— The appeal in this instance is taken by defendant from the judgment of the trial court, which, based on the verdict of the jury, adjudged and sentenced
The indictment was for murder in the first degree. There had been a mistrial, at the end of wMch defendant was admitted to bail in the sum of $5,000.
Briefly told, the substance and general outline of the evidence is this: Jeff Hadley who was hilled on the sixth of May, 1896, had about a year prior to that date, induced Louella, one of the daughters of defendant, to run away with him and get married. This was done after defendant, not liking the bad habits Hadley had, forbade him to visit his house. These circumstances naturally produced bad blood between, the parties, and gave rise to reciprocal threats being made by them; defendant on the occasion of the daughter being carried away by Hadley and married, remarking: “It looks like I ought to take my gun and go kill him” or words to that effect. On his part, Hadley was not backward in making threats respecting his recalcitrant father-in-law, by exhibiting a knife and revolver and inquiring how they would do for “Old Seal ?” etc., etc. These threats of Hadley’s had been told to defendant.
Time went on, however, and occasionally Louella would visit her old home, and on perhaps two occasions her husband accompanied her, and on one occasion, she visited the house of her father, the Sunday before the homicide, which occurred on Wednesday, and took dinner there.
Defendant had also visited his daughter, perhaps once or twice, and taken a meal or two with her, her husband being present. The families lived something over two miles apart, and both were by no means in affluent circumstances. Defendant owned, and lived on, a little place of his own, and Hadley had rented a forty of his wife’s brother-in-law, who lived also on the same place and about a quarter of a mile distant. Defendant was about fifty years old, had been twice married, and of the first marriage there had resulted
Alma was sixteen years old in April, 1896. On the afternoon of the eighth or ninth of that month she went to the house of her brother-in-law Hadley and remained with him and her sister over night. It is alleged that during the night he ravished her. On her return home the next day she had evidently been weeping, and her sister Caroline, with whom she slept, frequently would be awakened nights by her sister’s crying, and finding her weeping would ask what was the matter, when she, without reply and still weeping, would turn her face to the wall. This continued for several weeks. On the Sunday next before Wednesday, May 6, 1896, Alma, who was not permitted to meet George Stephens, her betrothed, at her father’s, met him at E. S. Tate’s, her mother’s father, and there without grossness she imparted to him the secret of her said story. Eeceiving this information, Stephens conveyed it the same day to Dan Tate and John Tate, the uncles of Alma, and also to Eansford, her brother. By Wednesday morning following, the information of the matter had reached the ears of E. S. Tate, the grandfather, who came down to the field on his place where Stephens was at work, and there, at his request, Stephens told what he had heard to the grandfather, and to Web Morse who was with the latter. Tate, the grandfather, not being on good terms with defendant, and thinking it best he should be informed of the matter in hand, asked Morse to go over to Grugin, who was something about three quarters distant at work in his field, and tell him about it. Morse accordingly taking with him Ancil Milan as Tate asked him, went and delivered the message of old man Tate. Morse speaking of this message to Grugin, said-: “I told Mr. Grugin that the report was that Jeff Hadley had
