64 Wash. 122 | Wash. | 1911
Defendant was charged with murder in the first degree, and convicted of murder in the second degree. The defense was that the killing was justifiable, and the first error assigned is that the court erred in overruling a motion for a directed verdict at the close of the state’s case. This assignment will need no discussion other than that which follows. The testimony of the state was ample to carry the case to the jury.
It is next insisted that the court erred in compelling defendant to admit, when on the stand as a witness in his own behalf, that he had been convicted of a crime and had been an inmate of the penitentiary in the state of Kentucky. It is
“Every person convicted of a crime shall be a competent witness in any civil or criminal proceeding, but his conviction may be proved for the purpose of affecting the weight of his testimony, either by the record thereof, or a copy of such record duly authenticated by the legal custodian thereof, or by other competent evidence, or by his cross-examination, upon which he shall answer any proper question relevant to that inquiry, and the party cross-examining him shall not be concluded by his answer thereto.”
We think the title is sufficient. It was the evident intention of the legislature, manifested not only by the title of the act but by the comprehensiveness of the act itself, to which were added general and specific repealing clauses, that the criminal code should stand in the place of all previous enactments as well as the former procedure, whether defined by the statutes or declared by the courts. As was said in Marston v. Humes, 3 Wash. 267, 28 Pac. 520, where the title, “An act relating to pleadings in civil actions, and amending §§ 76, 77 and 109 of the Code of Washington of 1881,” was under consideration:
“Again, it would hardly be contended that it is not competent under the provision in question for the legislature to*125 enact as a single law a code of civil procedure, and that an act entitled ‘An act to provide a code of civil procedure’ would be invalid, yet under this subject innumerable subheads and subjects can easily be carved out. Such title is good because the legislature has seen fit to take a comprehensive subject which can properly cover all of such subjects. If the legislature can thus by a name sufficiently comprehensive embrace all the subjects properly relating to civil procedure, it must follow that by adopting a subject sufficiently general it can embrace in one act all the statute law of the state. In other words, the legislature may adopt just as comprehensive a title as it sees fit, and if such title when taken by itself relates to a unified subj ect or ob j ect, it is good, however much such unified subject is capable of division.”
See, also, State v. Tieman, 32 Wash. 294, 73 Pac. 375, 98 Am. St. 854.
In the absence of a statute, most courts have held that a former conviction can be shown only by a written copy of the judgment, and that oral evidence, either independent or by cross-examination of the defendant, will not be received. But this rule has almost everywhere been altered, either by statute such as the one now complained of, or by the changing viewpoint of the judges. Lord Chief Justice Ellenborough, in Rex v. Castell Careinion, 8 East 77, said:
“It cannot seriously be argued that a record can be proved by the admission of any witness. He may have mistaken what passed in court, and may have been ordered on his knees for a misdemeanor; this can only be known by the record.”
This is criticized by Mr. Wigmore as a refinement of apprehension bordering on the ridiculous. 2 Wigmore, Evidence, § 1270. Judge Cooley, in Clemens v. Conrad, 19 Mich. 170, states the rule to be as follows:
“We think the reasons for requiring record evidence of conviction have very little application to a case where the party convicted is himself upon the stand and is questioned concerning it with a view to sifting his character upon cross-examination. The danger that he will falsely testify to a conviction which never took place, or that he may be mistaken*126 about it, is so slight, that it may almost be looked upon as purely imaginary; while the danger that worthless characters will unexpectedly be placed upon the stand, with no opportunity for the opposite party to produce the record evidence of their infamy, is always palpable and imminent.”
But aside from the statute, we do not conceive the reception of such evidence, when limited as it was by the court, who said that “such evidence of his conviction in Kentucky can only be considered by you for the purpose of determining the weight to be given to the testimony of the defendant, and for no other purpose, and should not be used or considered by you for any other purpose or in any other manner whatever in arriving at your verdict,” is a violation of any constitutional guaranty. Wharton, Criminal Evidence, § 489; 8 Ency. Plead. & Prac., 117.
The evidence tended to show, that defendant had given a son of the deceased liquor out of a bottle which he then had; that this coming to the notice of the deceased, he undertook to, and did, take the bottle away from defendant just before the fatal shot was fired. The defendant testified that the deceased attacked him with the bottle, and that he shot in self-defense, believing himself to be in danger of great bodily harm. The evidence introduced by the state tended to show that deceased did not assault defendant with the bottle, or at all. Accordingly the defendant submitted a further defense grounded on Rem. & Bal. Code, § § 2406, 2414, 2418. It is contended that, if a person kill another in defense of his person, or one who is in the act of committing a robbery from the person, it is justifiable. It is upon this latter defense defendant believed his motion for an instructed verdict should have been granted. The court instructed the law of self-defense, and unnecessarily, as we believe, went further and said:
“But the rule is different when the attack is not felonious in character, that is, when from the attack there is no real or reasonable apparent danger of death or great bodily harm to*127 the assailed. A person assailed has no right to take the life of his assailant even if he believes .his own life in danger when the assault is without a weapon of any kind and when there is no reasonable ground for the belief by the person attacked that his person is in imminent danger of death or great bodily harm, but that an ordinary battery is all that is intended and all that he has reasonable ground to fear from the acts of his assailant, while a person is not bound to retreat and may lawfully repel a threatened assault and to that end may use force enough to repel the assailant, yet he has no right to repel a threatened assault with naked hands by the use of a deadly weapon in a deadly manner, unless he honestly believes and has reasonable grounds to believe that he is in imminent danger of death or great bodily harm. However, an assault with the naked fist is sufficient to justify killing in self-defense if there is at the time a reasonable apparent purpose by the assailant to inflict death or great bodily harm upon assailed, and if the latter at the time believes and has reasonable grounds to believe that he is in imminent danger of death or great bodily harm at the hands of the assailant, supposing that the person assailed acts reasonably and as a reasonable man under the circumstances, as such circumstances at the time in good faith appear to him.”
