аfter stating the ease: The motion to quash was properly disallowed. It was based upon the ground of duplicity in the indictment, as the defendants were charged therein with a secret assault upon two persons, Neal Elliott and A. B. Moore. Motions of this kind are not favored. “The courts usually refuse to quash on the application of the defendant where the indictment is for a serious offense, unless upon
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tbe plainest and clearest grounds, but will drive tbe party to a demurrer, or motion in arrest of judgment, or writ of error,” as tbe case may require.
S. v. Colbert,
The defendants next complain of the instruction to the jury that “malice is presumed from the use of a deadly weаpon,” but this was not all of what the judge said, for immediately he told the jury, “if you find beyond a reasonable doubt from the evidence that deadly weapons were intentionally used by the defendants in committing an assault upon the said Neal Elliott and A. B. Moore without reasonable excuse therefor, if you find that an assault was committed upon them by the defendants, the defendants will be presumed to have acted maliciously.” The statute provides that if any person shall maliciously commit an assault and battery with any deadly weapon upon another by waylaying or otherwise, in a secret manner, with intent to kill such other person, he shall be guilty of a felony and punishable by imprisonment in jail or the penitentiary for not less than twelve months nor more than twenty years, or by a fine not exceeding $2,000, or both, in the discretion of the court. Revisal, sec. 3621. It has always been understood that malice, as used in statutes describing an offense or a wrong, means, in its legal sense, a wrongful act, done intentionally, without just cause or excuse. If, without cause or provocation, a blow is given to a person, likely to produce death or great bodily harm, it is done of malice, because done intentionally and willfully, without any excuse. This is general malice, as distinguished from particular malicе, which is ill-will against a person, and is required to be shown under some statutes, but not where the act itself implies a bad motive or a wicked heart. This definition originated, we believe, with
Justice Bayley
in
Bromage v. Prosser,
4 Barn, and Creswell, 255, and has been almost unanimously adopted ever since. It was applied to criminal offenses in a very lucid opinion by
Chief Justice Shaw
in
Com. v. York,
9 Metcalf (50 Mass.), 93, who said: “In
Wills v. Noyes,
*186 But Rex v. Matthew Hunt, 2 English Crown Cases (1 Moody), 93, is precisely in point, the facts bearing a close likeness to those in this case. The prisoner was indicted upon a statute for a felonious and malicious assault, and was tried before Mr. Justice Qasselee at the Lent assizes for Cambridge, in the year 1825, for the offense, the specific intent chаrged being, in the three first counts, to prevent his apprehension for a larceny of the property of 'William Headley in the night-time, and, in the last count, to do the prosecutor some grievous bodily harm. He had cut Richard Cambridge, a servant of Headley, who was assisting the latter in arresting him. There was a conviction, the jury fíúding specially that he intended to do grievous bodily harm to anybody upon whom his blow might alight, though the particular cut was not calculated to do such harm. The wound of Cambridge got well in a week. The learned judge respited the sentence until the opinion of the judges could be taken, it having been contended by Pryme, his counsel, that there was no evidence of malice against Cambridge, who was cut, but against Headley only, and that upon the statute general malice was not sufficient, but it must be actual malice against the particular person; but Lord Chief Justice Best and Littledale, J., held, upon grave consideration, “That general malice was sufficient under the statute, without particular malice against the person cut, and that if there was an intent to do grievous bodily harm, it was immaterial whether grievous bodily harm was done.” It was also held that, “On an indictment for maliciously cutting, malice against the individual cut is not essential; general malice is sufficient; an intent to do grievous bodily harm is sufficient, though the cut is slight and not in a vital part; the question is not what the wound is, but what wound was intended.”
