100 P. 770 | Ariz. | 1909
Appellant was convicted of the crime of assault with a deadly weapon. The circumstances surrounding the commission of the offense, as they appear from the testimony of the witnesses for the territory, are that Ryan went to the mining property of the Arkansas and Arizona Copper Company as the representative of a labor organization, threatened to close down the work at the mines, and endeavored to induce the miners there employed to leave their employment. While so upon the property of the mining company, its superintendent in charge, one Prank Burns, repeatedly ordered him to leave the premises, which he refused to do. Burns, to enforce his order, walked toward Ryan, carrying in his right hand, at the side, a bar of steel one inch in diameter, and twenty-four inches in length. Ryan backed away from Burns for some distance, when,
There is a diversity of opinion upon the question whether, where a loaded revolver is drawn and presented, accompanied by remarks which indicate an intention to fire it, so that the person at whom it is presented may reasonably fear that such use will he made of it, the actual intent harbored by the accused is at all material. Many authorities hold that an assault is committed, regardless of whether there was any intent to shoot, while others hold that the intent with which the weapon is drawn and pointed is the gist of the action, and that a conviction of assault is not justified in the absence of an actual intention to fire the weapon, or the intent to fire, if certain demands are not complied with. "When intent is material, the jury is authorized to infer it from the eir-eumstanees connected with the act; and, while there are some authorities which hold, with the trial court, that the intent of the accused is to be inferred only from the facts and eir-eumstanees surrounding the commission of the act, we think that the better rule is that the defendant is entitled, where intent or belief or motive is material, to testify directly what his intent, belief, or motive was at the time he committed the act. 1 Wigmore on Evidence, sec. 581; Wallace v. United States, 160 U. S. 466, 16 Sup. Ct. 859, 40 L. Ed. 1039; Crawford v. United States, 212 U. S. 183, 29 Sup. Ct. 260, 53 L. Ed. 465; Wohlford v. People, 148 Ill. 296, 36 N. E. 107.
We do not find it necessary to determine whether or not it is material that Ryan harbored the intent to injure Bums, for- the reason that, aside from the question of criminality in unjustifiably drawing and pointing a loaded weapon, there is involved in this case the element of self-defense, to which the question first indicated apparently was addressed. The defendant was entitled to present to the jury his version of the occurrence. His testimony was such that, if true, he had a right to resist the unnecessary force which Burns threatened to visit upon him in exercising his right to eject him from the premises, and if he was in danger of losing his life, or of sustaining great bodily injury, or the circumstances were such that it reasonably seemed to him that he was in such
In Wohlford v. People, supra, the defendant was on trial for an assault with a deadly weapon, and testimony as to why he used the weapon in the manner in which he did use it, and whether he in fact intended to do his adversary any bodily injury other than in self-defense, was excluded. The supreme court of Illinois, in discussing the subject, says: “Where the intent is of the essence of the offense, or an important element constituting the offense, we think a defend1 ant has the right to testify what his intention was ■ in the commission of the act with which he is charged. What credit should be given to a defendant’s evidence in this regard would be a matter for the consideration of the jury.” The territory contends that the defendant was permitted to give testimony from which his intentions and motives may be inferred. In Crawford v. United States, supra, a recent case, decided February 1, 1909, the supreme court of the United States had before it the question of whether the defendant should have been permitted to directly testify as to his motives or intentions in removing certain letters from their files. The contention of the government was that the letters had been surreptitiously removed, with the intention of preventing their use as evidence. The defendant offered to testify what his real motives were, but was refused that privilege. The court of appeals held the error harmless, because from other testimony given by him he had made clear his reasons for re
Counsel for appellant have assigned other rulings of the trial court as error, but since the same matters are not likely to arise upon retrial, we do not find it necessary to discuss them.
The judgment of the district court is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.