78 Wis. 602 | Wis. | 1891
We have had occasion heretofore to consider the transactions which gave rise to this action. Higgins v. Minaghan, 76 Wis. 298; Minaghan v. State, 77 Wis. 643. It is a matter of regret that the cause was not fairly tried at the last time, so as to stop this expensive litigation, which is ruinous to both parties, however it might finally result. But we think such error intervened on the trial that there must be a reversal of the judgment.
The first error assigned which we shall notice was the manner of selecting the jury. On the voir dAre the plaintiff’s counsel was permitted to ask, against the objection of the defendant, whether the juror had any prejudice for or against charivari parties, or if he entertained any prejudice against parties that engaged in charivaring. The learned circuit judge seems to have had some doubt about the propriety of this course of examination, and we think it was wholly wrong. Every good, law-abiding citizen must and does condemn such unlawful and riotous assemblies. ' They are wholly indefensible in law and morals, and are repro-bated by every well-disposed person. With the same propriety a juror called upon to try a man charged with a criminal act might be asked if he had or entertained any bias or prejudice for or against crime or criminals. Persons are undoubtedly entitled to a fair and impartial jury to try a cause; and where it appears that a juror is prejudiced, of course, upon a knowledge of the facts or that he has bias or prejudice in favor of or against one of the parties, he is disqualified. But if he has no actual bias and is able to hear the evidence and decide upon it impartially under the guidance of the court as to the law, whatever may be his views as to the enormity of crime in the ab
But, while we express our emphatic disapproval of the course pursued in the examination of the jurors on the w cUra, we do not reverse the judgment on that ground, but because the cause, we think, was not fairly submitted to the jury by the trial court. A number of instructions were asked on the part of the defendant, some of which were covered by the general charge; and some were refused which should have been given. The instructions and charge are too lengthy to be quoted verbatim, nor is it necessary, to make our remarks upon them intelligible. The really controverted question in the case was whether, under the circumstances, the defendant was justified in shooting the plaintiff as he did. The trial court, in considering the question whether the shooting was excusable or justifiable, said:
“ The defendant, as he had a lawful right to do, on the 14th day of June married a second wife and took her to his home to live. On the night of June 18, 1887, the plaintiff and others — men and boys — proceeded to the defendant’s house, and engaged in what is designated as a ohcvrwari, the nature and character of which is shown by the evidence.*605 The same thing was repeated on the nights of the 22d and 25th of the same month. It was continued on the last night until the plaintiff was shot, when the crowd dispersed. What was done on each night is for you to ascertain and •consider. The plaintiff was present on the 18th and 25th of June, as an actual participant, or aiding and encouraging the others, so that he is responsible for the acts, language, and conduct of each and every one constituting the charivari party, the same as if done by himself. He knew what had been done on the night of the 22d, before the commencement of the proceedings and disturbance on the 25th. The defendant, at these times, was in the peaceable pursuit of his own business, at home with his family, and •entitled to enjoy domestic peace and tranquility, without disturbance or molestation from the plaintiff or any one else. These three gatherings by the plaintiff and others were composed of men and boys from the defendant’s neighborhood, but whether he knew who they were at these times is, of course, a question for you to determine. The charivari parties consisting of t’he crowd in front of or upon the defendant’s premises constituted an unlawful assembly; and by their transactions, conduct, and behavior became what is known in the law as a ‘ riot,’ tending to the disturbance of the peace and the .annoyance, if not the terror, of the defendant and others in the vicinity; they were trespassers in the highway. Where an unlawful assembly and riot, like the one in question, offers and threatens violence to persons or property, it may and ought to be repelled with suitable and necessary force; but, where no violence is offered or threatened to person or property, no one is justified in unnecessarily or wantonly killing or. wounding a person engaged in a charivari. The law provides a punishment for such unlawful acts. Persons thus engaged are not necessarily outlaws beyond the protection of the law, who may be slain or wounded without cause by any person*606 not in any actual or apparent danger from their acts. To enable you to determine whether violence was offered, danger to person or property was threatened or contemplated, the numbers in these unlawful assemblies, and their acts and transactions, proceedings, and conduct on the three nights in question may be considered on the question of whether the defendant was justified in doing what he did, if he shot the plaintiff in the leg. . . .
“ In case you are satisfied from the evidence that the defendant shot the plaintiff in the leg, your next duty will be to determine whether such shooting was excusable or justifiable. Every one has the right to protect himself and his family from danger to life or limb, and his home from invasion by the felonious acts of others. He may employ suitable and appropriate means and methods to prevent or avoid the threatened danger. Before force can be resorted to there must be real or apparent danger, andri an apparent necessity of using force to avoid or prevent an injury. One instance is where one person attempts a battery of another, in which case the latter is not obliged to submit until an officer can be found or a suit commenced, but he may oppose violence to violence, and the limit to this privilege is only this: that he must not employ a degree of force not called for in self-defense; he must not inflict serious injuries in repelling slight injuries, nor take life, unless his life or limb is in danger. Where he exceeds the limit of necessary protection and employs excessive force, he becomes a trespasser himself, and his assailant may recover damages from him for repelling the assault with a violence not called for. >, As mere words never constitute an assault, neither will they justify the employment of force in protection against them, however gross, obscene, or abusive they may be. There are, probably, exceptions to this general statement, in words grossly insulting to females,— at least, where one would be excused, where grossly vulgar and insulting language was*607 employed in the presence of his family, if he were promptly to put a stop to it by force. Such force as one may employ in his own defense he may also employ in the defense of his wife, his child, or any member of his family; but to revenge the wrongs of himself or his family is no part of his legal right, and where the danger is repelled, or there is no real or apparent danger, justification for the further use of violence is at an end. The force or means to be employed in self-defense of person or family must be such only as are reasonably necessary to repel or prevent the threatened injury. . . .
