25 Del. 537 | New York Court of General Session of the Peace | 1911
charging the jury:
Gentlemen of the jury: — William Hill, the prisoner, is charged in this indictment with having committed, on the fifteenth day of October last in this county, an assault upon one John Spencer, with the intent him the said Spencer to murder.
This case differs from the ordinary case of an assault with intent to commit murder in this: That the person whom the indictment charges that the prisoner assaulted and intended to murder was not the person who was actually assaulted and whom the prisoner really intended to murder. That is to say, the state contends that the prisoner assaulted William H. Waters, and in the effort to consummate such attempt shot one Spencer, an entirely innocent person who had taken no part in the quarrel, or in the crap game in which the prisoner and Waters had been engaged.
This court in the case of State v. Sloanaker, Houst. Cr. Cas. 62, in charging the jury, used the following language:
“That if they were satisfied that the pistol was fired by the prisoner unintentionally and by accident merely, however imprudent, or improper it may have been for him to be handling or examining it loaded in such a place and at such a time, he ought not to be convicted of either the misdemeanor, or the felonious intention alleged in the indictment. But if, on the contrary, they were satisfied by the proof that he discharged it intentionally and wantonly or recklessly into the crowd of persons assem
It is not necessary, therefore, to charge you with respect to the crime of murder, or with respect to the essential ingredient of such crime, to wit, malice, because under the evidence in this case you cannot find the prisoner guilty of anything more than an assault.
It will be for you to determine from the evidence whether the prisoner is guilty or not guilty of an assault, bearing in mind the law as we have stated it.
Verdict, guilty of assault only.