123 Mo. App. 655 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1907
The prosecuting attorney of Cooper county filed an information against defendant before a justice of the peace, which in separate counts charged him with the offense of assault and battery inflicted on the person of Willie Brown. The assault alleged in the first count occurred on August 26, 1905, and that in the second on March 1st of the same year. The information is founded on section 1850, Revised Statutes 1899, which provides: “Any person who shall assault or beat or wound another, under snch circumstances as not to constitute any other offense herein defined, shall, upon conviction, be punished by a fine not exceeding one hundred dollars, or imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding six months, or by both such fine and imprisonment.” The trial in the circuit court, where the cause was taken on appeal, resulted in the conviction of defendant and his punishment was fixed at the maximum penalty provided in the statute.
Willie Brown is an orphan, who was twelve years old at the time of the commission of the first offense charged. About two years before that event, defendant, a farmer living in Cooper county, procured the boy from a charitable institution in St. Louis under a deed of adoption and from that time stood in the relation of a parent to him. On August 25, 1905, the boy ran away from the home of defendant where he was domiciled and went to the home of another farmer named Martin. He was recaptured by defendant, but late in the evening ran away again and stopped at the same place, where he stayed during the night. Defendant immediately started in pursuit and during his quest called at the Martin
Relative to the assault charged in the second count of the information, the evidence adduced by the State discloses that it consisted of a severe whipping administered by means of a heavy whip called a blacksnake. It is unnecessary to detail the facts of this chastisement pro and con. Suffice it to say, that the State produced
First, it is insisted that defendant cannot be prosecuted for common assault under section 1850 of the statutes for the reason that the provisions of section 1857 apply exclusively to offenses of this character committed against an infant by his legal custodian. Section 1850 merely provides a penalty for the commission of a common law offense. It has application to an assault and battery committed by a natural parent on the person of his child unless it should be said that the provisions of section 1857 reasonably construed should govern even in cases where 'that relationship exists, and that in dealing with the entire subject of such offenses the statute superseded the common law and in effect repealed it.
An analysis of section 1857 convinces us that it was the legislative intent to restrict its application to cases where the relation between the parties to the assault was not that of parent and child but that of master and apprentice or some analogous relationship. The meaning of the clause “or other person having the legal care and control of any infant” is modified by the context. It has relation to the preceding words “master' ... of an
Preliminary to the disposition of other points made against the information and the instructions given, it is essential to pronounce the test by which, in a given case, corporal punishment inflicted on a child by his parent is to be classified as a lawful chastisement or as an assault for which the parent should be punished. The law accords to parents a wide latitude in which to exercise discretion in the enforcement of family discipline. The extent and nature, of the punishment to be applied as a corrective of youthful disobedience or excess is wisely left to the judgment of the parent whose natural love for his child is deemed to provide an efficient barrier against any impulse to punish with undue severity. The parent
It was not necessary to charge an intent in the information. The allegation that defendant “did then and there unlawfully assault,”,etc., sufficiently advised him of the offense he was charged with having committed. The use of the word “unlawfully” necessarily implied that the assault was delivered with criminal intent. [State v. Boyer, supra; State v. Cox, 43 Mo. App. 328.]
Nor was it error to direct a verdict of guilty on the finding that defendant “inflicted unreasonable, cruel and excessive' punishment on the witness, Willie Brown,” etc., without including in the hypothesis that the punishment was inflicted with malice. The finding that the punishment was unreasonable,, cruel and excessive necessarily included the finding that it was inflicted with criminal intent. [State v. Boyer, supra; Com. v. Randall, supra.] And this is all that is required to constitute an assault under the principles we have stated.
The use of the word, punishment, in the instruction without, qualifying it with the adjective, corporal, or with one of similar import is not subject to criticism. The argument that the jury could have convicted defendant on the finding that the punishment consisted of verbal abuse is too farfetched for serious consideration. If the jury was composed of reasonable men, as we assume it was, it could not have put such construction., on the term employed.
Objection is made to the rulings of the learned trial judge in permitting the State to offer evidence to show with reference to the assault charged', in the first count of the information “.that the defendant compelled the prosecuting witness to walk home a distance of three or four miles; that the road was hilly and in places
A careful inspection of the entire record discloses that defendant was accorded a fair and impartial trial. Other points made by his counsel do not impress us as being of enough importance to merit special notice. The judgment is affirmed.