“If the noise, disturbance, and disorderly acts of the charwari party so affected the wife and children of the defendant that he had reasonable grounds to apprehend that either of them was likely to die or to be seriously injured in body, mind, or health, if such acts were continued, and reasonable cause to believe that such injury might result, then the defendant had the right to use the necessary force to avert the apprehended danger, the same, as though an actual attack had been made on their persons: • but if the sole and only danger to be apprehended was the injury to his wife and children from fright or terror, then if the defendant with reasonable safety to himself could have approached near enough to have informed the eharwari party of this fact, he should have done so, and given them an opportunity to desist, before firing into the crowd; he should have used all reasonable and practicable efforts which he could use without exposing himself to danger to let them know the situation and danger to his family from their acts; but if the acts and conduct of the oha/rvoa/ri party were of such a character that it would have been impracticable or dangerous to himself or his limb to have gone near enough to have given them this information, then he would be excused from so doing. If alone, and, in addition to danger to his wife and child from fright or terror, there*608 was imminent danger of a felonious attack on Ms bouse or on its inmates or himself, no notice to the oha/rvoa/ri party of such danger to his wife or child would be necessary; but it would be for you to find whether he is excusable or 'justifiable in firing, at the time and manner he did, under all the circumstances of the casé. The shooting or killing of another is justifiable when committed by any person in either of the following cases.”
Now, in respect to this charge, we remark (1) that what is said in 'it about justifiable homicide was calculated to mislead the jury from the real issue. The defendant did not kill any one, and there was no occasion to define justifiable homicide, for no such question was in the case.
(2) We do not think the defendant was bound to notify the eha/rvowri party that their shooting, noise, and. tumult were causing terror and fright to his wife and children, and were seriously injuring them in mind, body, and health. This was the third night these persons had been engaged in these unlawful and criminal proceedings. On the first night they came the defendant had warned them awa,y, and directed them to desist. The rioters themselves knew, or should have known, that their acts and conduct about the house, in the night, were well calculated to produce terror and fright, and injuriously affect the defendant’s family. This was the direct, necessary, and almost inevitable consequence of their acts. If the defendant had again requested them to desist and go away, had told them they were causing serious bodily harm to his wife and children, his notice .and warning would probably have been received with derision, insulting remarks, and vile abuse, as' they had been on previous occasions. So we think it was error to charge that the defendant was bound to inform the oha/rwari party of the fact that their riotous conduct was endangering the life of his wife and children, before taking effectual means, by shooting or otherwise, to drive them away. The circuit
(3) ¥e think the charge is faulty because it did not point out to the jury the essential difference between an assault by one person and by a body of rioters. An assault in the latter case always inspires more terror and is attended with greater danger than in the former; for, as defendant’s counsel says, when a number of men combine to do an unlawful act a kind of emulation is excited which leads one after another to go to greater and greater excesses and to resort to more flagrant acts, so that a person assaulted by a mob in that way is necessarily, from the nature of the case, subject to greater terror and apprehension than when the assault is made by an individual, and the assaulted party may act with more promptness and resort to more forcible means to protect himself and suppress the riot than in the latter case. Here the rioters were firing guns, blowing horns, drumming on pans, and making all kinds of hideous noises (76 Wis. 301), and kept up this tumultuous uproar for hours, until his wife and youngest daughter were nearly frightened to death. The defendant could not tell when they would attack his dwelling-house, or shoot him, or personally assault him; and in the excitement and confusion the law would justify or excuse him in the use of fire-arms for the safety of himself and family, when such means might not be resorted to in the case of an assault by an individual.
This idea, or difference between an assault by one and by a large number, is embraced in the eleventh and twelfth and some of the other instructions asked by the defendant, and the point should have been clearly and emphatically impressed upon the minds of the jury, for the difference is
We see no objection to the charge where the jury were directed: “ If a person is assaulted in such a way as to induce in him a reasonable belief of danger of losing his life or of suffering great bodily harm, he will be justified in defending himself, although the danger be not real, only apparent. Such a person will not be held responsible civilly or criminally if he acts in self-defense, from real and honest convictions induced by reasonable evidence, although he may be mistaken as to the extent of the actual danger. A person need not be in actual imminent peril of his life or of great bodily harm before he may shoot his assailant; it is sufficient if in good faith he has reasonable ground from the facts, as they appear to him .at the time, to apprehend a design to commit a felony, or to do some great personal injury, and reasonable cause for believing that there is imminent danger of such design being accomplished.”
We do not deem it necessary to comment further on the
By the Gourt. — The. judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and a new trial ordered.