121 Iowa 632 | Iowa | 1903
Lead Opinion
Tested by these rules, let us see if the indictment in this case charges that the killing was done willfully, deliberately, premeditatedly, and with malice aforethought. A willful* deliberate, and .premeditated assault is charged, which is said to have been made with a revolver, “then and there being loaded with powder and bullet, with the specific intent to kill and murder.” Whether or not the assault was made with specific intent to kill, or the revolver was loaded and charged with specific intent to kill and murder, is left to inference. Explanatory clauses generally relate to those expressions to which they stand closest. According to this rule of grammatical construction, the indictment does not even charge that the assault was with intent to kill. But it also charges that defendant did then and there, with said we-ajion, loaded and charged as aforesaid, sl^oot off and discharge the contents thereof into the body of Ed Bromley willfully, deliberately, premeditatedly, etc., inflicting a mortal wound, etc. In this respect the indictment is much like the one disapproved in State v. Andrews, supra, where we said: “The indictment accuses the-defendant of having inflicted the wound which caused the death * * * feloniously, deliberately, premeditatedly, and with malice aforethought, but except in the concluding part it does not charge that the murder was so committed. The case is within the rule announced in State v. McCormick, 27 Iowa, 403, and, following that case, w,e must hold that the indictment does not charge the defendant with the crime of murder in the first degree, as to authorize his trial for that offense.” Moreover, in the instant case the indictment does not directly charge that the revolver was shot off with the intent to kill. That is left to inference and
The Attorney General relies on State v. Stanley, 33 Iowa, 528; State v. Shelton, 64 Iowa, 336; State v. Dooley, 89 Iowa, 589. But they do -not sustain his position. In Stanley's Case the indictment, after charging an assault with a revolver loaded with powder and bullet, proceeds, “And then and there the said Stanley did, by lying in wait, and with the specific intent to kill, willfully, deliberately,” etc., “shoot and discharge the contents of said revolver into the body of,” etc., “thereby inflicting a mortal wound,” etc. In Shelton's Case the language is almost identical with that used in the indictment in the Stanley Case, and the same may be said of the indictment in Dooley's Case. The indictment under consideration nowhere charges that the act which caused the death was done with the specific, intent to kill. The most that can
Even had'the indictment been sufficient, we still think the evidence did not warrant the submission of this degree of crime. ' As there must be a retrial of the case, we shall not dwell upon the evidence any further than is necessary to an understanding of the points decided.
III. Defendant claims that what she did was .in der fense of her husband and of her habitation, and she asked an instruction to the effect that, as she was upon her own .premises when she claims she was attacked, she was not required to retreat. The'instruction was correct, but, as the trial court fully covered the ground in its thirteenth instruction, there was no error.
V. Some other questions are argued, which are not likely to arise on a retrial; hence they need not be considered.
For the errors pointed out, the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded fcr a retrial. — Eeversed.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the result reached, but do not agree with the conclusion announced in the first division of the opinion.