State v. Field

14 Me. 244 | Me. | 1837

The opinion of the Court, after a continuance, was drawn up by

Emery J.

The defendant, on an indictment for manslaughter, for killing Nathaniel Field, on the 22d Dec. 1835, has, by the verdict of a jury, been found guilty. In tire course of the trial, evidence was proposed to be offered, that the deceased was a man in the habit of drinking to excess whenever he could get rum, and that drinking spirit of any kind uniformly had an effect to make him exceedingly quarrelsome, savage, and dangerous, that he had when in liquor frequently threatened the life of his wife, and others, and that the prisoner had, more -than once, been called upon to protect his wife and family froni his drunken fury, and that his habits and character were well known and understood by all about him.

The judge refused to admit the evidence, and ruled that no evidence of his drinking, or habits, could be received at any other time than on the day aforesaid.

The argument of the defendant’s counsel is, that if the defendant had good reason to believe, that Nathaniel, the deceased, intended to kill him, and that he burst open the door with that intent, that the evidence of the savage and dangerous character of Nathaniel, when in liquor, and his habits of drinking ardent spirits, should have been admitted to relieve the defendant from the imputation of guilt, *247because it would be inferred that he acted promptly to preserve his own life; that his motive was justifiable.

A case in 5 Yerger, 459, and the cases of the United States v. Wiltberger, 3 Washington's C. C. R. 515, and Selfridge’s case are cited in support of the positions assumed by the counsel for the defendant. Wiltberger’s case was finally decided in the Supreme Court of the United, States, on a question of jurisdiction, in favor of the prisoner, notwithstanding the verdict against him in the Circuit Court. 5 Wheat. 76. But to the law, as stated to the jury by Judge Washington, upon the branch of the case, in any degree applicable to the present topic, we cordially assent. “ A man may oppose force to force in defence of his person, his family, or property, against one, who manifestly endeavors by surprize or violence to commit a felony, as murder, robbery or the like. But to justify killing the aggressor Ms apparent intent must be to commit a felony. That apparent intent is to be collected from the attending circumstances, the manner of the assault, the nature of the weapon used, and the like, and it must appear that the danger was imminent, and the species of resistance used, necessary to avert it.”

Of the benefit of all these attending circumstances, the defendant, Field, availed himself on the trial, through the faithfulness and ability of his counsel.

The trial of Selfridge took place in 1806. That of the United States v. Wiltberger, in 1819. And perhaps it would be doing no injustice to the high desert of the learned Judge Washington, who presided in the latter trial, to imagine that he might have had the benefit of the lucid charge of the late Chief Justice Parsons to the grand jury, so far as it is made known, in the commencement of the report of Selfridge’s trial, as well as of the interlocutory decision, so to speak, of Judge Parker, and his charge on summing up to the jury of trials. The coincidence of expression is striking. Parsons C. J. had charged the grand jury, that a bare fear, however well grounded, unaccompanied by any open act, indicative of such an intention, will not warrant him in killing.

Austin, the young man slain, was the son of a gentleman, against whom the defendant, Selfridge, had published in a newspaper a libel on the morning of the conflict. The deceased was standing with a hickory cane in his hand near the corner of Suffolk build*248ings, in Boston. Having cast his eyes upon Selfridge, who was coming down, crossing State-street diagonally towardjthe U. S. Bank, his hands behind him, outside of his coat, without'any thing in them; Austin shifted his cane into his right hand, stepped quick from the side-walk to the pavement, advanced upon the defendant with.his arm uplifted. As the deceased approached, the defendant put his right hand into his pocket and took out his pistol, while his left arm was raised to protect his head from an impending blow. The defendant turned, stepped one foot back, a blow fell upon the head of the defendant, and the pistol was discharged at the deceased, at one and the same instant. Several blows were afterward given, and attempted to be parried by the defendant, who threw his pistol at the deceased, seized upon his cane, which was wrested from him by the deceased, who becoming exhausted, fell down, and in a few minutes expired.

The late learned and excellent Judge Parker, alike distinguished for native sagacity, courtesy of manners, benevolence, and intrepidity in discharge of duty, who, jnevious to his advancement to the station of Chief Justice, presided at the trial of Selfridge, in charging the jury, doubted whether self-defence could in any case be set up, when the killing happened in consequence of an assault only, unless the assault be made with a weapon which, if used at all, would probably produce death. The stress of the case, in the Judge’s mind, was for the jury to settle whether the defendant could probably have saved himself from death, or enormous bodily harm, by retreating to the wall, or throwing himself into the arms of friends who would protect him.

The case probably is cited more particularly to show, that the ruling excepted against was too circumscribed, because in Selfridge’s case an examination was had to see whether the assault was by the procurement of the defendant, when the whole story of the misunderstanding between the defendant and the deceased’s father was heard by the jury. But the Judge declared, in his charge to the jury, that he thought it was going too far back to have an influence on the trial, but which the urgency of the Attorney General, and the consent of the defendant’s counsel, finally induced the Judge to admit. On the motion to admit the evidence, he observed that his own opinion was, that nothing was proper evidence excepting what *249took place on the same day, or very shortly before ; and more particularly, that any thing which went to show a previous quarrel with another person, or even with the same person, was not proper, the law being clear that no provocation by words would justify blows.

So far, then, as we apprehend the law on this subject, we perceive nothing in two of the cases cited by the defendant’s counsel, militating with the ruling of the Judge, in the case at bar. Tho case cited from Yager's Reports, we have not been so happy as to see. We regret it the more, because of the high reputation of the Court and of the reporter. We must be contented to take the law as we find it this side of the Alleghanies.

It would not be allowable to show on the trial of an indictment, that the prisoner has a general disposition to commit the same kind of offence, as that charged against him. I Phil. Xh. 143. Although the deceased may have been a savage and quarrelsome man, when intoxicated, he still was entitled to the protection of the law. He was not, from any evidence, unlawfully in the house. We look in vain among the attending circumstances of the melancholy catastrophe, for a provocation, or an excuse, for the resort to the deadly weapon, which the defendant used to destroy the life of liis victim. And to allow the introduction of evidence of the character of the deceased, and his habits of drinking at other times, and their consequences, could have no legal efficacy in reducing the crime of which the defendant stood charged, to justifiable or excusable homicide.

The permission given to the defendant, as to evidence of what transpired that day, was as liberal as the principles of the administration of criminal justice would authorize the Court to grant.

The exceptions are overruled.

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