When Milan left between 10 and 11 o’clock, in order to tell Tate that his message had been delivered, he promised to come by on his return home and see defendant. He did so, arriving sometime after the noon hour. On Milan’s arrival, he told defendant that as Hadley might get the news of the discovery of his crime, he might get away, and advised ■defendant that he had better go and get him and turn him over to the officers. Having no doubt now, as defendant, ■states, of Hadley’s guilt, and fearing he would escape as suggested by Milan, defendant says: “I thought I would go up there and see Mr. Hadley and take charge of him, until I could get an officer.” With this end in view, defendant took his double-barrel shotgun and four shells loaded with ■ordinary shot, and started to the place where Pladley lived. Pie arrived there about 3 o’clock in the afternoon, saw Pladley at work in the field planting, corn," spoke to his daughter Louella, as he crossed the fence, and approaching Hadley, and when within a few feet of him, said: "Jeff, what ever possessed you to rape Alma, my daughter f Hadley replied,"! will do as I damn please about it!" Defendant says that as Pladley made this insolent reply,' “He pitched forward as though he was coming at me — coming to me. I had my gun on my shoulder at that time and when he made his spring forward I pulled my gun off my shoulder and shot him. I then started home; from where I was standing in my tracks here I would pass close up, probably three or four feet; I don’t know exactly. As I passed him, I don’t know the cause of it, but I shot him the second time, but why I made the second shot, I don’t know; but I did it, and P walked straight towards home. I then met Jenson and his wife and the woman hallooed at me and wanted to
This history of the tragedy is as succinct a statement as I could make of the facts embodied in this voluminous record. Of course, I have not deemed it necessary to recount the various items of testimony touching what defendant is alleged to have said both before he took up his shotgun and started on his errand and after he had surrendered himself and was lodged in jail, tending to show that his purpose was other than that he testified to as above stated. His story not being an unreasonable one, not stamped with improbability, he was entitled to -have the theory which it embodied presented to the jury by appropriate instructions, and speaking about instructions, the court at the request of the State, gave twenty, covering almost six pages of closely printed matter. At the request of defendant, the court gave nine instructions, modifying two of them. Defendant then asked another instruction which the court gave with a modification; thereupon'defendant asked the court to modify that modification. This being refused, defendant asked the court to give seventeen other instructions covering six more closely printed pages. Judging by this record, and the immense acreage of the instructions asked, given, modified and refused, the trial judge must have had his patience sorely tried. I do not intend to encumber our reports with them, lest by so doing, I encourage and foster an imitation of their vastness and “damnable iteration.” In discussing them I shall only refer to such as especially require comment. And in passing, it is well enough to say that the instructions which begin the long series given on request of the State are in usual and appropriate form and correctly, in connection with others, lay down the definition of murder in the first and second degrees. Omitting any discussion of the instructions at the present, the subject will
First, did the outrage perpetrated by Hadley on his young sister-in-law Alma, defendant’s daughter, authorize and require a submission to the jury of the question whether defendant’s shooting Hadley, was done in “hot blood” and therefore only manslaughter?
Second, did the insolent and defiant reply of Hadley when questioned by defendant as to the vile deed he has done to the latter’s daughter, authorize and require a submission to the jury of the question whether the words used by Hadley were such as to generate a sufficient or reasonable provocation so as to produce hot blood, and thus lower the grade of the homicide in either degree to manslaughter?
Third, whether certain instructions given at the instance of the State should have been refused ?
Fourth, whether a certain instruction asked by defendant should have been given either as asked or in a modified form?
1. In discussing the first question propounded, we are necessarily brought into contact with that line of cases which treat of “hot blood” and how it may be engendered. Among ■other familiar instances furnished by the books are those where a husband finds a man in the act of adultery with his wife and immediately kills him or her, that is accounted but manslaughter, and it is the lowest degree of that offense; and therefore in such a case the court directed the burning in the hand to be gently inflicted, because there could not be •a greater provocation. [Sir T. Raym, 212.]
