48 S.E. 544 | N.C. | 1904
Indictment for assault with a deadly weapon.
Edgar Alston, a witness for the State, testified: "I went to my hog-pen one Sunday at Littleton, about two months ago, taking them slops. Just below the hog-pen, when I got there, was the defendant and his brother-in-law, Mr. Burton. After I fed the hogs and started towards the house the defendant called me to come to him. I told him I was in a hurry to get back home to dress and go to preaching. He called me again, and said `You come here.' I replied, `Yes, boss man, of course if you order me to come I'll come.' I pulled off my hat and went on to him, and he cursed me and said `Why can't you come to me when I call you?' I told him I did. I always obey a white man when he calls me, and I knew he meant for me to come. Just about that time he snatched a knife out of his right hand coat pocket that was open and put the blade right up against my throat and told me if I moved my hands he would cut my damned throat, and then he tapped me on the head with the handle of it. I stood there with my hands right down by my sides until he told me to put my hat on and go to the house. Mr. Burton was standing near there, (572) but did not try to stop him. I think the defendant was kind of intoxicated. I do not think if he had been sober he would have done so." On cross-examination the witness stated: "It was between eleven and twelve o'clock. I pulled my hat off as I started to him, and just as I got up to him I put my hat on, and he asked me why I did not come up to him when he called, and told me to take off my hat like a damn negro ought when he came up to talk to him, and then drew his knife and pulled off my hat."
The defendant, in his testimony, denied that he had used a knife, but admitted that he cursed the prosecutor, and stated that he had merely asked him to bring him a match and when he came told him he was too damned slow.
J. H. Burton, a witness for the defendant, testified that he is a brother-in-law of the defendant, and that the latter merely asked the prosecutor to bring him a match, and as the prosecutor started back to get it the defendant cursed him several times. *416 The witness was with Daniel at the time, but saw no knife, though he may have had one without the witness seeing it. The prosecutor took off his hat after he came up to the defendant. The witness admitted that he did not say anything about a match at the trial before the magistrate.
There was evidence tending to show that the defendant was under the influence of liquor at the time of the alleged assault, and also at the trial before the magistrate, when he drew a stick back at his own father. The prosecutor was recalled and testified that the defendant did not ask him for a match and did not state at the magistrate's trial that he had done so. The defendant was convicted of a simple assault, and appealed from the judgment rendered upon the verdict. We must consider this case as if the Court below had given only the first instruction to the jury as to what would be sufficient to convict the defendant of a simple assault, because the jury were told that if they found the facts to be as stated in either one of the three instructions they should return a verdict of guilty, and we are unable to determine by which of the instructions the jury were influenced in coming to their verdict. We think that the second and third instructions were correct in law; and if we could see clearly and with absolute certainty that the jury acted solely under them, or either one of them, there would be no error and we would so declare; but as the jury may have acted solely under the first instruction, we must assume in this appeal, and in testing the correctness of the Judge's charge, that they did so act.
The first instruction was that if the defendant cursed the prosecutor, Alston, and ordered him to come to him, and Alston obeyed through fear, the defendant was guilty of an assault. Before the prosecutor reached the place near the hog pen where the defendant was standing, the latter had made no threat nor had he offered or attempted any violence to the person of the prosecutor, nor was there any display or exhibition of force of any kind, so far as the evidence here shows. In this state of the case we are unable to sustain this instruction as a correct statement of the law of assault. It would seem, says READE, J., that there ought to be no difficulty in determining whether any given state of facts amounts to an assault, but the behavior of men towards each other varies by such mere shades that it is *417
sometimes very difficult to characterize properly their acts and words. S.v. Hampton,
An assault is an intentional offer or attempt by violence to do any injury to the person of another. There must be an offer or attempt. Mere words, however insulting or abusive, will not constitute an assault, nor will a mere threat or violence menaced, as distinguished from violence begun to be executed. Where an unequivocal purpose of violence is accompanied by any act which, if not stopped or diverted, will be followed by personal injury, the execution of the purpose is then begun and there has been a sufficient offer or attempt. S. v. Davis,
The principle is well established that not only is a person who offers or attempts by violence to injure the person of another guilty of an assault, but no one by the show of violence has the right to put another in fear and thereby force him to leave a place where he has the right to be.S. v. Hampton,
If, therefore, the defendant had threatened the prosecutor with violence and the threat had been accompanied by any show of force, such as drawing a sword or knife, or if he had advanced towards the prosecutor in a menacing attitude, even without any weapon, and had been stopped before he delivered a blow, and the prosecutor had been put in fear and compelled to leave the place where he had the lawful right to be, the assault would have been complete, although he was not at the time in striking distance. But in this case, so far as the facts. recited in the first instruction should be (576) considered, there was not even violence menaced, but, at most, only offensive and profane words. There must be an overt act or an attempt, or the unequivocal appearance of an attempt, with force and violence, to do a corporal injury — such an act as will convey to the mind of the other person a well grounded apprehension of personal injury. Bare words will never do, for, however violent they may be, they can not take the place of that force which is necessary to complete the offense. They are often the exhibition of harmless passion and do not by themselves constitute a breach of the peace, as the law supposes that against mere rudeness of language ordinary firmness will be a sufficient protection. S.v. Covington,
It may be, as suggested, that the positions of the two parties were relatively unequal, as the defendant belonged to a strong and dominant and the prosecutor to a weak and servile race, and it may further be that the words of the prosecutor as he approached the defendant were the cringing utterances of servility and showed great humility and submissiveness because of the lowliness of his station in life as compared with that of *419
the defendant, and therefore he abjectly obeyed the latter's command to come to him. All this may be true; and while it reflects little credit upon the defendant, whose conduct as it now appears to us can not be too severely condemned, it can not have the effect of reversing a long established principle of the law to which we must adhere, it being founded upon reason and justice and treated by the courts and the text writers as one of universal application. S. v. Millsaps,
It was argued that the verdict necessarily excluded the idea that a knife was drawn by the defendant, but we can not assent to that conclusion, as the jury may have proceeded under either the second or third instruction in convicting the defendant. The prosecutor's testimony as to the use of the knife was positive, and opposed to it was that of the defendant, while that of Mr. Burton was negative. The jury did not accept and act upon the defendant's testimony, as they could not have returned the verdict they did if such had been the case, and, having accepted the prosecutor's version, as shown by the verdict, they may have adopted it in its entirety. While it may be true, therefore, that they convicted the defendant under the first instruction, it does not by any means follow that they did not do so under the second or third; but as we are unable to decide with any legal certainty which instruction influenced them, we must assume and decide that the verdict was given under the first or erroneous instruction, which entitles the defendant to another trial.
New trial.
Cited: S. v. Morgan, post, 632; S. v. Garland,
(578)