75 Mo. 586 | Mo. | 1882
The defendant was indicted at the October' term, 1878, of the Benton circuit court for the murder of James S. Hatler, on the 26th of August, 1878. He was ar-. rested under that indictment and admitted to bail September 11th, 1879. At the ensuing October term of said court a second indictment was found against him for the same offense, charging the shooting to have been done on the 30th day of August, 1878, and thatHatler’s death resulted from it on the 1st day of September, 1878. He was arraigned at the October term, 1879, and pleaded not guilty, but there was a mis-trial. He was tried again at the May term,'1880; and found guilty of murder in the second degree, and his punishment assessed at fifteen years in'the penitentiary. From the judgment thereon he has appealed.
Section 1808 of the Revised Statutes provides that: “ If there be at any time pending against the same defendant two indictments for the same offense’, or two indictments for the same matter, although charged as different offenses, the indictment first found shall be deemed to be suspended by such second indictment and shall be quashed.” The statute of New York is identical with ours, except that, where the word “suspended ” occurs in ours, the word “ superseded ” is employed in the New York statute.
In Austin v. State, 12 Mo. 394, the court, commenting on section 4, page 867, of the Revised Statutes, identical with section 1808 of the present revision, said : “ This statute is the law that must govern in this case, and I must examine the defendant’s plea by this statute. A plea under this Btatute should state that the indictment pleaded to was the one which was first found, and should state that
In the People v. Fisher, 14 Wend. 9, the same question was raised on that section of the New York statute above noticed, and Savage, C. J., said: “We have the authority of Hawkins for saying that a plea of a former indictment pending for the same offense, is bad, and by our Revised Statutes, the first indictment is superseded by the second, and liable to be quashed. It is not, therefore, a bar to such second indictment.” For these reasons, and on the foregoing authorities, we are constrained to overrule the State v-Smith, and so much of the State v. Webb as sanctions it. '
The evidence on the trial of the accused was conflicting. On the part of the State, it tended to prove that the defendant was in a store-house in the town of Fairfield, and through the store window saw deceased passing along the street, and, stepping to the door, called to the deceased to “ throw up his hands,” and instantly shot him, inflicting
No such instruction should have been given, because there was no evidence that any threat made by Hatler had ever been communicated to Eaton; and if it had been otherwise, the instruction is erroneous in that it requires one whose life has been threatened, to wait, before he begins to defend himself, for personal violence or an assault made upon him. The instruction in this respect is inconsistent with the instructions given by the court, on the theory of self-defense. We are not to be understood as giving sanction to the doctrine, that a threatened man may
We think the court did not err in instructing the jury on murder of the second degree. Whether it was a deliberate murder, or a murder committed without deliberation, on a provocation given at the time, or manslaughter, or excusable homicide, -was properly left to the jury to determine, on all the facts before'them. If they had found him guilty of either of the offenses, we could not say that the verdict was not warranted by the evidence.
Nor do we think the indictment open to the objection urged by the appellant, that the “ striking,” “ penetrating” and “ wounding ” of the deceased is not alleged to have been willfully done. It alleged that defendant, “ feloniously, willfully, deliberately', premeditatedly and of his malice aforethought, did make an assault” upon the body of James Ilatler, and that said Joseph Eaton, with a pistol then and there charged with gunpowder, etc., which he held in his hands, then and thex-e feloniously, willfully, deliberately, premeditatedly and of his malice aforethought, ■discharged and shot off to, at and against said Ilatler; and that said Eaton, with one of the bullets, aforesaid, out of the pistol, then and there by him shot off' and dischax’ged, then and there feloniously, deliberately, premeditatedly and of his malice aforethought, did strike, penetrate and
For the reasons hereinbefore assigned, the judgment .is reversed and the cause remanded.