According to the old books such discovery of the wife’s ■adultery must have been made in the very act, and the killing must have been done “directly on the spot” in order' to reduce the homicide to manslaughter. [4 Black Com. 191; 8 Grreenl. Ev. (14 Ed.), sec. 122.] The husband must have
But since the law, as other sciences, makes progress, it is no longer accounted necessary that a husband should have "ocular inspection,” etc. It suffices if the provocation be so recent and so strong that the husband could not be considered at the time master of his own understanding. [State v. Holme, 54 Mo. 153.] In the case just cited, the case of Maher v. People, 10 Mich. 212, was approved, the facts in that case having been these: “The prisoner offered evidence tending to show the commission-of adultery by H. with the prisoner’s wife., Within half an hour before the assault, the proof showed that the prisoner saw them going into the woods together under circumstances calculated strongly to impress upon his mind the belief of an adulterous purpose; that he followed after them to the woods; that they were seen not long after coming from the woods, and that the prisoner followed on in hot pursuit, and was informed on the way that they had committed adultery the day before; that he followed H. into a saloon in a state of excitement, and there committed the assault. The court held, that the evidence was proper as from it, it would have been competent for the jury to find that the act was committed in consequence of the passion excited by the provocation, and in a state of mind which would have given to the homicide had death ensued, the character of manslaughter only. The evidence showed, that the prisoner in following H. from the woods was laboring under great excitement, that, when a friend told him on the way what had happened the day before, his passion was increased and that, when he arrived at the saloon, the perspiration had broken out all over his face.” And in that case> it was ruled that the question as to what is an adequate or reasonable provocation, is one of fact for the jury, and so also is the question whether a
And in Maher’s case it is said: “To the question, what shall be considered in law a reasonable or adequate provocation for such a state of mind, so as to give to a homicide, committed under its influence, the character of manslaughter; on principle, the answer, as a general rule, must be, anything the natural tendency of which would be to produce such a state of mind in ordinary men, and which the jury are satisfied did produce it in the case before them. . . . . It is doubtless, in one sense, the province of the court to define what, in law, will constitute a reasonable or adequate provocation, but not, I think, in ordinary cases, to determine whether the provocation proved in the particular case is sufficient or reasonable. This is essentially a question of fact, and to be decided with reference to the peculiar fact of each particular case. As a general rule, the court, after informing the jury to what extent the passions must be aroused and reason obscured to render the homicide manslaughter, should inform them that the provocation must be one, the tendency of which would be to produce such a degree of excitement and disturbance in the minds of ordinary men; and if they should find such provocation from the facts proved, and should further find that it did produce that effect in the particular instance, and that the homicide was the result of such provocation, it would give it the character of manslaughter.....The law can not justly assume, by the light of past decisions, to catalogue all the various facts and combinations of facts which shall be held to constitute reasonable or adequate provocation. Scarcely two past cases can be found which are identical in all their circumstances; and there is no reason to hope for greater uniformity in future. Provocations will be given without reference to any previous model, and the passions they excite will not consult the precedents. The same principles
In Cheek v. State, 35 Ind. 492, it was ruled on a trial for murder, it is error to exclude evidence tending to show that the person killed by the defendant had entered into a
Commenting on the subject of the “Adequacy of the Cause of Excitement,”-Bishop remarks: “The Doctrine.— Under this head, appearing as it does in the books in illustrations rather than in rules, hardly admits of reduction to rule. Not attempting an impossible exactness, we may deem it in a general way to be that the law accepts human nature as God has made it, or as it manifests itself in the ordinary man, and every sort of conduct in others which commonly does in fact so excite the passions of the mass of men as practically to enthrall their reason, the law holds to be adequate cause.” [2 Bishop’s New Or. Law, sec. 701.]
Touching the subject of cooling time, Wharton observes: “Of course, hot blood could continue to exist, even after a day’s delay, but this, which would sustain a conviction of manslaughter, is very different from a defense of excusable homicide, ending in an acquittal.” [1 Whart. Crim. Law (10 Ed.), sec. 496.]
Elsewhere, the same author when discussing the point in hand, says: “Men’s temperaments, also, vary greatly as
In Biggs v. State, 29 Ga. 723, Parish had entered the bedchamber of Biggs, and insulted his wife by a personal indignity and by words. Biggs permitted Parish to escape, •with threats of punishment should he remain in the city. The next morning the would-be seducer appeared at the hotel breakfast table, and brazenly seated himself within two chairs of his intended victim, whereupon Biggs shot at, but unfortunately missed him. Being indicted and tried for an assault with intent to murder, the trial court refused to admit evidence of what transpired in the bedchamber the night before, and this upon the theory that sufficient time had elapsed for passion to subside, and for reason to resume her sway. But this refusal was held error, Lumpkin, L, saying: “To shut out the scene which transpired in the bedchamber, is to deprive the jury of the power of appreciating the transport of passion kindled in the bosom of Biggs, by the presence of Parish.”'
