1 Wash. Terr. 360 | Wash. Terr. | 1872
Opinion by
Indictment for murder in tbe first degree. From tbe first Judicial District, Walla Walla county.
Wm. McAllister, plaintiff in error, was indicted at tbe May term, A. D., 1872,' of tbe district court of tbe first Judicial District, boldiBg terms at tbe city of Walla Walla for tbe counties of Walla Walla and Whitman, of murder in tbe first degree, and was found guilty of murder in tbe second degree, and sentenced by tbe court to imprisonment in tbe penitentiary for seventeen years, and be brings up tbe case bere by writ of error to obtain a reversal of said judgment, and obtain a new trial upon tbe errors alleged to bave been committed by tbe district court, and assigned in tbe precipe.
Of these alleged errors in their order:
Tbe first error assigned is tbe overruling by tbe court of defendant’s motion for a change of venue. Tbe ground of tbe motion was tbe alleged prejudice of tbe people of Walla Walla county, or district, against him to such an extent as to prevent a fair and impartial trial of bis case. Tbe motion was supported by several affidavits — -tbe strongest of which were made by defendant and some of bis counsel. A change of venue
The Judge must-be fully satisfied of the truth of the allegations of prejudice and its prevailing extent before he is warranted in delaying the trial, or subjecting the proper county to the additional expense by granting the same. The law presumes that the court is sufficiently willing to listen favorably to such motions and lodges with it discretionary power which is not reviewable by this court. Error cannot be assigned on such an exercise of judicial discretion.
But it is alleged that the court ought to have excluded the jurors from Walla Walla county.
Although there may be some doubt as to the true meaning of Section 231, page 250, statutes 1869, taken in connection with the preceding sections, yet we are all of the opinion that the better construction would require the exclusion of the jurors from a particular county, where the sub-district is composed of more than one county when the proper motion and affidavit is made by the defendant. But while 'we are of the opinion that the above is the safer and better construction, we can find nothing in this record to show that a single juror was taken from Walla Walla county. It is true that defendant in his motion for a new trial says that certain jurors were taken from Walla Walla county, but the court overruled the motion. It might have been overruled because it was untrue in fact. Whether the ruling was based on matter of law or matter of fact so far as this point is concerned, it is immaterial, for we are all of the opinion that the point cannot be raised in this way.
Sections 221 and 222, pages 53 and 51, of the code of 1869, provide for the trial of a challenge made to an individual juror. If a juror was from Walla Walla county, he could have been challenged for cause and the fact of his residence developed either by his examination or the testimony of other witnesses. The Judge as trier makes a minute of the challenge and of the testimony, and his notes and the substance of the testimony can
There is in this record a motion to exclude certain jurors because the motion says they were from Walla Walla county. An allegation of this kind made in an unverified motion is not conclusive upon the court. What greater effect can it have than a challenge unsustained by proof? But admitting, for the sake of argument, that the mere statement in the motion is sufficient, and the court erred in overruling the motion, how could this ruling have injured the defendant, unless it was followed by the admission of jurors from that county ? We find no error in the record on this point.
The second assignment of error is the refusal of the court to give the following instructions, asked by the defendant:
“If the jury believe from the evidence, that the defendant was attempting to kill Walker, and that Ward, the deceased, interfered to prevent the defendant from killing Walker, but that Ward gave no reasonable notice to the defendant that he interfered for the purpose of preventing such killing and to keep the peace, and not to interfere in the quarrel, then the jury cannot find the defendant guilty of murder in the first degree.”
A brief statement of a portion of the evidence in the record is necessary, not only to a full understanding of this instruction asked, but of other points raised and the refusal of the court to give the instruction.
There had been some angry words in the saloon, which resulted in Walker striking defendant with a beer mug on the
It is the duty of every good citizen to interfere to prevent the commission of any felony attempted to be committed in his presence. This duty is imposed by law. Its exercise is not necessarily dependent upon the giving of “reasonable notice” of his intent so to do. The failure or neglect to give such notice does not of itself reduce the homicide from murder in the first degree to murder in the second degree, because such neglect, which is personal to the deceased, does not exclude the existence of deliberate and premeditated malice upon the part of the slayer, for he may improve the occasion to accomplish his long meditated design. Whether a killing under such circumstances is murder in the first degree or murder in the second degree must be determined from all the facts attending the killing, and not by the fact whether reasonable notice was given or not. Such notice is not the line which separates one from another. Whether notice was given or not being a part of the res gestee is of course admissible in evidence.
