84 Pa. 80 | Pa. | 1877
delivered the opinion of the
Upon the indisputable evidence in this case the verdict was correct. These are the leading facts. Andrew Lanahan, the prisoner, and John Reilly, Esq., the deceased, were at a saloon under Landmcsser’s Hall, in Wilkesbarre, on the afternoon of the 15th of September 1874. They had not gone there together, but were drawn thither by a political convention held in the hall above. Late in the evening, Lanahan invited Reilly to take a seat in his buggy to go home. They left the saloon about dark, Lanahan sitting on the right and Reilly on the left side; Lanahan driving down Main street. When between two and three hundred yards from the saloon, and still in the built up part of Main street, a witness on the sidewalk heard two shots in pretty quick succession, and saw two flashes proceeding from the buggy, and immediately heard a voice coming from the buggy saying: “You have shot me,” or “I am shot.” The direction of both flashes was from the right towards the left side. Immediately a man’s body slipped from the seat, and his legs hung out at the left side, dangling against the wheel, and continued thus for a short time until the buggy approached Hazel street, the vehicle going at great speed. Before the firing no voices were heard, or other evidence of a quarrel in the buggy. When crossing, the railroad track into Hazel street, the buggy was
Lanahan disappeared, and Avas not found until about a year after-wards, Avhen he was discovered in a western state, under a feigned name, arrested and brought back, denying his identity and not admitting it until fully identified at Wilkesbarre. Reilly, the deceased, was not known to have possessed a pistol,' and none was found upon him, or in the buggy, or on the road the buggy ran, or elsewhere. The identity of the two persons, the buggy and horse, and of the time, place and circumstances of the shooting being undeniable, the chief and indeed only possible defence was that a quarrel must have arisen between them, that each had a pistol, and
The verdict of the jury establishes the murder in the first degree. Was the evidence sufficient ? Did it contain the ingredients ? The burden of this proof, it is admitted, lies on the Commonwealth. But it is not necessary that the evidence should be express; it is sufficient, if from the nature and use of the weapon, and the acts and conduct of the prisoner, his intention to kill can be fully, fairly and justly inferred, with so much time used and opportunity for deliberation, as to convince that his purpose was wilful and premeditated. If the doctrine were otherwise secret murders would rarely be punished. This doctrine was held by the courts immediately after the passage of the Act of 1794, and has been announced in numerous decisions down to the present hour. The case of Mulatto Bob was tried before Chief Justice McKean and Justice Smith in 1795. The Chief Justice said, “Although premeditation is necessary under the act, still the intention remains as much as ever the true criterion of crime, and the intention can only be collected from the prisoner’s words and actions: but let it be supposed that a man without uttering a word should strike another on the head with an axe, it must on every principle by which we can judge of human actions be deemed a premeditated violence 7 Sm. Laws, Appendix.
This doctrine was re-stated by Chief Justice McKean in O’Hara’s case, tried in 1796. It was also held by Judge Rush in Dougherty’s case, tried in 1807, and in Smith’s case in 1816: 7 Sm. Laws, Appendix. In the case of Kilpatrick, Judge Ludlow substantially repeated the language of Judge Rush and his charge was approved by this court in 7 Casey 198.
In Cathcart v. Commonwealth, 1 Wright 108, Justice Strong reiterates the presumptions to be drawn from the use of a deadly weapon. He says, “ If the killing were not accidental, then malice and a design to kill were to be presumed from the use of a deadly weapon ; for the law adopts the common and rational belief that a man intends the usual, immediate and natural consequences of his voluntary act.”
It is supposed that the case of Kelly v. The Commonwealth, 1
When we consider that the instrument about which he was reasoning was an iron bar, an instrument which may kill, but yet is not what is termed a deadly weapon — a weapon intended to kill— such as a gun or a pistol, Ave perceive at once his meaning; that is, that more than the mere bloAv with such an instrument, and death ensuing, or the catastrophe, as he terms it, are necessary to be shoAvn. The intention to kill must also exist, and on this point the instrument, he says, is evidence. It is clear, therefore, it was not in his mind for a moment to question, much less deny, the ancient, well-settled doctrine, that the use of a deadly weapon, such as a pistol or gun, a deadly instrument, such as an axe, when voluntarily directed against a mortal part, is evidence from Avhich a jury
None of the assignments of error are supported, and the sentence of the court is therefore affirmed, and the record is ordered to be remitted for the purpose of carrying the sentence into execution.