In this connection it must not be forgotten what a high estimate the men of all nations have placed on the chastity of their women and on the inviolability of their persons. Some of the fiercest tumults and wars have had their origin in assaults made on the modesty or honor of women. Notwithstanding this, the law as yet has made no
Lord Macaulay in his “Report on the Indian Code,” very forcibly points out the gross injustice of accounting a husband who slays an adulterer, found with his wife, only guilty of manslaughter, and yet holds a high-spirited brother who in a paroxysm of rage kills the seducer of his sister, guilty of murder. Proceeding further, Lord Macaulay says: “There is another class of provocations which Mr. Livingston does not allow to be adequate in law, but which have been,, and while human nature remains unaltered, will be, adequate in fact to produce the most tremendous effects. Suppose a person to take indecent liberties with a modest female, in the presence of her father, her brother, her husband, or her lover, such an assault might have no tendency to cause pain or danger; yet history tells us what effects have followed from such assaults. Such an assault produced the Sicilian Vespers. Such an assault called forth the memorable blow of Wat Tyler. It is difficult to conceive any class of cases in which the intemperance of anger ought to be treated with greater lenity. So far, indeed, should we be from ranking a man who acted like Tyler with murderers, that we conceive that a judge would exercise a sound discretion in sentencing such a man to the lowest punishment fixed by the law for manslaughter.”
When testifying before the “Homicide Amendment Committee,” in 1874, Blackburn, L, said: “Supposing a man is actually keeping company with a young woman; she can not be called his sister or his ward, or even under his protection; and suppose a ruffian steps forward, and in the presence of the other, pulls up her petticoats, and catches hold of her, and the other struck him down, and the man
If, as Bishop states, the “law accepts human nature as God has made it, or as it manifests itself in the ordinary man, and every sort of conduct in others which commonly does in fact so excite the passions of the mass of men as practically to enthrall their reason, the law holds to be adequate cause,” I do not see how defendant is to be denied the benefit of that theory in the painful circumstances of the present case. To him, in contemplation of law, the foul wrong done his child, though not revealed to him until the morning of the day of the homicide, was as fresh and potent-to stir his blood as if done on that very morning. If this be the case, then the law, while it softens the punishment of a husband who slays an adulterer found in his bed, surely can not be so illogical as to deny a like result to a father who slays the ravisher of his young daughter. Indeed it might well be said that in the latter case there should be greater lenity shown by the law than in the former, because the wife has been a consenting party to the homicide-producing adultery. The trial court while it admitted the evidence which preceded the killing, yet by its instructions denied that such evidence had any effect to lower the grade of defendant’s crime from either degree of murder to manslaughter. If the evidence referred to, was to be denied any effect, then it should not have been admitted. The instructions for the State under review, were also erroneous in that they dictated to the jury as a matter of law, what was a sufficient or reasonable provocation, and what a sufficient cooling time. They were also guilty of the serious fault, prohibited by the statutes and condemned by numerous decisions of this court, that of commenting on the evidence, to wit, by stating to the jury that “if the jury find that such information was
Again, the instruction is given, “that if they believe from the evidence that Grugin was informed that Hadley had ravished his daughter about one month before, and that information came to Grugin about nine or ten o’clock in the forenoon, and that in the afternoon Grugin went a distance of about three miles and shot and killed Hadley in his corn field at work because of his (Grugin’s) anger on account of said rape and his belief that said rape had occurred, then the jury should find the defendant guilty of murder,” etc. These comments on this point occur some four or five times. Such comments are sufficient of themselves to cause a reversal.
The tenth instruction given on behalf of the State told the jury, “that under the law mere excitement or agitation do not, of themselves and alone, destroy the element of deliberation in murder in the first degree,” etc., while the ninth instruction given on defendant’s request told the jury, “that in passing upon the defendant’s motives, intentions and purposes, and the reasonableness and good faith of the same, they should take into consideration any agitation and excitement of mind and feelings, if any such were shown, as well as all other facts and circumstances shown in evidence.” These two instructions can not be reconciled and were well calculated to mislead the jury, and if the prior positions taken in his opinion are correct, then the tenth instruction aforesaid is not the law.
