51 Cal. 495 | Cal. | 1876
The prisoner having been convicted in the court below of the crime of murder in the first degree, in the felonious killing of Edgar Gr. May, and adjudged to suffer death, brings this appeal from the judgment, and from an order denying his motion for new trial:
1. We are unable to discover any error in the action of court below denying the motion of the prisoner to change the place of trial of the case. Though the point is made in form, no argument in its support has been submitted, and it is understood to have been abandoned.
2. In impaneling the trial jury, T. V. Johnson, who had been returned upon the venire, having stated that he “did not like to have anything to do with a case where death was at stake,” was thereupon challenged by the District Attorney for implied bias. The challenge was sustained by the
3. At the trial the court below charged the jury as follows: “That if the defendant, knowing the deceased to be unarmed, provoked a quarrel with deceased and voluntarily engaged in a combat with him, having, himself, upon his person, and concealed, a deadly weapon, proposing to use the same on the deceased, and did in $uch combat, and not in self-defense, use such weapon, and slay the deceased therewith, such killing is murder. ”
To the giving of this instruction the prisoner reserved an exception, and now claims that it involves an error, entitling him to a reversal of the judgment.
In considering the propriety of this instruction it should be borne in mind that, under the provisions of the statute now in force in this State, the jury not only, as formerly, by their verdict, ascertain the guilt or innocence of the prisoner, but in case they find him guilty of the crime of murder in the first degree, also determine whether he shall suffer the extreme penalty of the law or imprisonment in the penitentiary. (People v. Welch, 49 Cal. 174.)
In determining between these penalties juries should be, and doubtless are, influenced by a consideration of the degree of atrocity with which the particular murder has been attended. It is not the purpose of the "statute that the extreme penalty should absolutely be imposed in all cases of murder, even in the first degree, but only in certain cases
It was said here in People v. Sanchez (24 Cal., 28), as follows: “No instruction should be given to a jury which is not predicated upon some theory logically deducible from at least some portion of the testimony. Such instructions are only calculated to confuse and mislead the jury, and ought not to be given.” Again, in People v. Byrnes (30 Id., 207): “Instructions are always to be given with reference to the facts proved before the jury.” Obviously, if a hypothetical instruction be given to a jury, the hypothesis assumed as its basis should be one which finds some support in the evidence adduced at the trial, for if the hypothesis be one entirely beyond and without the evidence, and wholly unsupported by it, the tendency of the instruction would be to mislead the jury.
The instruction just recited necessarily rests upon two inculpatory hypotheses at the outset:
1. That the deceased was, in point of fact, not armed.
2. That the prisoner knew this as a fact.
It is to be observed that no evidence upon either of these points was offered by either party at the trial. No witness was examined nor circumstance shown in evidence for the purpose of establishing the condition of the deceased in that respect or the prisoner’s knowledge of that condition when the homicide occurred.
In this state of the proof, the instruction under consideration must have proceeded not only upon the negative presumption that the deceased was unarmed, because not affirmatively shown to have been armed; but also the affirmative presumption that the prisoner knew the fact, because not negatively shown to have had no knowledge of it. Without stopping nowxto inquire whether under the rules applicable to criminal trials a presumption of fact arises that a particular person was unarmed, because the evidence fails to establish the contrary, we think it must be admitted that guilty knowledge upon the part of a prisoner on trial cannot be assumed to exist, but must be affirmatively shown by direct
Judgment and order denying a new trial reversed and cause remanded for a new trial.