1 Park. Cr. 291 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1851
By the Court,
We think the learned justice who presided at the Oyer and Terminer erred in charging the jury that if they believed “ that Kane came to his death by a blow from the stone thrown against him, the case was capable of being regarded as a case of murder under the 2d subdivision of the section of the statute defining murder.” He was probably led into the mistake by the remarks of the
It is quite obvious that the revisers in the first chapter relating to “ crimes and their punishment,” intended to present a perfect system in which every grade of homicide should be distinctly and accurately classed. They state in their notes that, “ It has been supposed that there was nothing so much wanted in the criminal law, as a settled line of distinction between murder and manslaughter which are now so nearly connected, and run into each other so much, that courts and juries often mistake, and a lamentable uncertainty prevails, which operates as well to screen the guilty as to expose the innocent.” This evil they have remedied hy a careful and judicious classification, so complete and perfect, that upon an ascertained state of facts, every homicide can be reduced to its appropriate degrees, and while it falls clearly within one class can not be brought within any other. The authors of this statute, unlike some modern law givers, understood the precise force and effect of the language used; and as a skillful surveyor makes his work meet so that his map covers the whole ground, neither more nor less, so they have included in their system every species of homicide known to the law, each degree standing by itself and occupying its own peculiar ground.
This principle, we apprehend, has not always been kept in view, even by our courts, in giving construction to some of the sections. It seems to have been supposed in some of the cases that, upon a certain state of facts, a case might fall indiffer
1. When perpetrated from a premeditated design to effect the death of the person killed or of any human being;
2. When perpetrated by any act imminently dangerous to others, and evincing a depraved mind, regardless of human life, although without any premeditated design to effect the death of any particular individual;
3. When perpetrated without any design to effect death by a person engaged in the commission of a felony.”
Thus it appears that by the terms of the statute, the killing of a human being in three specified cases is murder, unless it falls within some of the inferior classes of homicide; from which we deduce the inference that if a case comes within any degree of manslaughter, it can not be deemed murder, although it is accompanied by some of the circumstances which make up the latter crime.
Now, in the case before us, the prominent and undisputed facts show, that the prisoner and Kane, both intoxicated, on the 4th of July last, were seen alone engaged in a scuffle or fight, in the public highway; that the prisoner knocked Kane down, and stepped to the stone wall and took from it a large stone and raised it with both hands and threw it upon Kane’s head, with such force as to crush his skull and produce his death.
The first idea which arises from this statement of facts to my mind is, that this was the killing of a human being in a cruel
We suppose that an erroneous impression may thus have been produced upon the minds of the jury. We consider the second subdivision wholly inapplicable to a case where there is' reason to believe that the killing was in the heat of passion, for such killing never was murder at the common law, and the revisers did not intend to increase the cases of murder. That subdivision is applicable to numerous cases of murder known to the common law, where malice was implied. It would apply to the case of a man shooting into a crowd, or throwing missiles from a house or wall into the public streets of a city, without regard to the lives of those who might be exposed. It may also apply to the case where but one person is exposed, and even where the blow is aimed at the person. This appears by the case of Rector, if the fatal, blow was given not in the
The conviction must be reversed and the case remitted to the court of Oyer and Terminer in and for the county of West-chester, with directions to award a venire de novo.
Conviction reversed.
The doctrine of this decision is fully sustained in the case of the People v. Darry, decided by the court of appeals at March term I8Í4, in which the second subdivision of the section defining murder is held to be inapplicable to a case of personal combat between two persons, and by which the dicta holding a contrary doctrine are overruled.