It is complained, that the instruction is a comment on the evidence; that it, in effect, tells the jury that deceased was without a weapon of any kind, whereas defendant had testified that, after the deceased had taken the bottle from him, he had assaulted him with it; and that it is contradictory of the former and admittedly correct instructions of the court. We are of the opinion that the statement “that the rule is different when the attack is not felonious in character; that is, when from the attack there is no real or reasonable apparent danger of death or great bodily harm to the assailed,” is a proper qualification to be made in submitting the defense here set up. The court had defined the term “felonious” as well as the word “assault,” and from these definitions the jury must have understood that resistance of an assault to the extent of taking human life would not be justifiable unless the assault was made with evil or criminal intent, for it is not
“You are instructed that if you find from the evidence that the defendant did shoot and mortally wound James O. Silvey in the actual resistance of an attempt on the part of the deceased to take from the possession of the defendant a bottle of whiskey, the property of defendant, by force and violence, then you should find the defendant not guilty;”
thus going, as we believe, beyond the law, at the request of, and in behalf of, defendant. It is not every chance altercation over property, as this affair was, that comes within the intent and design of the statute. Rem. & Bal. Code, § 2116, warrants the repulsion of a robbery by force, even to killing; but the act must bear the ear marks of that crime. We find no such intent on the part of the deceased. His act was a trespass—an impulsive demonstration on the part of a father who had sought to destroy rather than asport that which had been used, as he believed, to debauch his son.
It is also complained that the following instruction:
“Premeditated means thought over beforehand, for any length of time, however short. When a person after deliberation once forms a design to take human life, after ample time and opportunity for deliberate thought, then no matter how soon the felonious killing may follow the formation of the settled purpose, it will be murder in the first degree. Premeditated malice exists when the intention unlawfully to kill is deliberately formed in the mind and the determination thought over and reflected upon before the fatal blow is struck*129 (no particular space of time, however, need intervene between the formation of the intent to kill and the killing) ;”
is vicious within the rule of State v. Rutten, 13 Wash. 203, 43 Pac. 30. But we do not so read the cases. The court did not, as in the Rutten case, tell the jury that the thought and act must concur in time, but was careful to say that premeditation means “thought over beforehand,” and if they found that there was previous thought, that the execution of the design might follow immediately thereafter. The instruction complained of is the general rule of law, and has been expressly sanctioned by this court in the case of State v. Bridgham, 51 Wash. 18, 97 Pac. 1096. But in any event the error, if it could be held to be an error, would not avail defendant, as the verdict of the jury indicates that it found that there was no premeditation. Ross v. State, 8 Wyo. 351, 57 Pac. 924; Downing v. State, 11 Wyo. 86, 70 Pac. 833, 73 Pac. 758.
The court defined assault in the first degree and assault in the second degree as included crimes, and submitted to the jury verdicts covering these crimes. It is assigned as error that these crimes are not included in the charge of murder in the first degree, and that defendant is therefore entitled to a new trial. This assignment is not well taken; for although the crime of assault in the first degree and assault in the second degree may not, under §§ 140,141, and 143 of the Laws 1909, p. 930 et seq., so-called criminal code (Rem. & Bal. Code, §§ 2392, 2393, 2395), and under the facts as developed at the trial, be included in the crime charged (State v. Pepoon, 62 Wash. 635, 114 Pac. 449), and had the court of its own motion submitted these verdicts, a conviction of either of the offenses, assault in the first or assault in the second degree, would have resulted in an arrest of judgment (State v. Kruger, 60 Wash. 542, 111 Pac. 769), the error was harmless, (1) because we find from the record that defendant requested that the crimes of assault be defined, and that such
It is also complained that the court erred in refusing to permit defendant’s counsel to further cross-examine a witness for the prosecution. It is said:
“The defense had a right on cross-examination to ask any question which would tend to test the accuracy or veracity of the witness, and cross-examination is as important to test the accuracy of testimony as its truthfulness or credibility, and prejudice will be presumed when this right is denied, and where a man is being tried for his life, certainly the right to determine through the medium of cross-examination the exact knowledge of the witness or the accuracy of his statements, should not be denied him.” State v. Rutten, supra.
All rules of evidence must be measured by reference to the particular case. When the subject of examination has been fairly inquired into and rehearsed upon cross-examination, to a length sufficient to attain the object sought, and elucidate
Judgment affirmed.
Dunbar, C. J., Ellis, Morris, and Crow, JJ., concur.