81 Va. 1 | Va. | 1884
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a writ of error to a judgment of the circuit court of Goochland county, rendered at its April term, 1884, overruling the motion of plaintiff in error for a new trial, and sentencing
On February 3d, 1882, Alexander L. Parrish, the plaintiff in error, and one A. J. Mitchell, the deceased, entered into a written contract, by which the said Parrish employed the said Mitchell to cultivate and secure crops on his farm in said county, during the current year, and to pay him in a part— one-half—of the crops, instead of money, for his labor and services. It was stipulated in said agreement that Parrish should furnish Mitchell with corn and other specified necessaries for the support of himself and his family while he should be engaged.in his said service, and should pay himself therefor out of the part of the crops which would be going to said Mitchell. Parrish was also to pay himself out of Mitchell’s said share for certain expenditures in employing other laborers, and in supplying and repairing tools, &c. The said Mitchell was very poor, and had a wife and five children, all young, and was utterly unable to iwocure those necessaries in any other way. Indeed, the plaintiff in error had, before the date of the said contract, already furnished him with some supplies tO' live on. Plaintiff in error, Parrish, kept an accurate itemized account of everything furnished to Mitchell by him; and’when the crops, the results of Michell’s labor, were made and being garnered in the fall, while Mitchell was shucking and housing the corn, in October or November, Parrish called Mitchell’s attention to the amount of his account—$85.06, which Mitchell vehemently disputed, and protested that he would not pay it, or suffer Parrish to pay himself out of his share of the crops, as the contract provided it should be paid.
The whole crop of corn amounted to only about thirty-one
The evidence being certified by the court below, according to the rule of this court we will consider only the evidence adduced by the Commonwealth and the account set forth in the record, which is documentary, and disregard all the oral evidence offered on behalf of the plaintiff in error, which is in conliict with the evidence for the Commonwealth.
The contract of February 3d, 1882, between Mitchell and Parrish settles the status of Mitchell to have been that of a mere employe or cropper. Parrish had furnished Mitchell with a house and lot, free of charge, on a different place from that on which Mitchell cropped for Parrish, and nearly a mile away. Mitchell -was entitled to nothing until Parrish had been fully reimbursed, out of Mitchell’s share of the crops, for whatever Mitchell might owe to him for supplies, and otherwise. He was therefore no tenant. Parrish was to pay him for his services, and the arrangement was only a mode of paying for Mitchell’s labor. 2 Minor’s Inst. 159. There had been no
Mitchell could not have any rights in the crops till a division, and no right to be on the premises except as the employe of Parrish; and Parrish had the same right to prevent the taking of his corn by one Avho, though in his employ, endeavored to deprive him of it by violence, and putting him in fear that he would have had to ■ prevent any other employe from forcibly taking money from his person, or his safe, upon a false claim that he owed him money-wages.
It was Mitchell’s duty to strip the tobacco and prepare it for market, and for this purpose he had the key of the tobacco house; yet, in order to negative, in the most emphatic manner, any claim of Mitchell to take the corn, or any part of it, out of the house, Parrish, in his presence, and-without any remonstrance upon Mitchell’s part, securely nailed up the door of the tobacco house. With a consciousness that he had no claim against Parrish which he could establish before the legal tribunals of the country appointed to settle all such matters, Mitchell deliberately determined to invade Parrish’s premises in the darkness of the night, and by force and violence, and Avith a high hand, to plunder him of his property. And when Nuckols, after he had warned Parrish of Mitchell’s purpose and approach, met Mitchell and told him that Parrish would resist his going into the tobacco house, he demonstrated his determined recklessness by declaring that he would go into the house that night, and get the corn, or die.
Parrish, surprised in the night, remote from the help of neigh
And all question as to the employe, in cases of contract similar to that between Mitchell and Parrish, being allowed to interpose a plea of a “ claim of right,” as an immunity to criminal conduct, like Mitchell’s, is expressly negatived by the
We come now to consider the extent to which appellant was justified in going to defend his person and property against the high-handed and violent outrage which Mitchell was endeavoring to perpetrate.
The tobacco house was in Parrish’s curtilage, and it had therefore all the privileges and the protection of the capital or dwelling-house. Blackstone’s Com. 225; Davis’ Crim. Law, 150.
Wherever the party shall be forcibly attacked, in person or property, it is lawful to repel force by force, and the breach of the peace which happens is chargeable upon him only who began the affray. For the law in this case respects human passions, which no prudential motives are for the most part strong enough to restrain; considering, moreover, that the future process of the courts is by no means an adequate remedy for injuries accompanied by force, since it is impossible to say to what wanton lengths of rapine or cruelty outrages of this sort might be carried, unless it were permitted a man immediately to oppose one violence with another. 4 Minor’s Inst., page 5, and cases there cited. Sir Matthew Hale says : The right of self-defence in these cases is founded in the law of nature, and is not, nor can be superseded by the law of society. The true principle upon which rests our right of defending either our persons or our goods is this: the law of nature does not oblige us to give them up when any one has a mind to hurt them or
“It is plain from the foundation of this right that it must be an indefinite one, or that we are not debarred from proceeding to extremities, in the defence of our goods, where the obstinate injustice of such as would take them from us makes this behavior necessary.” Idem, p. 195-6.
“If any person attempts a robbery or murder of another, or attempts to break open a house in the night time, and shall be killed in such attempt the slayer shall be acquitted and discharged.” 4 Black. 180; and this is the law here. On page 224 of 4th vol. Blackstone, says: “We have seen in the case of justifiable homicide how much more heinous all laws make an attack by night rather than by day, allowing the party attacked by night to kill the assailant mth impunity.”
Justifiable homicide “ takes place when a man, in defence of his person, habitation or property, kills another who manifestly
In the leading case of People v. Pond, already referred to, and stated in full in Horrigan and Thompson’s cases of self-defence, 814, the court said the rules which make it excusable or justifiable to destroy life under some circumstances, are really meant to ensure its general protection. “They are designed to prevent reckless and wicked men from assailing peaceable members -of society by exposing them to the danger of fatal resistance at the hands of those whom they wantonly attack, and put in peril or fear of great injury or death; and such rules, in order to be of any value, must be, in some reasonable degree, accommodated to human character and necessity. They should not be allowed to entrap or mislead those whose misfortunes compel a resort to them.”
In the case at bar, the Commonwealth introduced the admissions or statements of Parrish to prove the killing; and, according to all the authorities, “if a prosecutor uses the declaration
'“The guilt of the prisoner must depend upon the circumstances as they appear to him.” Parke B. in R. v. Thurston, 1 Den. C. C. 387. This doctrine was approved in the cases reported in H. and T. of Neely’s Case, 101; Patten’s Case, 826; Pond’s Case, 814; Hurd’s Case, 840; Harris’ Case, 276;
The court erred in excluding the evidence of character, as set out in the first and third bills of exception. General character is always in issue in a criminal case; and evidence thereof is always admissible. Roscoe’s Crim. Ev. 100 ; Phillips on Ev. 762. The judgment of the circuit court must be reversed and the case be remanded for a new trial.
Lewis, P. and Hinton, J., dissented.
Judgment reversed.