People v. Potter

5 Mich. 1 | Mich. | 1858

Martin Ch. J.:

The admission, by the Court below, of the statement of the prisoner that he had been reading the life of “Jack Rand,” *5&c., was not error. It is true that it was not competent for the prosecution, on the trial of a criminal case, to introduce evidence which tends only to prove a general disposition to commit crime, but this evidence could not, we apprehend, have been offered for that purpose. The facts of the case show that this remark was made in the course of a conversation, during an interview which was concluded by the homicide for whicli the prisoner stands charged with murder, and at which the deceased was present. Had it been made at another time, or under different circumstances, the rule contended for by the prisoner’s counsel would apply; but every occurrence, every remark, and the whole conduct of the prisoner, from the time he and the deceased came together until the consummation of the crime, are competent evidence, as part of the res gestee, to enable the jury to determine whether any crime was committed, as well as to inform them as to its degree. The tendency of the evidence to establish or to disprove malice was a question for the jury, under the instruction of the Court, but its admissibility as an occurrence in the interview which commenced at the theater, and continued until the fatal blows were struck by the prisoner, is beyond question. The general rule, and one just to the public and humane to the accused, is this: That upon the trial of an indictment, the whole occurrence immediately preceding the commission of the act charged as criminal, can be given in evidence, for the purpose of illustrating the act itself, by showing the influences which operated to produce the catastrophe, to establish malice, and to justify the act or mitigate the crime.

The request of the counsel for the prisoner, that the Court should charge the jury that to constitute murder in the first degree, under our statute, something more was necessary than would be necessary to constitute murder at common law; that ■to constitute murder in the first degree, the murder must be preceded or attended by facts and circumstances not necessarily an ingredient of murder at common law; and that, if the government sought to have the jury convict the prisoner of *6murder in the first degree, the burden of proof was upon the government to show that the murder was committed in the perpetration, or attempt to perpetrate, arson, rape, robbery, or burglary; or by poison, or lying in wait; or to prove such facts, in addition to the act of killing, as made such act murder in the first degree; although somewhat obscurely expressed, was substantially correct.

Murder is where a person of sound memory and discretion unlawfully kills any reasonable creature in being, in the peace of the State, with malice prepense or* aforethought, either express or implied. This, the' common law definition, is still retained in our statute. It speaks of the offense as one already ascertained and defined, and divides it into degrees, by providing that all murder which shall be perpetrated by means of poison, or lying in wait, or any other kind of willful, deliberate, and premeditated' killing, or which shall be committed in the perpetration, or attempt to perpetrate, any arson, rape, robbery, or burglary, shall be deemed murder in the first degree; and that all other kinds of murder shall be deemed murder in the second degree; and requires the jury, in case of a trial, to find, by their verdict, the degree of the crime; and the Court, in case of a confession of guilt, to ascertain the same from evidence. This division of the crime had its origin in Pennsylvania, where death was the penalty ibr murder, as early as the year 1794, and its object was “to diminish the area of cases to which the penalty of death is applicable.” Accordingly, amongst other things recited in the preamble of that law, is the following: “ An d^ whereas, the several offenses which are included under the general denomination of murder differ so greatly from each other in the degree of atrociousness that it is unjust to involve them in the same punishment, all murder,” &c. Of this Act ours is a substantial copy. Mr. Wharton, in his “American Law of Homicide ” (in which, and in his “ Criminal Law,” this subject is fully discussed, and of which I have made liberal use), in commenting upon this law, says: “The principle upon which rests this statutory distinction, is that of *7the lex taUonis, and took its origin from the admitted harshness of inflicting death for a homicide, when death was not intended.” “No objection was taken to the common law distinctions. The general feeling was, that it was proper that they should remain. The question was one of punishment, not of definition. It was felt that there was a large class of cases falling- under the general head of murder, in which a jury ought to be allowed to say whether there was an intent to take life or not, and where no such intent was found, that it was proper that a sentence lighter than death should be inflicted. And it was to meet this class of eases that legislative action was invoked.”

