STATE v. LILLISTON
Supreme Court of North Carolina
May 28, 1906
141 N.C. 857
STATE v. LILLISTON.
(Filed May 28, 1906).
Homicide — Self-Defense — Recklessness — Instructions — New Trial for Newly Discovered Evidence.
- Where two men fight willingly with pistols in a crowded waiting room and a bystander was killed, both are guilty of murder, one as principal and the other as aiding and abetting.
- Malice is implied when an act dangerous to others is done so recklessly or wantonly as to evince depravity of mind and disregard of human life, and, if the death of any person is caused by such an act, it is murder.
- In an indictment for murder, the court did not err in refusing to charge that there was no evidence either of murder in the second degree or manslaughter, where the evidence is conflicting as to whether the deceased was killed by the prisoner or by another.
- An excerpt from a charge to the jury is to be construed with the context and in connection with the whole charge.
- In an indictment for murder, where the prisoner contended that he was suddenly assaulted, the court did not err in charging that in such cases the right of self-defense exists if there is apparent danger from waiting for the assistance of the law and there is no other probable means of escape.
A motion for new trial for newly discovered evidence, will not be granted, even in a civil case, where the evidence is merely cumulative or where it was withheld by the party moving. - Motions for new trials for newly discovered evidence cannot be entertained in this court in criminal cases.
CONNOR and WALKER, JJ., dissenting.
INDICTMENT for murder against Robert H. Lilliston, heard by Judge George W. Ward and a jury, at the January Term, 1906, of the Superior Court of WAKE. From a verdict of murder in the second degree and judgment thereon, the prisoner appealed.
Robert D. Gilmer, Attorney-General, for the State.
Argo & Shaffer and J. N. Holding for the defendant.
CLARK, C. J. It was in evidence that the prisoner Lilliston and one Clark were two “fakirs” who had been attending the Raleigh Fair, and on Thursday and Friday nights, they with others were at a house of ill-fame, engaged in gambling and drinking, and that a difficulty sprung up there on Friday night between these men over charges of cheating. On Saturday, 21 October, they went to the railroad station in Raleigh to take the train to leave the city, and there in the crowded reception room they engaged in shooting at each other — the next room, separated only by a glass partition, being occupied by ladies and children. It is admitted by the prisoner that Clark fired two shots and then ran out of the east door and that Lilliston fired five shots. And these two men, who showed this contemptuous defiance of law and of the lives of so many peaceable people who were entitled to the protection of the law in their lives and persons, escaped unharmed, while one bystander was killed, another seriously wounded, and others narrowly escaped. If they fought willingly in such a place, the reckless disregard of
The jury have acquitted Clark; and Lilliston, convicted of murder in the second degree, presents in substance three grounds of alleged error in the conduct of the trial by the learned and impartial judge. He contends that the judge should have told the jury that there was no evidence against him either of murder in the second degree or manslaughter. It is admitted that Clark stood towards the southeast and fired northwestwardly two shots, one of which struck above the ticket office. Mr. Horton testified that he dropped behind the radiator and was struck on the buttock (which was exposed) by Clark‘s second bullet, which entered, he says, from the side Clark was on, and which could not have come from the direction where Lilliston was at that time. Of the five shots fired by Lilliston, the location of four found embedded in the building are admitted. The State contends that Lilliston‘s other ball was the one found in the body of Smith, the deceased. There was evidence, if the jury believed it, that Lilliston dodged behind Smith, and that in the excitement, Lilliston, the lodgment of whose other balls showed that he was firing wildly, shot Smith. The prisoner contended that this was not true, also that it was Lilliston‘s
These questions of fact were ably presented to the jury by counsel of great skill and long experience. There was evidence, as the judge properly held, to submit the case to the jury, and their finding is not reviewable by us. Had the judge who tried this cause and heard the witnesses and could judge from their bearing as to the weight to be given their evidence, felt any doubt of the correctness of the verdict, it was in his power and it would have been his pleasure to set it aside. He refused to do so.
