43 Fla. 156 | Fla. | 1901
Frank Roberson, the plaintiff in error, was indicted for the crime of murder in the first degree in the Circuit Court of Duval county on the 15th day of August, 1899, and on the same day was formally arraigned and pleaded not guilty. He was tried upon such indictment, found guilty of murder in the first degree and sentenced to death. From this judgment he took writ of error from this court, and the judgment was here reversed on April 24th, 1900, and a new trial awarded (See Roberson v. State, 42 Fla. 223, 28 South. Rep. 424). The cause was again tried in June, 1900, and ag-ain resulted in a con-fiction of murder in the first degree for which the defendant was again sentenced to death, and to- review such judgment again comes to this court on writ of error.
At the trial now under review the court gave to the jury the following charge, numbered 8: “Sheriffs, deputy sheriffs and constables are authorized to arrest public offenders without warrant for a felony committed in the presence of the, officer making the arrest, or if they have reasonable ground, for believing that such felony has been committed; and by our statutes, sheriffs, etc., are, invested with authority to' apprehend without war rant any person who is in the disturbance of the peace, and to carry him before proper magistrates for further proceedings according to* law; and in addition any such officers may arrest without warrant for any misdemeantending- to a breach of the peace when committed in the presence of the officer making the, arrest. Carrying concealed weapons is such a misdemeanor tending to a breach of the peace, if you find from the evidence be
In view of the evidence disclosed to us in the record, the last above quoted portion of this instruction in reference to the power of officers to arrest without warrant for the misdemeanor of carrying concealed weapons is erroneous. The evidence pertinent to. the charge under discussion is in substance as follows: Mary Weston, for the State, swore that she was at Pablo> on the afternoon of June 26th of last year; that while on her way to a store she met the defendant and his brother walking arm in arm, and that as they passed her one of them shoved her off the side walk. Upon her remonstrating with them one of them drew a pistol from his pocket and said “1 will let daylight through you.” The defendant and his brother then went on. She (the witness) then saw Capt. Dennis and told him that two boys had pistols and went with him and Mr. Sadler (the deceased) to point them out. She pointed them out to Mr. Sadler and Dennis Jenkins. The two last named acted .as deputy sheriffs.
Jerry Delaney, for the State, testified as follows, in substance: I reside at Pablo-, and saw the shooting of deputy sheriff Sadler by the prisoner Frank Roberson on the 26th of June last. I saw Mr. Sadler and Dennis Jenkins, the deputy sheriffs, coming towards me-. Right in front of them walked two colored boys close together, who I know as th-e defendant Frank Roberson and his
Dr. Hoyle Haddock testified that he made a post mortem examination on the body of the- deceased, Charles M. Sadler; that his death was caused by a thirty-eight calibre revolver bullet.
N. B. Broward testified that he was sheriff of Duval county at the time of the shooting and that Sadler and Dennis Jenkins were both deputies of his at that time.
Isaiah Small, for the State, testified that he was down at Pablo on the excursion on June 26th of last year and saw the shooting of Dennis Jenkins and Mr. Sadler on that day by the two- Roberson boys. I was also a deputy sheriff at the time. At the time Mr. Sadler was shot I had been called about arresting a man for carrying concealed weapons, about the same time Mr. Sadler and Dennis Jenkins were called to arrest Frank Roberson, the defendant. I saw Mr. Sadler and Jenkins go up to the prisoner, Mr. Sadler on one side and Dennis Jenkins on the other. Mr. Sadler talked to the prisoner and told him, I have to arrest you for carrying- concealed weapons. Mr. Sadler’s remark was: “My boy, I have to arrest you for carrying concealed weapons,” and he took hold of him. Frank Roberson whirled around as soon as
Tom Brown, for the State, testified that he was present and saw the shooting of Sadler by the defendant. At the time the shooting took place I was standing only a few feet from them. When Mr. Sadler made the arrest of Frank Roberson, the latter jerked away and fired two shots, then he ran away and turned around and fired two more shots. I went to Mr. Sadler, who was then laying on the ground and assisted to' do what I could for him.
