Head v. Martin

85 Ky. 480 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1887

JUDGE HOLT

delivered the opinion oe the court.

The single question presented is, whether a peace officer may, in order to arrest one upon a warrant for bastardy, or to prevent his escape after arrest, kill him when fleeing. If he has the right under such circumstances to shoot and wound him, as was done in this instance, then it necessarily follows that he can not be held responsible if it results in death.

It is attempted to draw a distinction between a case where one is attempting to avoid arrest, and where one is endeavoring to escape after arrest. If, however, the offender is in flight, and is not at the time resisting the officer, then the law is the same, whether he be fleeing to avoid arrest or to escape from custody. (2 Bishop on Criminal Law, section 664; Wharton on Homicide, sections 212-214.) The averments of the answer, admitted by the demurrer, show that the appellee, Martin, had in fact been arrested by the appellant, Head, as deputy sheriff, and was shot by the *483latter when fleeing from Ms custody; but the fact that an arrest had been made does not alter the law of the case.

A bastardy proceeding is, under our law, a civil one. Yet.it proceeds in the name of the Commonwealth, and under the statute the offender is subject to arrest. As to the question now before us, it is, therefore, to be regarded in the same light as a misdemeanor.

Our statute is silent, unless it may be regarded as speaking by implication, as to the force an officer may use in effecting an arrest, or in recapturing a prisoner. It merely provides, that “no unnecessary force or violence shall be used in making the arrest.”

We, therefore, turn to the common law for guidance. By it an officer in a case of felony may use such force as is necessary to capture the felon, even to killing him when in flight. In the case of a misdemeanor, however, the rule is different. It is his duty to make the arrest; he may summon a posse, and may defend himself, if resisted, even to the taking of life; but when the offender is not resisting, but fleeing, he has no right to kill. Human life is too sacred to admit of a more severe rule. Officers of the law are properly clothed with its sanctity; they represent its majesty, and must be properly protected ; but to permit the life of one charged with a mere misdemeanor to be taken when fleeing from the officer would, aside from its inhumanity, be productive of more abuse than good. The law need not go unenforced. The officer can summon his posse, and take the offender.

*484The reason for this distinction is obvious. The security of person and. property is not endangered by a petty offender being at large, as in the case of a felon. The very being of- society and government requires the speedy arrest and punishment of the latter.

Bishop says: “The justification of homicide happening in the arrest of persons charged with miscLemeanors, or breaches of the peace, is subject to a different rule from that which we have been laying down in respect to cases of felony; for, generally speaking, in misdemeanors it will be murder to kill the party accused for flying from the arrest, though he can not otherwise be overtaken, and though there be a warrant to apprehend him; but under circumstances, it may amount only to manslaughter, if it appear that death was not intended. * * * *

“But in misdemeanors and breaches of the peace, as well as in cases of felony, if the officer meet with resistance and the offender is killed in the struggle, the killing will be justified.” (2 Bishop on Criminal Law, sections 662-3.)

The same rule may be found in the works of the other common law writers.

Hale says: “And here is the difference between civil actions and felonies. If a man be in danger of arrest by a capias in debt or trespass and he flies, and the bailiff kills him, it is murder; but if a felon flies, and he can not be otherwise taken, if he be killed it is no felony, and in that case the officer so killing forfeits nothing, but the person so assaulted and killed forfeits his goods.” (1 Hale’s Pleas of the Crown, page 481.)

*485So great, however, is the law’s regard, for human life, that if even a felon can be taken without the taking of life,, and he be slain, it is at least manslaughter. Even as. to him, it can be done only of necessity.

An officer in arresting or preventing an escape for a misdemeanor may oppose force to force, and sufficient to overcome it, even to the taking of life. If the offender puts the life of the officer in jeopardy, the latter may se defendeudo slay him; but he must not use any greater force than is reasonably and apparently necessary for his protection.

It is often said, that an officer may use such force as is necessary to make an arrest. Generally speaking, this is true. It was so said in the cases of Fleetwood v. Commonwealth, 80 Ky., 1, and Moccabee v. Commonwealth, 78 Ky., 380. But in those cases a deadly affray between parties was in progress or about to occur, endangering the lives not only of the participants, but innocent persons ; and it was the duty of the officer, when resisted, to quell it even at the sacrifice of human life. In these cases he was justified in killing, not only se defendendo, but to prevent the impending commission of a felony.

In case, however, of a mere riot upon one day, and an attempted arrest upon the next, surely the officer would not be justified in killing the offender when fleeing from custody or to escape arrest. A person commits a misdemeanor by the use of profane language; he flees from the officer attempting to arrest him or from custody. The dictates of humanity as well as the legal rule forbid the taking of his life under such circumstances.

*486The officer must in such a case summon his posse, and take him. He has no more right to kill him than he would have if the offender were to lie down and refuse to go with him.

It is said, however, that the appellee was in the wrong; that there was a sort of contributory neglect upon his part which produced the injury. It was not, however, such neglect or conduct as, under ordinary circumstances, would produce the injury. It could not be expected that, in consequence of it, the officer would go beyond the limit of the law, and employ force when and of a character forbidden by it. It is not a question whether unnecessary force was used; but the answer of the appellant shows that he used it when and in a degree forbidden by the law.

The demurrer was, therefore, 'properly sustained, and the judgment must be affirmed.