The prisoner also excepts to the following excerpt from His Honor‘s charge: “Another principle of law is where in an indictment for murder the State has satisfied the jury beyond a reasonable doubt that the prisoner slew the deceased intentionally with a deadly weapon, nothing else appearing, the law presumes that the defendant is guilty of murder in the second degree, and the burden of proof shifts to the defendant to satisfy the jury, not beyond a reasonable doubt, but to sim-
The prisoner further excepts to the following paragraph of the charge: “Self-defense exists where one is suddenly assaulted and in the defense of his person where an immediate and great bodily harm would be the apparent consequence of waiting for the assistance of the law, and there is no other probable means of escape, he kills the assailant.” This paragraph is quoted from
Here, though, “the fierceness of the adversary” abated immediately after the second shot (when he fled); the prisoner testified that he shot five times, some, if not all, of which shots were fired while Clark was getting from the radiator to the door, and as he went out of the door. It is worse than if he had killed the fleeing man, for he not only shot unnecessarily, not for his own protection, but in a crowded
The prisoner filed a motion in this court for a new trial for newly discovered evidence which he avers would prove that Arnold fired the fatal shot. This motion has never been allowed in this court in a criminal case. But had it been made in a civil action, in which it is sometimes though rarely allowed, this motion would be disallowed, both because it would be merely cumulative of the evidence which was offered and which was submitted to the jury with a prayer thereon as requested by the prisoner, and, for the stronger reason, that the State filed, before the argument here, the affidavit of O. L. Parham, jailer of Wake County,
It has uniformly been held that motions “for new trial for newly discovered evidence” and “rehearings” cannot be entertained in this court in criminal actions.
In State v. Jones, 69 N. C., 16, Reade, J., held that this court had no power to rehear in a criminal action, saying: “In equity cases and in civil actions, the practice has been common, but, in criminal cases, never to our knowledge.”
In State v. Starnes, 94 N. C., 973, where a motion for a new trial for newly discovered evidence was made in a criminal action, it was denied, Smith, C. J., saying: “No such proposition in reference to criminal prosecutions has ever been made or entertained, so far as our investigations have gone, in this court. The absence of a precedent (for we cannot but suppose such applications would have been made on behalf of convicted offenders if it had been supposed that a power to grant them resided in this appellate court) is strong confirmatory evidence of what the law was understood to be by the profession. We are clearly of the opinion that no such discretionary power, as that invoked, is conferred upon this court. In appeals from judgments rendered in indictments, our jurisdiction is exercised in reviewing and correcting errors in law committed in the trial of the cause, and to this alone. State v. Jones, 69 N. C., 16.”
In State v. Starnes, 97 N. C., 423, Smith, C. J., again says: “The motion, as far as our own and the researches of counsel disclose, is without precedent in the administration of the criminal law on appeals to this court, and is so fundamentally repugnant to the functions of a reviewing court,
In State v. Rowe, 98 N. C., 629, Davis, J., says: “Upon careful consideration, we must adhere to the principle that in criminal actions the appellate jurisdiction of this court is limited to a review and correction of errors of law committed in the trial below. State v. Jones, 69 N. C., 16; State v. Starnes, 94 N. C., 973.” The cases cited show that the court adhered to its previous rulings on grounds broad enough to apply both to motions for “new trials for newly discovered evidence” and for “rehearings.” The court then proceeded to point out that there was no ground for the innovation which was sought, since the governor could look into the entire merits of the case and render any relief justice should demand.
In State v. Edwards, 126 N. C., 1055, the court dismissed the motion as a well settled matter, merely saying that “such motions are not entertained in criminal cases, as has been often held.” In State v. Councill, 129 N. C., 511, the matter was fully considered and the court held that this court could not grant either rehearings or new trials for newly discovered evidence in criminal actions. In State v. Register, 133 N. C., 746, it is again said that “the prisoner also moved this court for a new trial for newly discovered testimony, but such motions can only be made in civil actions. Our precedents are uniform that this court has no jurisdiction to entertain such motion in criminal actions.”
So the point is settled if the uniform practice of this court and its repeated and uniform decisions to the same effect can settle anything. But it is contended that all these decisions and the uniform practice are erroneous and should now be reversed. Counsel cite the statutes. In Laws 1815, chapter 895, the power was first conferred to grant new trials in criminal cases (and the prisoner‘s brief admits
In 1805 the title of the Court of Conference had been changed to “Supreme Court” and in 1810 the Supreme Court had been authorized to elect a chief justice, though it was not constituted as at present till the Act of 1818, which went into effect 1 January, 1819. In 1854 chapter 35, section 35, of the Revised Code, the words “Courts of Law” were substituted for “Superior Court Judges,” the object being as stated in prisoner‘s brief, to limit the authority to the judge when sitting in a court of law instead of a court of equity.