This exception of defendants, therefore, is equally untenable. What is said in
S. v. Jennings,
There can be no doubt, in any view of the facts, that the assault was a secret one within the meaning of the statute. The defendants were assembled near an old empty house about midnight; they saw the policemen approaching, and one of them said, “Yonder comes two of them G— d— policemen; let’s kill them,” and Sikes fired two shots and “shot Moore down,” and then fired two more shots. The light of Moore’s lantern flashed in Sikes’ face, when he said, “Take-that light out of my
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face,” and at once fired tbe first shot. Sikes was recognized by Elliott by tbe flash of tbe lamp in Moоre’s band. Moore was evidently unconscious of Sikes’ presence when tbe latter fired, and tbe court, at defendant’s request, charged tbe jury that, if they believed tbe evidence, they should acquit Sikes of a secret assault on Neal Elliott, because be saw them by tbe flash of tbe lantern. Eut Knotts and Helms shot Elliott before be was aware of their presence, and if Sikes was present, aiding and abetting this assault, be is equally guilty with them, but be is surely guilty, with tbe others, of a secret assault upon Moore. They were all concealed in tbe darkness and behind a bouse, when they opened fire, and Moore fell at tbe first shot, before be knew they wеre there or bad any opportunity to defend himself. This case falls obviously within tbe intent and spirit of tbe statute, and also within its very letter. Tbe attack was made under tbe cover of darkness and tbe defendants were as effectually concealed as if they bad been- lying in wait in an ambush. If tbe State’s testimony is believed, tbe jury could well have inferred therefrom that this officer of tbe law, A. B. Moore, was shot down while acting in tbe discharge of bis duties and when be was utterly unconscious of tbe presence of bis assailants. This is all that is necessary to sustain an indictment for a secret assault, according to all tbe authorities, from
Jennings' case,,
It was contended that defendant Will Stamey was not guilty, as be took no part in tbe assault; but we think otherwise. He was there, furthering by bis presence and bis action, sympathy, and encouragement tbe common design. If tbe defendants were banded together with a common purpose, and Sikes shot Moore when Moore was unconscious of bis presence, then all would be guilty of a secret assault upon Moore. If in furtherance of tbe common purpose Knotts and Helms shot Elliott when be was unconscious of their présence, then all would be guilty of a secret assault upon Elliott. He who bunts with tbe pack is responsible for tbe kill. An aider and abettor, or an accomplice, is as guilty as be who fired tbe pistols and wounded tbe policemen.
“As tire creeper that girdles the tree-trunk, the Law runneth forward and back — •
For the strength of the Pack is the Wolf, and the strength of the Wolf is the Pack.”
And so tbe Attorney-General argued to us, as we think, correctly. Stamey was present, and while perhaps not as bold and aggressive as tbe others, and while bis courage may have failed at tbe critical moment, be was equally a participant in tbe unlawful act. It is not necessary,
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however, that the accused should have been an original contriver of the mischief, for he may become a partaker in it by joining the others while it is being executed. If he concurs, no proof of agreement to concur is necessary. As soon as the union of wills for the unlawful purpose is perfected, the offense of conspiracy is complete. This joint assent-of minds, like all-other facts of a criminal case, may be established as an inference of the jury from other facts proved; in other words, by circumstantial evidence.
Spies et al. v. People,
Defendant Stamey was keeping bad company that night, giving them aid and comfort by his presence, which was by no means passive, and by his evident willingness, as all the evidence shows, to “see them out.” He was no casual or innocent onlooker, as hi's conduct, before and after the event, afforded sufficient ground upon which the jury might base a reasonable inference that he not only consented to, .but participated in, the felonious assault.
S. v. Hildreth,
The characters of defendants were not involved, as they did not take thе stand as witnesses in their own behalf, nor was there any evidence on that subject. It was said in
S. v. O’Neal,
The comments of the-solicitor were made merely in explanation of an argument of defendants" counsel and was entirely proper. Defendants cannot complain of their own wrong in provoking the discussion, as they started it. There was no harm done, anyhow.
The punishment was not unusual or excessive, but was mild as to some of the. defendants, and certainly not immoderate as to any of them. They conspired to take the life of the policemen, who were, at the time, acting strictly within the line of their duty, and in doing so committed a crime of grave enormity. Besides, there are other matters which show *191 that they belong to the criminal class and that they were abroad that night for no good purpose, all of which the' judge might well consider in awarding punishment.
We
may say, before closing, that we have not overlooked the cases cited by defendants’ learned counsel (who have defended them with great skill and ability) upon the question of duplicity in the indictment, viz.,
S. v. Hall,
We have carefully examined and reviewed the record, and there is no error that we have been able to find by diligent search.
No error.
