39 La. Ann. 687 | La. | 1887
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Lnlre Brady appeals from a conviction and a sentence to hard labor for one year, under an indictment which charged that Luke Brady and Peter Paul “did willfully, maliciously and feloniously assault one P. O. Nugent by willfully shooting at him,” * * *
I-Iis complaint embraces four bills of exception, the substance of which, as suggested by his counsel, turns upon a proper construction of Section 792 of the Revised Statutes, under which the indictment rests and which reads as follows:
“ Whoever shall assault another by willfully shooting.at him, or with intent to commit murder, rape or robbery, shall on conviction thereof, be imprisoned at hard labor not exceeding- two years.”
■ In his hill, reserved to the refusal of his .motion in arrest of J udgment, the defendant urges in substance that the indictment charge's no offense known to the laws of the State, that it fails to qualify the intent'with which the offense is said to have been committed, aud that, if the crime sought to be charged is shooting with intent to murder, the charge is defective because malice aforethought is not averred.
The fallacy of the argument is due to an erroneous construction of the plain language of the statute, and in requiring the qualification of the “willful shooting at” by the word intent, which has no reference thereto.
The statute denounces the offense of an assault by “ willfully shooting at,” which by itself is a complete and distinct offense without any other qualification than that of intent; it denounces the offenses of assault with intent to commit murder, rape or robbery — which are in themselves and each separately, distinct and complete offenses; and the statute finally prescribes the same penalty for each of the offenses thus denounced. State vs. Williams, 38 Ann. 372; State vs. Simien, 36 Ann. 924.
Now, as the indictment propounds the charge of a felonious, malicious and willful assault “by willfully shooting at,” * * * it is clear that it does contain a charge of an offense known to our laws, since the same is specially denounced in the statute under discussion. And as the language used in the indictment is already redundant by the qualifications of the assault, which were not necessary under the terms of the statute, it is hardly in order for the defendant to suggest an improvement in its confection by adding the description of an intent, which is absolutely unnecessary.
Under these views, it becomes unnecessary to indulge with defendant’s counsel in the idle discussion of the words or charges which the pleader should have used, if he had intended to charge the accused with an assault by “willfully shooting at another” with “intent to commit murder.”
If such had been his intention, he would in all probability have preferred the charge which is covered by Section 791. The intention of the law-maker in providing for the offense of an assault with intent to commit murder in Section 792, is to define such an assault by any other mode but by “ shooting at.”
In his other bills the accused complains of the refusal of the district judge to give several special charges to the jury, altogether conveying the general idea that the. State had intended to charge the accused with an assault by shooting at with intent to commit a murder. The judge properly refused the instructions requested by him in that sense, and in substance informed the jury that, to convict the accused as charged, they must reach the conclusion that if death had ensued from the deed, it would have been manslaughter. He correctly held that malice of itself is not murder in a homicide, and that it is only as malice aforethought that it becomes an essential ingredient in the charge and in the proof of murder.
This is conceded by defendant’s counsel, as shown by the complaint
District attorneys would doubtless find it an economy of labor to themselves aud especially to the courts by following the very words of the statute in the confection of indictments or informations for statutory offences.
There is no force in the complaint that the judge erred in charging the jury that they could find either of the three following verdicts:
1. Guilty as charged.
2. Guilty of assault.
3. Not guilty.
"We can see no advantage to the accused himself, and no interest of justice to he subserved, by charging, as requested by defendant’s counsel, that the jury could have returned some one of an almost infinite variety of verdicts. “ Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.”
We find no error in the proceedings to the detriment of die accused, who lias had the benefit of a most ingenious defense conducted by a mind of prolific resources. ■
Judgment affirmed.