We find no error in the refusal of the above quoted instruction.
The third error assigned is the refusal of the court to give the following instruction:
“If two persons are engaged in a fight, and a third person assaults one of the parties, and the party assaulted thereupon kills the assaulting party, then such killing is no more than manslaughter.”
We are all of the opinion that this instruction was properly refused.
Now it cannot be claimed, nor is it true that the killing in this case was involuntary manslaughter. Then, if manslaughter at all, it must have been voluntary manslaughter.
The court was asked to charge that a mere assault would make the killing manslaughter. There is no such rule of law. All the authorities agree that this “sudden heat” must spring from an adequate cause; the provocation, in other words, must be great; it must be of a character to stir the blood, and to arouse for the time being uncontrollable passion. It must not only be adapted to accomplish the purpose, but it must actually do it before the “sudden heat” can be said to exist. Now there is nothing in the great majority of assaults to produce this maddening result.
Besides the existence of an assault does not necessarily exclude the existence of malice, and if malice existed, the killing could not be manslaughter.
We find no error is this refusal.
Again, there was evidence introduced on the trial tending to show that a short time previous to the shooting at Walker, as we have shown in the testimony given above, that Walker had struck defendant a blow with a beer mug on the forehead. Upon this state of the evidence, the court gave the following instruction, the giving of which is assigned as error.
' “It is claimed by the defendant that at the time of the alleged shooting, by reason of a wound received upon his head, he was deprived of his reasoning faculties, and was not conscious of what he was doing, and did not know that he was committing a crime.
“Tbis is a matter of defence that must be substantially proved by the defendant as an independent fact, and the burden is on the defendant to prove it.
' “ And if in the case before you the killing be admitted, or clearly proved, then the defendant in order to excuse the same by reason of his being deprived of his reason at the time of said act, must satisfy you by the evidence of such fact, to wit: That at the time of the commission of said act, he was deprived of his reasoning faculties in so far as to be unconscious that he was committing a crime.”
The rule of law, as to the burden of proof in criminal cases we all agree, is this: The burden is on the Territory to make out every material allegation in the indictment beyond all reasonable doubt. The learned Judge who tried the cause in the District Court repeatedly, in the instructions given on his own motion, and in those asked on the part of the defendant, told the jury that such was the rule of law. The force and effect of this rule cannot be destroyed by any action of the prosecuting officer so far as the facts constituting the res gestee are concerned. Part of the facts included in the res gestee may be developed by the Territory, and part by the defense, but still the rule is the same. The defendant is entitled to the instruction that the jury must be satisfied of his guilt beyond all reasonable doubt on all the facts so put in evidence, and so the jury were told, except as shown above. And we are satisfied that so far as the facts attending the killing are concerned- — at least so far as those facts are included in the res gestae, that the burden of proof never shifts. This is as true of the defense of insanity under the limitations stated above, as of any other defense. But if insanity is set up as a separate and distinct defense, and its proof does not consist of the facts attending the killing, then the proof must be made out by the defendant, the legal presumption of sanity being sufficient for the indictment in the absence of all evidence to the contrary. Commonwealth vs. James McGee, 1 Gray, 61; 1 Greenleaf on Ev., Sec. 81 b. and 81 c.; Oyletine vs. State, 28 Alabama, 673; Tweedy vs. State, 5 Iowa, 435; Commonwealth vs. Hawkins, 3 Gray, 463. Dissenting opinion of Wilde, Judge, in case Comn. vs. York, 9 Met., 425.
But we are all of the opinion that there was no evidence calling for a statement of the law upon that subject, and that the instruction gave the defendant the benefit of a defense to support which there was no evidence given. A mere blow, whether upon the head or any other part of the person, nothing appearing to show its severity or any other physical consequence from it, is not evidence from which insanity may be inferred. The world has had quite enough of that kind of insanity which commences just as the sight of the slayer ranging along the barrel of a pistol, marles a mortal spot on the body of the victim and ends as soon as the bullet has sped on its fatal mission.
We find no error prejudicial to the rights of the defendant in this instruction.
The last error insisted upon here by learned counsel for the defendant, is that the indictment does not show that twelve grand jurors concurred in finding it. This court has already decided at this term in the case of Watts vs. The Territory, that the finding, endorsement, and presentation, and filing of the indictment in the manner prescribed by law is sufficient evidence of that fact.
There are one or two other errors assigned in the precipe but they seemed to be abandoned on the argument here. We find no errors in the record, and the judgment must be affirmed with costs, and it is so ordered.