passion would have subsided unless wrath had been nursed, — intervened, the killing would be murder. The malice was implied, because violence was carried too far, or because it was supposed the provocation was seized upon to gratify revenge. Such a homicide may also have been attended with evidences of express malice, as in the preparation for the killing, or the weapon employed, or some other evidence of it. Yet, the provocation may rebut the existence of the wilfulness, deliberation, premeditation, and malice, which must concur in murder in the first degree. A killing may also be reckless, without evincing a purpose to take the life of any particular human being, and without evincing the degree of depravity shown in the illustrations we have mentioned. There may be no purpose to do mischief; as if one from a house-top recklessly throws down a billet of wood upon the sidewalk, where persons are constantly passing, and it fall upon a person passing by and kill him. Moore v. State, 18 Ala. 532. No more accurate definition of murder in the second degree can be given than that found in the statute, — a malicious and unlawful killing under other facts or circumstances than those enumerated as constituting murder in the first degree. The charge given by the court was of consequence correct. The charge requested was properly refused. It would have misled the jury into the supposition *355that no other homicides than those it specifically enumerates were murder in the second degree.

The judgment must be affirmed.

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