103 Cal. 577 | Cal. | 1894
The defendant was convicted of an assault with intent to commit murder, and now prosecutes this appeal from the judgment and order denying his motion for a new trial. At the request of the prosecution the court gave the jury the following instruction: “Every person is presumed to intend what his acts indicate his intention to have been; and if the defendant, at the time and place alleged in the information, voluntarily assaulted the prosecuting witness with a deadly weapon, in such a manner that the natural and ordinary consequences of such assault would be to kill the said witness Stanovitch, then the law presumes that the defendant intended to kill the said witness Stanovitch; and unless it appears from the evidence that the intention of the defendant was other than his acts indicated, the law will not hold him guiltless.”
It is now argued by the attorney general that the foregoing instruction should not be construed as an attempted exposition of the law bearing upon the specific offense charged in the information, but that it related and was pertinent to other and lower offenses necessarily included therein, and that as to such
The court refused to give the following instruction asked by the defendant: “In order to justify a verdict of guilty of the crime of assault with intent to commit murder the facts and circumstances proven in a case must be such that, if death had resulted from the shooting, the crime would have been murder and not manslaughter; for if the crime in a case of death would have been only manslaughter the defendant cannot be convicted of the offense charged.” This instruction should have been given, for it is sound law. If death should result from an assault with intent to commit murder no case can be imagined where the assailant would not be guilty of the crime of murder. Indeed, the death of the party assaulted is the only element necessary to change the offense from assault with intent to commit murder to that of murder. It may be suggested that the converse of this principle does not necessarily follow, .to wit: if the killing is murder there must necessarily have been an intent to commit murder. (See People v. Mize, 80 Cal. 42.)
For the foregoing reasons it is ordered that the judgment and order be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial..
Van Fleet, J., and Harrison, J., concurred.