55 S.E. 69 | N.C. | 1906
The defendant was indicted for an assault on Johnson Smith. It appears that two mules had been attached by the Sheriff in the suit of *460 I. H. Kearney v. J. F. Scott, and by him delivered to Kearney as his agent or bailee. The jury returned a special verdict, from which we make the following extract: "In July, 1906, Richard Perry, by order of Kearney, harnessed the mules to a wagon, and together with Johnson Smith started to haul lumber. The wife and sister of the defendant went out and told them to carry the mules back to the stable and let them stay there. In a few minutes John Conyers came back (583) driving the same team, and with the said Johnson Smith was preparing to load the wagon with lumber, the lumber being near the house of the prisoner. The prisoner went to the place with a pistol in his hand, pointed at the driver, the said John Conyers, and ordered him to turn loose the reins, which he did, leaving the team standing. The prisoner turned to Johnson Smith and asked him what he was doing there. Upon being informed that he was there helping to haul the lumber, the prisoner pointed the pistol at him and ordered him to leave, which he also did, the prisoner still having the pistol in his hand. The mules and wagon were then sent back to the stables of Kearney. No shot was fired from the pistol. The parties in charge of the mules were acting under orders of Kearney." Upon this verdict, the defendant was adjudged guilty, and from the sentence of the Court he appealed.
Whether Kearney, as bailee of the Sheriff, had the right to use the property, and if he did use it or permit it to be used in the manner described in the special verdict, whether the officer thereby lost his special property in the mules so that the defendant could thereafter retake them, are questions we prefer not discuss, as the case can well be decided upon another ground which clearly sustains the judgment of the Court. The rights and duties of a sheriff with respect to property in his custody by virtue of a levy under attachment are considered in 1 Shinn on Attachment, 392. See, also, S. v. Black,
A person may lawfully use so much force as is reasonably necessary to protect his property or to retake it, when it has wrongfully been taken by another or is withheld without authority; but if he (584) use more force than is required for the purpose, he will be guilty of an assault. So if one deliberately and at the outset kills another with a deadly weapon in order to prevent a mere trespass, it is *461
murder; and if he offers to strike with a deadly weapon or to shoot with a pistol, under the same circumstances, before resorting to a milder mode of prevention, he shows ruthlessness and a wanton disregard of human life and social duty. S. v. Myerfield,
The right to protect person or property by the use of such force as may be necessary is subject to the qualification that human life must not be endangered or great bodily harm threatened except, perhaps, in urgent cases. The person whose right is assailed must first use moderate means before resorting to extreme measures. Clark's Cr. Law (2 Ed.), 241, 242; S. v. Crook,
Those are the leading cases and are considered as having settled the law in this State upon the subject. When they are tested by the principle there announced, and it is commended both by common sense and a just regard for the public peace and private security, we find no difficulty in adjudging the facts found in the special verdict sufficient to establish the defendant's guilt. John Conyers and his companion, Johnson Smith, who is the prosecutor, were putting lumber on the wagon *462
when the defendant suddenly appears on the scene and points a pistol, presumably loaded (S. v. Cherry,
No Error.
(586)