51 Mich. 199 | Mich. | 1883
Respondent, having been convicted of murder, was sentenced to twenty years’ imprisonment, and brings error. The Attorney General, on careful consideration of the case, has concluded that he cannot uphold the convic.tion. "We are of the same opinion. But inasmuch as we are to consider whether the prisoner should be retained for further trial or discharged, we are compelled to deal with it far enough to determine that question.
Respondent is charged with murdering one Martin Yan
Without going over all the facts an outline of the principal matters will be enough to explain our legal views. Some burglaries having been recently committed at Williamston, in Ingham county, where respondent had been doing business, one Carr, who was a constable of Ingham county, undertook, with Yan Etter’s co-operation, to see what they ■could discover on the subject. They had no indications or suspicions, well or ill-founded, pointing towards any person as the criminal. They procured revolvers and stationed themselves by a bridge nearEowlerville in Livingston county, with the purpose of compelling passers-by to submit to a search, expecting thereby to get at indications of guilt in somebody. The person who killed Yan Etter, and who is claimed to have been respondent, having, while passing along the highway, reached the bridge, was stopped, against his remonstrances, by these parties, and they endeavored to compel him to accompany them to Eowlerville — as Carr clalms —to be searched. He warned them off once or twice if not ■oftener, and charged them with designing to rob him. Carr •claims to have informed him of the burglaries and to have -also told him that he was showing guilt in the matter. Having kept a few paces in advance of them, — they following him -with weapons, and Yan Etter’s pistol, if not Carr’s, being cocked, — he attempted to evade them by running off .•southward across the ditch, and when about twenty feet off -he whirled round and fired and shot Yan Etter through the
In order to make the act of the assailant murder, the prosecution undertook to show that he was resisting or evading a lawful arrest, and to do so they were allowed to prove the-burglaries, and the subsecpuent action of Carr and his associate as based on probable cause. At least, no other reason can very well be suggested for allowing such proof.
Carr, when acting out of his own county, was not vested with official character. But no one, whether private person or officer, has any right to make an arrest without warrant in the absence of actual belief, based on actual facts creating probable cause of guilt. Suspicion without canse can never be an excuse for such action. The two must both-exist, and be reasonably well founded. We need not now go further,— although we may perhaps say that no one can be justified in threatening or taking life in attempting an arrest on suspicion, without incurring serious responsibilities. And where the life of an actual felon is taken by one who does not know or believe his guilt, such slaying is murder. A private citizen has less immunity than an officer. But we need not discuss their respective rights or liabilities, because neither Carr nor Yan Etter were proceeding on any honest belief or well-founded suspicion. Except in the lack of specific intention to rob they in no way differed from any highway wrong-doers, and their appearance would justify any one in believing them to be dangerous criminals. Any serious injury done by them could hardly fail to be a felony.
The proof of the 'Williamston burglaries was therefore-improper, because defendant was not on trial for them, and because his attempted arrest was not warranted by any honest and well-founded supposition of his complicity in them..
From the facts as detailed by Carr himself we are strongly inclined to think he made out a case of justifiable homicide. But whether this was absolutely shown or not,, the case should have been put to the jury on that hypothesis,, and if they thought that Yan Etter was killed by a person
This, however, is now immaterial, because even if the homicide was voluntary, there can be no doubt that, having been provoked by unlawful violence and the display of deadly weapons to compel submission to a wrongful arrest, the killing could not be more than manslaughter; and it-should have been so held.
The conviction was erroneous, and the judgment must be-vacated. And inasmuch as, if respondent had been indicted' for manslaughter, the prosecution would have been outlawed,, he should not be subjected to another trial but should be discharged. Inasmuch as the Attorney General has appeared in this case, we can pay no attention to suggestions from other parties, and as we have no doubt the papers before us-are substantially correct, it would not be just to postpone the decision.