19 Mo. 506 | Mo. | 1854
delivered the opinion of the court.
Edmund Harper, on the 17th of December, 1849, took from the Phcenix Insurance Company a policy of insurance on his • life, for the term of five years, for three thousand dollars. The policy was subject to the following conditions: “That if the said Harper shall die in consequence of a duel, or by the hands of justice, or in the known violation of any law of this state, then, in such case, the policy shall be void.”
This is an action on the policy by the plaintiff, Woodyard, who is the.administrator of Harper.
The answer sets up the defence that Harper died in the known violation of a law of this state, in committing an.assault upon one Coryell, whereby the policy was avoided ; that Harper, just before his death, assaulted Coryell with a pistol, and attempted to shoot him, who, in resisting said attempt, and in defence of his life, shot and immediately killed Harper.
The trial of the cause was submitted to the court without a jury, and the facts were agreed as follows : On the 6th day of February, 1850, and in the year, within the time for which the life of said Edmund Harper was insured, one Coryell was talking to a man named Wilson, standing about forty paces from B. Harper’s store, where the said Edmund Harper, the deceased, then was. The deceased spoke to the said Wilson, and asked him if he knew to whpm he was speaking, and admonished him
Upon these facts, the court found for the defendant, whereupon the plaintiff sued out this writ of error.
When this cause was formerly here, the idea intended to be conveyed in the opinion given was, that a person could not be said to have died in the known violation of a law of this state,
The facts of this case clearly show that the person slaying Harper was guilty of a crime. There is no proof of the fact set .up as a bar that Coryell slew Harper in self defence. Harper had abandoned the conflict, retreated as far as possible, and endeavored to screen himself from the attack of his assailant. His having a stick of wood in his hand at the time he was slain, did not, in the least, extenuate the guilt of Coryell. Under the circumstances, Harper would have been justified had he slain Coryell. This is made so by our statute. He would have been excused by the common law. If A., upon a suddden quarrel, assaults B. first, and upon B.’s returning the assault, A. really and bona Jide flees, and being driven to the wall, turns again upon B. and kills him, this is se defendendo. 1 Hale, 480. Foster, 273. By the twelfth section of the second article of the act concerning crimes and punishments, it is enacted, that every person who shall unnecessarily kill another, either while resisting an attempt by such other person to commit any felony or do any other unlawful act, after such attempt shall have failed, shall be deemed guilty of manslaughter in the second degree, Now, if one dies under circumstances which would justify him in slaying his adversary, and when the person causing his death is, thereby, .guilty of a felony, is it not.a gross perversion of language