76 Mo. 121 | Mo. | 1882
The defendant was jointly indicted with Aaron Harpster at a special term of the Clinton county circuit court, held on the 15th day of December, 1879. He is charged by the indictment with murder in the first degree in killing one Henry C. Culver, and Harpster is charged with being an accessory after the fact. At the April term, 1880, of said court, on defendant’s application, a change of venue was awarded to the circuit court of Clay county, and at the February term, 1881, of said court, a
There are a great number of grounds stated in the motion for new trial, but we shall only consider such of them as counsel have deemed of sufficient importance to call our attention to in their briefs, the first of which is, that the court erred in overruling defendant’s motion to dismiss the cause, for the reason that it did not appear from the record that the grand jury returning the? indictment had been sworn. "We find, upon an examination of the record, that the transcript first filed by the circuit clerk of Clinton county in the office of the clerk of the Clay circuit court did not show that the grand jury had been sworn, but we also find that before the determination of the motion for new trial the prosecuting attorney suggested a diminution of the record, and upon such suggestion being made the court awarded a certiorari directing the clerk of the Clinton county circuit court to send up a true, complete and perfect transcript. The transcript sent up and certified to by the said clerk in obedience to the certiorari shows that the grand jury was sworn; and the motion for new trial based on that ground was properly overruled.
The court instructed the jury as to what constituted murder in the first and second degrees, and also as to excusable and justifiable homicide. No complaint is made as to the propriety of the instructions on behalf of the State except to the fifth, which is as follows:
5. The right of self-defense does not imply the right of attack, and it will not avail in any case where the difficulty is sought for and induced by the party himself—commenced or brought on by any willful act of his toward his antagonist, or where' he voluntarily and of his own free will enters into a difficulty. If the defendant was expecting a difficulty with the deceased, his right to defend himself did not arise until he had done everything in his power to avoid the necessity. If he could have safely avoided using the weapon he was not justifiable in taking the life of the deceased.
This instruction in the first part of it asserts a correct principle of law, and the latter part is but an application of it to the case before the court, and taking it in connection with the third instruction given for defendant, the law was fairly put to jury. Commonwealth v. Drum, 58 Pa. St. 9; People v. Sullivan, 3 Seld. (N. Y.) 396; 1 Wharton Crim. Law, § 486. The said third instruction was as follows:
3. That if the jury believe from the evidence that the defendant did not know the deceased, Culver, or his official position, and that defendant, with one Aaron Harpster, had started home, and while on their horses the deceased seized hold of the defendant and the reins of the bridle or halter on his horse, and that the defendant, from the circumstances, had a reasonable cause to apprehend a design on the part of the deceased to kill him, or to do him some great personal injury, and that he had reasonable cause to apprehend immediate danger of such design being accomplished, then the killing is justifiable m law. And
The action of the court in refusing the following instruction is also excepted to :
While the principle announced in the instruction is abstractly correct, it was misleading in this, that it ignored the question of knowledge on the part of Johnson as to the fact that Culver was an officer of the law, as well as the purpose of the assault, and as the third instruction for defendant covered substantially the same ground, there was no error committed in refusing it.
If defendant did not know deceased Culver was an officer and he killed him without malice and the resistance
The evidence in this case tended strongly to show that defendant knew the deceased was the marshal of the town of Cameron, that he was after him for the purpose of arresting him for shooting off his pistol in the streets of said town, that defendant had threatened, a short time before the shooting, that he would fix the marshal if he “ fooled with him,” that at the time of such threat he exhibited two pistols, and but a few minutes before the tragedy he procured cartridges and a third pistol; and that when deceased directed defendant to halt and caught his horse by the bridle defendant immediately shot the deceased and rode off, he being on horseback at the time. Under this evidence an instruction defining manslaughter would not have been proper.
"We perceive nothing in the record which would justify our interference with the judgment, and it is hereby affirmed,