Now, at the common law, if a mortal blow was malicious, although not given with intent to kill, or if death ensued from an act accompanying an unlawful collateral act, or under circumstances which showed general malice, such as a reckless disregard of the safety or lives of others, the killing would be murder, and would be punishable in the same manner as though perpetrated with the deliberate design of taking the life of the victim. It was to mitigate the punishment for this class of murders, and to leave it to the discretion of the Court, to a considerable extent, that our statute was passed; while for murder perpetrated willfully, or in the perpetration, or attempt to perpetrate, either of the four felonies mentioned, the punishment is inflexibly fixed by the law. Hence, in defining the first degree of murder, the statute specifies two instances in which willfulness, deliberation, and premeditation are most strongly indicated, viz., the use of poison, and lying in wait; and then provides that all other willful, deliberate, and premeditated killing, should also be murder in the same degree..The more atrocious crime is separated from the general class of murder; and, it would seem to follow that to establish murder in the first degree, more proof is necessary than of the single fact of malicious homicide, and that it must be shown that the killing was willful, and with design to take the life of the victim, or in some one of the ways pointed out in the *8statute. When the intent is specially made by the statute an ingredient in the crime, or where it is made essential to enable a court or jury to determine its degree, and to fix the character and amount of the punishment with which its commission is to be visited, such intent must be affirmatively shown, and can not be established by those ordinary legal inferences which were sufficient at the common law to establish the general crime, but at which the statute, by dividing the crime into degrees, especially aimed. Sometimes this intent is established, by evidence of hostile feelings, of previously uttered threats, of previous attempts to do bodily injury,»or of deliberate preparation. In some instances, the proof of the intent is furnished by the manner of killing; as when the murder is shown to have been committed with a lethal weapon, in an unequivocal manner. Here, “the enquiring mind can come to no other conclusion than that the death of the victim was intended. Thus, if one man shoot another through the head with a musket or pistol ball, or if he stab him in a vital part with a sword or dagger, if he cleave his skull with an axe, or the like, it is almost impossible for a reflecting and intelligent mind to come to any other conclusion than that the perpetrators of such acts of deadly violence intended to kill.” — Am. Law of Hom. 473. In such case, the law presumes every person to intend the usual consequences which accompany the use of the means employed in the manner employed, and casts upon the accused, as much as in the case of avowed malice, the burden of showing that the intention in using the weapon was harmless, or not murderous. The mere proof of the murder, then, without other proof deduced from the manner of the killing, or from other evidence tending to establish a design to take the life of the victim, would not establish the higher degree of the crime, but would only authorize a verdict of murder in the second degree.

We think the Court erred, therefore, in refusing to charge as requested, and in omitting- to define clearly to the jury the degrees of murder as established by law. The duty of ascer*9taming the degree of the crime is peremptorily imposed upon the jury trying the issue of “not guilty,” and it is only upon evidence that such duty can be performed. Every case must, to a great degree, depend upon the particular facts and circumstances surrounding the transaction; and it is only by the aid and advice of the Court, that a jury can give to such their due wóight in determining the degree of tbe crime. In ordinary cases, it is the duty of a Court to inform the jury of the law by which their verdict must be controlled, and assist them, by such illustrations as the case requires, to apply the law to the facts. In the case of murder where a living death hangs upon the verdict, this duty should be most fully and carefully performed.

The charge of the Court, we think, had a tendency to mislead the jury. The proposition submitted to them, and which was to bo their guide in ascertaining the degree of the crime, was, whether there was proof of malice aforethought, or not. Now, it is true, as charged, that if the act of killing was proved, the presumption of law is that it was doné with malice aforethought; but this rule only obtains where there is an entire absence of qualifying or explanatory evidence involved in, or deducible from, the manner of the killing. But, malice aforethought is as much an essential ingredient of murder in the second degree, as in that of the first. Without this, the •killing would be only manslaughter, if criminal at all. Now, malice aforethought is either express or implied, and there can be no case of murder in the first degree, except when committed in the perpetration, or attempt to perpetrate, arson, rape, robbery, burglary, or robbery, when there does not exist express malice; while, in case of murder in the second degree, the malice is generally, if not universally, implied.

The rule of the common law in respect to malico is in no degree changed: the statute only relates to its application by the jury in determining the degree of guilt. It is also true that the burden of disproving malice is in all cases of murder cast upon the prisoner, unless the case made by the prosecu*10tion shows it to be absent; and this rule now applies with special force to the second degree of murder, if not entirely to it. While, therefore, as a common law proposition, the charge of the Court below was correct, yet it falls far short, in our apprehension, of an illustration of the statute, and tended to mislead the jury in the discharge of their duty.

The other Justices concurred.

New trial directed *

On a second trial, the prisoner was convicted of murder of the second degree

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