The prisoner rests his argument to overrule the uniform decisions and settled practice of this court upon the following section 3272 of the Revisal, which reads, “The courts may grant new trials in criminal cases when the defendant is found guilty under the same rules and regulations as in civil cases.” This clearly refers to the time “when he is found guilty,” and when that section is turned to, it will be found further that it is under sub-head “Trials, Superior Court,” under which are grouped all the provisions peculiar to trials in that court, to-wit, sections 3262 to 3273, inclusive, and the note of the commissioners to said section 3272 shows that it was chapter 895, Laws 1815, and Revised Code, chapter 35, section 35, above quoted, which the prisoner‘s brief admitted applied only to the Superior Court, and was brought forward as Code (1883), section 1202, which was in force when the above decisions were made, and is now again brought forward in the Revisal, section 3272.
The Constitution, Article IV, section 8, is conclusive:
But even if the Constitution and the precedents did not forbid it and it were an open question, this court ought not to grant new trials for newly discovered evidence in criminal actions for several reasons: First, There is no necessity for it (the sole ground on which they are allowed in civil actions), for the Governor is vested with power to investigate the facts more fully than we could, and to do what justice shall require. There is no complaint that the executive has not been sufficiently liberal in its exercise. Again, it is the well known complaint of our governors that, in matters of this kind, insistence and pressure have been often too great. This court has no time for such applications and no disposition to seek or invite them. The Constitution has wisely restricted our power in criminal cases, to reviewing on appeal “decisions of the courts below in matters of law or legal inference.”
And lastly, the odds against the State in a trial for a capi-
“Mercy murders, pardoning those who kill.”
In refusing to entertain such motions in criminal cases, we are adhering to the uniform practice and rulings of the court from the first day of its existence down to the present. We are refusing to make an innovation. The object of punishment for murder is not to reform the offender, but by the certainty of infliction and its unpleasant nature, to deter others from the like offenses. The number of homicides in North Carolina, as recorded in the United States census and the annual reports of the Attorney-General of this State, is
No Error.
CONNOR, J., dissenting: This case has given me much anxious concern. Certainly there is nothing in the record calculated to arouse any sympathy with the prisoner or his conduct. This fact imposes upon the judge the duty of especially guarding himself against relaxing rules of the law and permitting wrong and injustice to be done him. It behooves the State through its courts to protect the lives of its citizens. One of the means by which this is sought to be done is the detection and upon conviction, the punishment of those who commit a criminal homicide. It clearly, if not primarily, affects the honor of the State that she permit none to be punished who are innocent or convicted otherwise than by the law of the land. I trust that if I appear to be jealous of the honor of the State in that respect, I may not for that reason be charged with a want of as much concern for the due execution of the law as my brethren. To my mind no greater wrong can be done the State and every citizen thereof than the punishment of an innocent man. It seems from the evidence that the prisoner belongs to a class of persons who purchase “concessions” at State fairs to conduct the business of “fakirs.” This fact does not in my judgment throw any light upon the legal aspects of his conduct at the time of the homicide as presented upon this record. In this
“The general rule is, ‘that one may oppose another attempting the perpetration of a felony, if need be, to the taking of a felon‘s life;’ as in the case of a person attacked by another, intending to murder him, who thereupon kills his assailant. He is justified. 2 Bish. Cr. Law, section 632. A distinction which seems reasonable and is supported by authority, is taken between assaults with felonious intent and assaults without felonious intent. In the latter the person assaulted may not stand his ground and kill his adversary, if there is any way of escape open to him, though he is allowed to repel force by force, and give blow for blow. In this class of cases, where there is no deadly purpose, the doctrine of the books applies, that one cannot justify the killing of the other, though apparently in self-defense, unless he
first ‘retreat to the wall.’ In the former class, where the attack is made with murderous intent, the person attacked is under no obligation to flee; he may stand his ground and kill his adversary if need be. 2 Bish. Cr. Law, section 633, and cases there cited. And so Mr. East states the law to be. ‘A man may repel force by force, in defense of his person, habitation or property, against one who manifestly intends or endeavors by violence or surprise to commit a known felony, such as murder, rape, burglary, robbery and the like upon either.’ In these cases he is not obliged to retreat, but may pursue his adversary until he has secured himself from all danger; and if he kill him in so doing, it is called justifiable self-defense.”
This I consider to be the correct statement of the law as frequently approved in this court. State v. Matthews, 78 N. C., 523; State v. Castle, 133 N. C., 769; State v. Clark, 134 N. C., 698; State v. Hough, 138 N. C., 663;
WALKER, J., concurs in the dissenting opinion.
