58 Pa. Super. 616 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1915
Opinion by
In the statement of claim it was alleged that, while John Geiger was lawfully upon a public street and in the peace of the commonwealth,, the defendant discharged a number of shots from a revolver “willfully and maliciously into the body of the said John Geiger,” causing the injuries which were described, and that he died as the result of said injuries. At the outset of the trial the plaintiff was permitted, under objection and exception, to amend his statement by substituting “negligently” for “wilfully and maliciously.” We cannot agree with counsel that by the allowance of this amendment a new and different cause of action was introduced. And, according to numerous authorities,
The remaining assignments of error relate to the
Between. 4 and 5 o’clock on the afternoon of July 6, John Geiger, aged about eighteen years, was seen “working” at a lower cellar window of a private dwelling house in the middle of a block on North Franklin street in the city of Philadelphia. The witness who testified to this fact said he was “working at the lock,” but when interrogated by the court he admitted that, as far as he knew, Geiger “was a carpenter repairing damages to the window-frame there.” No other testimony upon that subject was introduced by either party. The importance of this indefiniteness of proof as to what Geiger was doing will appear later when we come to discussion of the lawfulness of the defendant’s acts. A
The law applicable to such a state of facts is not in doubt. One who flees from an attempted arrest does not, under all circumstances, forfeit his right to five. Taking human life in the name of the law is the punishment inflicted after conviction of our highest grade felony, and it would ill become the majesty of the law to justify such a sacrifice in order to prevent one charged with a mere misdemeanor from escaping: Com. v. Rhoads, 23 Pa. Superior Ct. 512; Wharton on Homi
It is argued that the court erred in charging the jury that the defendant was guilty of having negligently shot Geigér. This argument is based on the testimony of the defendant’s witness to which we have already referred, that when Madden fired the third shot he "held the pistol in a downward position.” This testimony, when considered in connection with the testimony as to the place where the bullet entered Geiger’s body, scarcely warrants the inference that he pointed the pistol at the pavement instead of at Geiger. But granting that he pointed the pistol at the pavement, he must be deemed to have taken the chance of the bullet glancing and striking Geiger, and, as he had no lawful right to fire in his direction, with the probability of such consequences in view, the court committed no error of which he can complain, in saying that this was a negligent act. Characterizing it as a negligent act did the defendant no harm, for it might well have been characterized as a reckless act.
The assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.