The State here rested its case, and the defendant offered no testimony.
From this testimony we gather the following brief summary of the circumstances attending the arrest of the defendant that resulted in this unfortunate homicide : The defendant and his brother, out of the presence and view of the two officers, committed a breach of the peace by shoving a woman from the side walk, at the same time intimidating her by a threatening display of a pistol. After this actual breach of the peace comes to an end, the two brothers pass on and the- woman seeks the two officers (deputy sheriffs) and informs them of the behavior of the two brothers, and also, informs them that said two brothers are carrying pistols concealed on their
Section 4723 of the Code of the State of Georgia (edition of 1882) provides that “an arrest may be made for a crime, by an officer, either under a warrant or without a warrant, if the offence is committed in his presence, or the offender is endeavoring to escape, or for other cause there is likely to be a failure of justice for want of art officer to issue a warrant.” The Supreme Court of Georgia, in the case of Pickett v. State, 99 Ga. 12, 25 South. Rast Rep. 608, construing the effect of this statute in authorizing an officer to- arrest without warrant for the crime of carrying concealed weapons, says: “While, under section 4723 of the Code, an officer may, without a warrant, make an arrest for an offence committed in his presence, he has no authority, upon bare suspicion or upon mere information derived from others, to arrest a citizen and search his person in order to ascertain whether or not he is carrying a concealed weapon in violation of law. The constitution of this State expressly declares in the bill of rights that ‘The, right of ¿he people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated.’ * * * * * If any search is unreasonable and obnoxious to our fundamental law,
In the well-considered case of Briggs v. Commonwealth, 82 Va. 554, the court, discussing the law of homicide of an officer in resisting an unlawful arrest,.says: “The deceased was without authority to make the arrest, and the plaintiff in error was- not bound to submit to an unauthorized arrest. The law upon this subject is stated by Mr. Bishop- as follows: ‘If one, even an officer, undertakes to arrest another unlawfully, the latter may resist him. He has no protection from his office, or from the fact that the other is an offender. But the doctrine * * * that nothing short of ah endeavor to- destroy life will justify the taking of life, prevails in- this case; consequently, if the one to be arrested kills the officer or private individual in resisting, he commits thereby the lower degree of felonious homicide called man-» slaughter.’ * * * This doctrine, however, must be qualified by the consideration of the existence of malice, * * * -and by the principal which com' pels every man to avoid, as far as possible, the extreme necessity to take life. If, upon being assaulted, the passion of the. assaulted person become greatly excited, and under that impulse he kill his assailant, though it be with a deadly weapon, the offence is manslaughter only. ' Yet should his resistance with a deadly weapon be made in a very cruel manner, not at all justified by the nature of the assault, the inference would be. that malice, not passion, impelled the blow making his crime murder. So-, one who, excited in resisting the outrage of an illegal
In view of the law as above stated, touching the rights of the citizens in cases of unlawful arrests, and the fact that the arrest in this case has b'een found under the facts in proof to have been unlawful, the defendant had the right to have the question passed upon by the jury, under proper instructions of the law of the case from the court, as to whether his action in shooting the deceased was prompted solely by. a transport of sud" den passion provoked by the unlawfulness of his arrest, or- whether it resulted from malice or a premeditated design to effect the death of the deceased. If it was the result solely of such sudden passion, then his offence was manslaughter; but if from premeditated design, then it was murder. The latter part of the questioned charge of the court erroneously converted the facts of the arrest, as an assertion of law, into- a lawful arrest, when it was otherwise, thus eliminating from the con
..Various other errors are assigned upon refusals to give divers instructions requested on behalf of the defendant ; of these several qre abandoned here by non-argument; of those argued it becomes necessary for us, after what has already been said, merely to add that we have examined such refused instructions and find that they were properly refused.
The assignment of error predicated on the court’s denial of the defendant’s motion in arrest of judgment has been abandoned here.
. - For the error found, the judgment of the court below is reversed and a new trial ordered.