The fifth instruction is wrong, because there were no “indications or brutality and atrocity” in the commission of the homicide, unless it can be said that homicide done by
2. The second interrogatory is next for consideration. It embodies and comprehends the question whether words constitute a sufficient or reasonable provocation in law ? Of course the books abound in utterance of the platitude that words however opprobrious constitute no provocation in law. Speaking as the organ of this court I have often uttered this platitude myself, but the statement is subject to many qualifications. The general good sense of mankind has in some instances so far qualified the rigor of what is termed the ancient rule that a statute has been passed in Texas which reduces a homicide to manslaughter where insulting words are used to or concerning a female relative, the killing is reduced to manslaughter where it occurs as soon as the parties meet after the knowledge of the insult. [9 Am. and Eng. Ency. of Law, 581.]
In Alabama, a statute provides that opprobrious words shall in some circumstances justify an assault and battery. [Riddle v. State, 49 Ala. 389.] And in that State, without any statutory provision on the subject, it has been determined that “insult by mere words ” when the defendant acts on them and he has not provoked them, may be weighed by the jury with other evidence in determining whether the killing was murder in the first or second degree. [Watson v. State, 82 Ala. 10.]
After speaking of Morley’s Case, Hale says: “Many, who were of opinion, that bare words of slighting, disdain, or contumely would not of themselves make such a provocation as to lessen the crime into manslaughter, yet were of this opinion, that if A. gives indecent language to B., and B. thereupon strikes A., but not mortally; and then A. strikes B. again, and then B. kills A. that this is but manslaughter. Eor the second stroke made a new provocation, and so it was but a sudden falling out; and though B. gave the first stroke,
Now in the case Hale supposes, it is as he says the second stroke that made a “new provocation ” but the second stroke was given by A. Then what made the old provocation? Evidently, the "indecent words” of A. which, given by A. to B., prompted the latter to give the first stroke. So in Morley’s Case, it was agreed that “if upon ill words -both of the parties suddenly fight, and one kill the other, this is but manslaughter; for it is a combat betwixt two upon a sudden heat, which is the legal description of manslaughter.” [6 How. St. Tr. 771.] In that instance, also, it must be noted that “ill words” were the provocation that made the hot blood which resulted only in manslaughter: To test this matter further, suppose no “ill words” used, what then the crime ? Evidently murder.
It is said in the books that though an insufficient assault or demonstration do not import coming violence, still it and insulting words combined, may so excite the passions as to reduce the killing to manslaughter. [2 Bishop’s New Or. Law, sec. 704.]
If the inchoate assault be naught as provocation, and the approbrious words be naught as provocation, I am unable to see how the addition of these two ciphers can make a unit. “The moment, however, the person is touched with apparent insolence, then the provocation is one which, ordinarily speaking, reduces the offense to manslaughter.” [1 Whart. Or. Law (10 Ed.), sec. 456.] And it is held that such "apparent insolence ” may be manifested in a variety of ways, as f<jr instance, by a contemptuous jostling on the street, by tweaking the nose, by filliping on the forhead, or by spitting in the face. In most of these instances and illustrations there is no physical pain or injury inflicted, the “sudden
I will now refer to some adjudications where insulting words have been held a sufficient basis for a charge or an instruction on the offense of manslaughter. Where the prisoner was indicted for the willful murder of his wife, Blackburn, L, in summing up, said: As a general rule of law, no provocation of words will reduce the crime murder to that of manslaughter, but under special circumstances there may be such a provocation of words as will have that effect; for instance, if a husband suddenly hearing from his wife that she had committed adultery, and he, having no idea of such a thing before, were thereupon to kill his wife, it might be manslaughter. Now, in this case, words spoken by the deceased just previous to the blows inflicted by the prisoner were these: 'Aye; but I’ll take no more for thee, for I will have no more children of thee. I have done it once, and I’ll do it again.’ Now, what you will have to consider is, would these words, which were spoken just previous to the blows, amount to such a provocation as would in an ordinary man, not in a man of violent or passionate disposition, provoke him in such a way as to justify him in striking her as the prisoner did?” [Reg. v. Rothwell, 12 Cox C. C. 145.] In that case (tried in 1871) the husband seized a pair of tongs, close at hand, and struck his wife three
In Reg. v. Smith, tried in 1866, a woman bad left her husband and gone off and lived in adultery with one Langley. He having died, sbe returned to her home, and her husband forgave her, but sbe did not prize this forgiveness, because on tbe next night after her return sbe violently abused him, taunting him with her preference for Langley and declaring bad be not died, sbe bad not returned. Whilst this was going on, she was so violent as to have to be held by two other women who were present; her husband sat by her on tbe seat trying to pacify her. Finally sbe broke from the women who were bolding her and repeating with much foul language her preference for Langley, spat towards her bus-band, whereupon be, who was then standing up witbin a yard of her, gave her a blow in tbe neck with a sharp pointed pocket knife, which caused her immediate death. And tbe jury were in substance charged: An assault, too slight in itself to be sufficient provocation to reduce murder to manslaughter, may become sufficient for that purpose, when coupled with words of great insult. [4 E. & E. 1066.] A verdict of guilty of manslaughter was returned.
