43 Neb. 337 | Neb. | 1895
This is a petition in error and presents for review a judgment of the district court for Saunders county, whereby the plaintiff in error was convicted of an assault with intent to murder. The offense, it seems, was committed at a dance in a saloon in the village of Touhy on the 8th day of September, 1893. Of those present a number, including the prosecuting witness, Ganson Stoughton, had, during the evening, indulged freely in the use of liquor, and were, at the time of the assault, about two hours after midnight, ap
The attack upon the judgment in the oral argument-,and also in the excellent brief submitted by counsel for the prisoner, is directed in particular against the eleventh instruction given by the court on its own motion, as follows 5 “ The law presumes that all persons intend the natural andi probable consequences of their acts, and where it appears, that one person has assaulted another with a dangerous and deadly weapon, the presumption is that he intends the natural and probable consequences of his acts. If you believe from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant assaulted the witness Stoughton with a garden hoe, struck him on the head with such force and violence as to
1. The first objection to the above instruction is that it can only be interpreted to mean “ that when one assaults another with a deadly and dangerous weapon, it raises a legal presumption that he intends to kill.” It was said in Curry v. State, 4 Neb., 545, that “a person is presumed to do that which he voluntarily and willfully does in fact do; but if the intent is to be carried beyond the result actually produced by the acts of the accused, evidence must be introduced to justify the jury in so finding.” The above is substantially the rule as stated in Commonwealth v. Webster, 5 Cush. [Mass.], 305, and may be accepted as the law of this state. We do not, however, interpret the rule to require in every case independent evidence of the particular intention. On the contrary, the circumstances attending the principal act may be of such a character as alone to exclude every rational hypothesis except the existence of the specific intent charged. According to the modern and more reasonable- view the test in all such cases is a rule of logic rather than a rule of law; and while a direction to the effect that men are presumed to intend the natural and probable consequences of their voluntary acts is generally held unobjectionable, what is meant thereby is that the jury are at liberty, if the circumstances warrant, to infer the intent from the act. Such inference, in the language of Dr. Wharton, is not one of law but of probable reasoning as to which the court may lay down logical tests for the guidances of the jury, but can impose no positive binding rule. (Wharton, Criminal Evidence, secs. 735, 736.) Judged by that test it may be conceded that the proposition stated by the court is incomplete, and unless supplemented by other instructions, merits the criti
2. It is next contended that the instruction is erroneous, in consequence of the assumption therein that a garden hoe is a deadly weapon. There is an apparent diversity of opinion respecting the subject suggested. The question whether a weapon is deadly, within the meaning of the law of homicide, is by some writers said to be one of fact for the jury. Mr. Bishop, on the other hand, says: “It [a deadly weapon] is a weapon likely to produce death, or great bodily injury. In a case of doubt, the manner in which it was used may be taken into the account in determining whether or not it was deadly. And when the facts are all established, the question of whether a particular weapon was deadly or not is of law for the court. Yet practically, as in most instances, the establishment of the facts awaits the
3. Numerous instructions were asked bearing upon the subject of self-defense, and their refusal is also assigned as error. At the conclusion of the argument we were strongly impressed with the soundness of that contention, but a careful reading of the record has convinced us that there is no evidence whatever to which such a charge could apply. It is not necessary in this connection to discuss at length the law of self-defense. It is sufficient for present purposes' that in order to lay a foundation for the submission of that ■subject there must be some evidence tending to prove that the act in question appeared to be necessary for the protection of the person of the prisoner or another. The prisoner in the case at bar did not testify in his own behalf, and we have searched the record in vain for such foundation. The prosecutor, it is true, was intoxicated and evidently abusive, but his attitude when assaulted was in no sense aggressive. ■Judged by the testimony for the prisoner, he appears rather to have been acting on the defensive and, as we have seen, was retreating backward from the persons in front of the saloon when he was struck from behind by the prisoner. There being no error in the rulings assigned, the judgment of the district court must be
Affirmed.