66 Ind. 185 | Ind. | 1879
The appellant was indicted, being impleaded with Charles Patterson, William Adams and John Bryant, for the njurder in the first degree of Anthony White.
Adams was tried separately and found guilty of manslaughter. Adams v. The State, 65 Ind. 565.
The appellant also pleaded separately, was tried and convicted of murder in the second degree. He appeals to this court, and presents two questions for our consideration.
The evidence in the case tends to prove that the appellant and the deceased, previously to, but upon the same day of, the fatal conflict, had a difficulty, which led to a quarrel, about some drinks which .the deceased had ordered for them, and did not pay foi\ Afterwards the parties came together, and the appellant and others set upon the deceased' to beat and take from him a pistol which he had refused to give up. The deceased endeavored to escape from the fight, but could not get away. During the conflict the pistol was taken from the deceased and fired oft’, but whether by accident or with the purpose of killing the deceased does not clearly appear. The bul
The above evidence is sufficient-to show the applicability of the questions presented by the record.
At the trial, evidence was offered on behalf of the appellant to prove that the deceased, upon the day he was killed, became very much intoxicated, was riding around the country on horseback in that condition, endeavoring to .pick a quarrel with whomsoever he met; that while on foot he was taken by the arms by two persons and conducted along the road a distance of fifty yards, and induced to mount his'horse ; that he rode several miles to a public meeting and picnic, where he dismounted and mingled with the crowd, around a hand of music, and was there performing, leaping and attempting to dance ; that in the afternoon he was still greatly intoxicated. Which evidence was offered to the jury, to affect the question as to the manner in which said deceased received the wounds other than that supposed to be the pistol shot.’
This evidence was rejected by the court; but the court offered to admit it, if the defendant would declare that he sought or expected to prove thereby, or claimed, that any of the injuries on the person of the deceased were occasioned thereby, or received therein, or might have been inflicted thereby, which offer the defendant refused, and excepted to the ruling of the court.
This evidence, so offered, was too remote to authorize any fair inference by the jury that the wounds mentioned were received as accidents of the drunken behavior of the deceased; and, as the appellant had no more evidence to offer tending to show, that the wounds were received in that manner, it was properly rejected. While we are clearly
After the close of the evidence in the case, the court gave the following instruction to the jury :
“ 18. When two persons enter upon a combat by mutual agreement, neither intending to kill the other, and one of them unintentionally slays the other by the force he uses therein, or, out of the hot blood engendered by such combat, and without malice, intentionally slays the other by the force he uses therein, the grade of such homicide is hut that of manslaughter. But if the person who does the killing entertained malice towards his victim, and out of such malice slew him, his crime would he murder, notwithstanding his blood was heated by combat.
“ Where one or more persons, not being moved by legal provocation so to do, assail another for the purpose of giving him a beating and wounding, and the person thus assaulted does nothing except ward off the attack made, and refuses to enter into combat with his assailants, and in such attack is intentionally and unlawfully slain by his assailants, the one who thus slays him is guilty of murder, notwithstanding his blood may have become so heated as to carry him beyond his original purpose.
“ And so, in this case, if you find that James Patterson and others made an unlawful assault upon Anthony White, the deceased, not in hot blood arising out of sufficient provocation, with the intention of beating and wounding said White but not of killing him, and find that said White refused to enter into combat with them, and did nothing but ward off their assault, and find that during said attack the defendant James Patterson’s blood became heated, and that, impelled by such hot blood, he drew a weapon, or seized one, and intentionally shot and' killed said White,*189 said defendant would be guilty of murder in tbe second degree.”
This instruction, although given as one, contains three distinct propositions, which we have divided into paragraphs for convenience in its examination. The question presented for our consideration is, whether the fact3 supposed as the basis of the instruction constitute murder, either in the first or second degree.
Murder in the first degree is defined by our statute as follows:
“ Sec. 2. If any person of sound mind shall purposely and with premeditated malice, or in the perpetration, or attempt to' perpetrate any rape, arson, robbery or burglary, or by administering poison, or causing the same to be done, kill any human being, such person shall be deemed guilty of murder in the first degree, and upon conviction thereof shall suffer death.” 2 R. S. 1876, p. 423.
Murder in the second degree is defined as follows :
“ Sec. 7. If any person shall purposely and maliciously, but without premeditation, kill any human being, every such person shall be deemed guilty of murder in the second degree, and on conviction thereof, shall be imprisoned in the state-prison during life.” 2 R. S. 1876, p. 426.
It is plain, from the above definitions, that murder in the first degree can not be committed in a ease like the present, arising out of combat, unless the killing was done “ purposely and with premeditated malice ; ” and that murder in the second degree can not be committed in any case unless the killing was done “ purposely and maliciously.”
The first proposition of the charge instructs the jury, that if the killing was intentionally done, in hot. blood engendered by a combat, without malice, it is no more than manslaughter. This is correct. But, in the succeeding sentence, the jury are instructed, that, “ if the person
The second paragraph of the instruction tells the jury, that, if the slaying in combat was “ intentionally and unlawfully” done, the slayer “ is guilty of murder, notwithstanding his blood may have become so heated as to carry him beyond his original purpose.” This instruction, as it leaves out the elements of premeditation and malice in the offence, can not amount to murder either in the first or second degree. The facts supposed amount to no more than manslaughter.
In the third paragraph of the instruction, essentially the same facts are supposed as those stated in the second, by way of hypothesis; indeed, tlie instruction, is essentially tlie same as the second, except that the names are mentioned, the killing supposed to be done by a weapon, and the murder restricted to the second degree.
For these reasons we think the instruction throughout is erroneous. Ro killing in a combat which engenders hot blood, however unlawful, can be murder even in the second degree, unless the elements of purpose and malice concur in the act. Such a killing may amount to manslaughter, but it can not be mui’der in either degree. 1 Bishop Crim. Law, secs. 427, 428, 429; 1 Archb. Crim. Pr. & Pl. 740; Ex Parte Moore, 30 Ind. 197; Murphy v. The State, 31 Ind. 511; Miller v. The State, 37 Ind. 432; Allison v. The State, 42 Ind. 354; Field v. The State, 50 Ind. 15; Wall v. The State, 51 Ind. 453; Bechtelheimer v. The State, 54 Ind. 128.