This, case arose in Tennessee. Tbe defendant killed Jones with a deadly weapon. Jones being at defendant’s bouse, used obscene language in tbe presence of defendant’s family and at bis table. Defendant being tried, be was convicted of murder in- tbe second degree. Tbe lower court held tbe words of tbe deceased however obscene, and bis conduct however vexatious, ■ could not amount in law to reasonable and adequate provocation, and upon that view of tbe law, withdrew from tbe jury tbe consideration of tbe facts. Upon this tbe Supreme Court held: “It ought to have been left to tbe jury to determine under proper instructions, whether tbe obscene language of tbe deceased, used in tbe presence of tbe defendant’s family, and at bis table, in
In Wilson v. People, 4 Parker Cr. Rep. 619, the accused was convicted of murder in the first degree. The statutes in that State as to murder and manslaughter are the same as our own. The deceased had been struck on the head by a hatchet or some other weapon, but died, it seems, in consequence of falling into the water and drowning. The lower ■court had charged that the “heat of passion” meant by the ■statutes, could not be produced or provoked by “words of ■the most aggravated characterCommenting on this charge, Wright, L, observed: “The law, respecting the infirmities of our nature, attaches a less degree of criminality to acts of violence perpetrated under an excitement provoked by the assailed. The passions may be heated as effectually by words as by acts; and an assault may be provoked oftentimes as readily by the former as the latter. In cases of assault of the person, it has always been held that provocation by words has gone far to mitigate the legal wrong. . . . It is enough that the passions are heated by the ■acts or conduct of the one upon whom the assault is made,
So it will be seen that there are circumstances where words do amount to a provocation in law, i. e., a reasonable provocation to be submitted to the determination of the jury, and if found by them to exist, then the crime is lowered to the grade of manslaughter: If there ever was a ease to which' this principle should be applied, it would seem it should be applied to the case at bar. A father is informed that his young daughter just budding into womanhood has been ravished by his son-ipi-law, while under the supposed protection of his roof. Arriving where the son-in-law is, and making inquiry of him why he had done the foul deed, that father receives the answer, “I’ll do as I damn please about it.” This insolent and defiant reply amounted to an affirmation of Hadley’s guilt! So long as human nature remains as God made it, such audacious and atrocious avowals will be met as met by defendant. It should be held, therefore, that the words in question should have been left to the jury to say whether, in the circumstances detailed in evidence, they constituted a reasonable provocation, and if so found, that then defendant was guilty of no higher offense than manslaughter in the fourth degree.
3. Relative to one of the instructions asked by defendant but refused by the court. This instruction was. asked: “If the jury believe from the evidence that the deceased, Hadley, had intercourse with Alma Grugin in the-year 1896, and that she was then unmarried, of previously chaste character, and under the age of 18 years, then said Hadley was guilty of a felony, and this is true, even though you may further find that she consented to such intercourse.” This instruction lays down the law as announced by this court in State v. Knock, 142 Mo. 515. That Alma Grugin was of “previously chaste character,” is shown by Hadley’s
The judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded.