17 Ala. 587 | Ala. | 1850
Stephen P. Oliver was indicted and tried for the murder of Wm. E. Hammond, in the Circuit Court of Talladega. The jury returned a verdict of guilty of manslaughter in the first degree, upon which the court sentenced him to be imprisoned in the Penitentiary for the term of two years. On the trial several exceptions were taken to the ruling of the court, and the cause is brought here for our revision by a writ of error.
1. The first assignment of error is that the court admitted certain declarations of the deceased1, made a few days before his death, to go to the jury as evidence. Dying declarations, made under the sense of impending death, are admissible as evidence, when the death of the deceased is the subject of the charge, and the circumstances of the death are the subject of the declara- ■ tions. — Greenl. Ev. 156, 158. It is essential to the admissibility of such declarations as evidence, that they were made under the sense of impending death. It is this condition of the declarant’s mind that gives to them a sanction equivalent to an oath, for it is supposed that when one stands on the verge of time, and the hopes of life and this world are gone, that the mind is influenced by the most solemn considerations to speak the truth alone. But the condition of the mind of the declarant is first to be ascertained by the judge before the declarations are to be received. In doing this, the court must look to all the circumstances under which they were made, and if they be sufficient to induce the belief that the deceased made them under-the sense of impending death, the declarations are admissible. McLean v. The State, 16 Ala. 672, and cases there cited. The declarations in the case before us were made three days before the death of the declarant, but from the time he received the
2. The declarations too had reference to the circumstances of the death, that is, they refered to a fact in connection with the charge, to which the deceased would have been competent to testily, had he been living; and as they relate to a circumstance in connection with the homicide, to which the deceased would have been a competent witness, they were property received as evidence.
3. The prisoner offered to prove that on the day he shot the deceased, he went to the town of Talladega, with the view of surrendering himself as a prisoner; that on his way be met with one Turner, and told him that he had shot Hammond and was going to give himself up ; and that after reaching Talladega he gave information to the same purport, when he was advised not to surrender himself until he had procured persons to become his bail. This testimony was objected to by the State, and the objection was sustained. It is certainty incompetent as a general rule, for a party by his own declarations after the act is done to make evidence for himself. — McLean v. The State, 16 Ala. 672; Bradford v. Bush. 10 Ala. 389; State v. Tilley, 3 Ired. 424. Such declarations, however, may become evidence if they form a part of the res gestee, or if they are introduced against the accused; then all he said must go to the jury, as well such portions as are favorable as those portions that are unfavorable to his innocence: Or if the State had first introduced evidence that the deceased had fled, then it would have been competent for the accused to have shown the reason of his flight, as that it was not from a sense of guilt, but from the advice of others, or from any motive that would negative the idea that he fled to avoid the consequences of his crime. But the State in this case did not bring out the declarations; they are no part of
Upon the testimony, that, was introduced the court charged the jury — '1st. That if Hammond had taken the children of Oliver under the circumstances, he would not have been guilty of a felony. 2d. That if there was an apparent necessity for Oliver’s killing Hammond in order to get possession of his children, he then was justified in killing him ; but unless Oliver had reasonable grounds to believe that the necessity was apparent and pressing, that it did not justify Oliver’s killing him, although Oliver might believe it did exist. 3d. That if Olivetshot Hammond assisted, without reasonable ground to believe there was a necessity to kill him in order to prevent his taking his children from him, then the homicide could not be less than manslaughter in the first degree.
The 20th section of the 3d chapter of the penal code enacts, that “every person who shall maliciously, forcibly or fraudulently lead, take or carry away, or decoy or entice away any child under the age of twelve years, with the intent to detain or conceal such child from its parent, guardian, or any other person having the lawful charge of such child, shall, upon conviction, be punished by imprisonment in the Penitentiary for a period not less than five years,” — (Clay’s Dig. 415,) — and by the 8th section of the 8th chapter, all offences punishable by imprisonment in the Penitentiary are made felonies. — lb. 439. The court by the first charge undertook to pronounce that the deceased would not have been guilty of a felony had he carried out his threat and taken the children of Oliver from him by force.
There are cases, as we shall presently see, where the law will itself imply one fact from the existence of another. This, however, would be a legal presumption. But in reference to the question now under consideration, there was no one
If the secoud charge was erroneous, the error was favorable to the prisoner. The law, it is true, will justify the taking ofi life, when it is done from necessity, to prevent the commission) of a felony, or to preserve'one’s own life, or his person from' great bodily harm. — 4 Black. Com. 184; 1 Russ, on Cr. 513; 1 Hale’s P. C. 44-5. So may one strike to protect his wife, his child, or servant, and if the assailant, who intended the felony, he slain, the law considers it .homicide in self-defence. But it is not to be understood that the law will justify the taking of life for the purpose of preventing a mere trespass to property, or an assault upon the person that does not threaten a felony or great bodily harm. — Russ, on Cri. 520 ; Grainger v. The State, 5 Yerger 459. The law has never justified the shedding of human blood to prevent slight .injuries to the person or the property of others. Nor can we suppose that our predecessors ever intended to hold a different rule, or to depart from those principles, which bave received the sanction of wisdom and stood the test of time. In the case of Johnson v. The State, 12 Ala. 841, the court merely affirmed the general rule that every one had the right to defend his person and property against the unlawful violence of another; but we apprehend that if the accused had' been indicted in that case for an assault, instead of resisting process, he would baye been convicted. If, however, it was intended by that decision to hold that life may he. taken to prevent a mere trespass to property, we should without hesitation overrule it. To justify the taking of life there must, be an imperious necessity to prevent the commission of a felony or great bodily harm. Without this necessity, the law, although under some circumstances it will mitigate the crime to manslaughter, cannot hold the party slaying altogether justified.
But the latter part of the second charge informed the jury that unless the prisoner had reasonable ground to believe that the necessity was pressing, then he was not justified. It is true that the necessity which exculpates the accused from guilt need not be actual. If the circumstances be such as to induce a reasonable belief that such necessity exists, the law will acquit the slayer of all guilt; but if there is no reasonable ground for believing that there is such a necessity, then the law cannot acquit him. — Wharton’s Crim. Law, 210; 1 East. 272; State v. Scott, 4 Ired. 415. It has been said that if a man kill another through fear, alarm or cowardice, under the belief that great bodily injury was intended him, it is neither murder nor manslaughter, although at the time of the killing he was in no danger of injury. 5 Yerg. 459. We think it wholly immaterial to inquire, in laying down the principle of law, whether the party slaying was in a state of fear or alarm — whether he was a man of firmness of character or of a weak or cowardly disposition. The question is whether the circumstances were such as to produce a reasonable belief upon his mind of a pressing necessity to take the life of the assailant. If they were not, he cannot be justified by law. It may be said that the belief of imminent danger will exist in the minds of some from circumstanc.es that would produce no idea or beliéf of danger in the mind of another. This, however, will not alter the principle of la»w applicable to both. The law requires that the ciroúínstances should be such as to create a reasonable belief of impending necessity. These circumstances are^fe be ascertained by the jury, and they may consider the condition as well of the party killing as that of the party slain ; and if they find the circumstances such as to create a reasonable belief in the mind of the accused that his danger was imminent, then the law would say that be might strike in his own defence. In no point of view has the prisoner been injured by this charge.
The counsel for the prisoner contends that the third instruc-' tion is erroneous for two reasons; first, that it precluded the jury from considering, whether the accused was not guilty of
The cause, however, must be reversed and remanded for another trial, for the error we have before pointed out.