85 Cal. 231 | Cal. | 1890
The defendant was charged with murder and convicted of manslaughter. In support of his appeal, he assigns error upon various rulings of the court in the admission of testimony, and in the giving and refusing of instructions to the jury.
To a proper understanding of these exceptions a brief statement of the case is necessary.
The defendant at the date of the homicide was a constable. The deceased, John Collins, and one Clarke had been engaged in a quarrel and fight, in which Collins was worsted. Collins left the saloon where the fight occurred, went to his home, armed himself with a pistol,
The defendant testified that his attention was attracted by the noise in the saloon; that he saw Collins go to his house, and return to the saloon with his pistol, and that he heard the shot; that he took his own pistol and hurried to the saloon, under the impression that Collins had shot some one, and for the purpose of arresting him. In the saloon he found Clarke, Collins, and others, who, after some talk, took a drink together, whereupon Collins started to leave. Defendant followed him outside, took hold of him, and told him he was his prisoner.
There is a conflict of evidence as to what ensued. According to the testimony of the prosecutioxx, the defendant shot Collins without excuse or provocation. But the defendant introduced evidence which, if true, showed that Collins was a quarrelsome and dangerous man when driixkixrg; that he had been drinking oxx this occasion; that on previous occasions he, defendant, had been compelled to threaten Collins with arrest for disturbing the peace; that Collins had declared he never should arrest him alive, and had made other threats which had been communicated to defendant. And the defendant testified that he did not know that Collins had been disarmed, but believed that he still had the pistol with -which he had just assaulted Clarke, and would use it if he had the opportunity. To quote his own wox’ds: “His right hand, when I shot, was in a position where he could have drawn his pistol. I thought, at the time of firing, that if I did not kill Collins or disable hixn he would kill me. I had no grudge against him.”
According to the testimony for the defense, the manner, bearing, and words of Collixxs, at the time defendant attempted to arrest him, were defiant and threatening,
This being the case, it is 'claimed that the court erred in instructing the jury that “any person making an arrest may take from the person arrested all offensive weapons which he may have about his person.”
The argument in support of this assignment of error is, that it must have produced the impression upon the minds of the jury that the failure of defendant to search Collins for arms was a neglect of duty, and that an inference of guilt must be drawn therefrom.
We do not think that it couhbhave been so understood, and we can see that the right of defendant to search and disarm the deceased when he first encountered him in the saloon had its bearing upon a very material question in the case. There was a conflict of evidence as to whether defendant knew that Collins had been disarmed, and the jury were entitled to consider the failure to search him when defendant had the right and opportunity to do so, as bearing upon the probability of his statement that he had not been informed that Collins’s pistol had been taken away.
It is next claimed that the court erred in giving the instruction numbered 12.
In this instruction the jury are told that if certain things are proyed beyond a reasonable doubt they should find the defendant guilty. Among other facts enumerated in the instruction is this: That the defendant, at the time of the homicide, was constable, and in the exercise of his official duty.
It is contended that this fact was matter of defense, and that the court virtually instructed the jury that it must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
But certainly the instruction does not say so, nor does
There was no error in the instructions of the court laying down the law of self-defense. The whole theory of the defense was, that the killing was necessary, not for the purpose of making the arrest, but to prevent Collins from killing the defendant. The defendant himself confines his justification to that ground. And even if he had also made a serious claim that the killing was necessary in order to effect the arrest, it would have been proper and necessary to give the law of self-defense complete, and in doing so, to use the expression complained of, viz., that the defendant “ must have acted under the influence of such fears alone,” confining its application, of course, to this ground of defense. And we think the collocation of the instructions in this case was such, especially in view of the defendant’s testimony, that the jury could not have failed.to apply the expression complained of exclusively to the plea of self-defense.
It is true, the court refused to give one instruction asked by defendant, to the effect that a homicide is justifiable when necessarily committed in a lawful attempt to arrest a person who has committed a felony, and this might have prejudiced the defendant but„for the fact that another instruction, also drawn by his counsel, in slightly different terms, but in substance the same, had already been given. The instruction so given was in the following terms, and we think covers the whole ground: —
“ The court charges the jury that an officer in making an arrest has the right to use all the force which, from the surrounding circumstances, seems to him, as a rea
The court did not err in refusing to instruct the jury that it, was immaterial whether Collins was armed or not, if defendant himself believed he was armed. The defendant's belief that Collins was armed would not justify him in acting upon such assumption, unless the circumstances were such as reasonably to warrant the belief. With this necessary qualification, the instruction was substantially included in the charge of the court. ¡Nor did the court err in admitting evidence as to the quarrel and fight between Clarke and Collins. This had a necessary bearing upon the question whether Collins had committed a felony, and whether defendant had a right to arrest him without a warrant, and to kill him if necessary to effect his arrest. The effect of the testimony could only have been favorable to the defendant.
The testimony of the justice of the peace that he had issued no warrant for the arrest of Collins was perhaps immaterial, but its admission cannot have been at all prejudicial to the defendant.
But the testimony which was admitted over the objection of defendant, for the purpose of showing that Collins and Clarke had made up their quarrel and became reconciled before defendant attempted to make the arrest was immaterial; and since the only use that could be made of it was to argue that no arrest was necessary, it must have been prejudicial.
If Collins had committed a felony, it was the duty of the defendant to arrest him, no matter how complete the reconciliation between him and the man he had assaulted. It was a vital point to the defense to show
In this instance the error might perhaps have been cured if the court had given the instruction asked by the defendant to the effect that it is the duty of an officer to arrest a person who has committed a felony, even though the parties concerned may have attempted to settle it. But this instruction was refused.
It was also error to refuse the instruction that if the testimony of Boyle and Clarke was true, Collins had committed a felony.
According to their testimony, he had undoubtedly committed felony, and if so, it was the undoubted duty of defendant to arrest him, and to use sufficient force for that purpose. This, as we have said, was a vital point in the defense, and the defendant was entitled to have the law affecting it given to the jury.
For the error of the court in refusing these instructions, the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
It is accordingly so ordered.
McFarland, J., and Sharpstein, J., concurred.