45 Vt. 308 | Vt. | 1873
The opinion of the court was delivered by
It is objected in behalf of the respondent that the dying declarations of Elanders, as testified by Mr. Hill, should have been excluded from the consideration of the jury, by force of the rule as stated 1 Greenl. Ev. §159, viz., that “whatever the statement may be, it must be complete in itself; for, if the declarations appear to have been intended by the dying man to be connected with, and qualified by, other statements which he is prevented by any cause from making, they will not be received.” What we understand by the expression, that the statement “ must bo complete in itself,” is, notthat the declarant must state every thing that constituted the res gestee of the subject of his statement, but that his statement of any given fact should be a full expression of all that he intended to say as conveying his meaning as to such fact. This is plainly indicated by the closing part of the above quotation, as to the declarations made being intended by the dying man to be connected with, and qualified by, other statements which he is prevented from making. There is no indication in the testimony given by Mr. Hill, that Flanders intended what he said to Hill should be qualified by any thing that he wished to say, and was prevented from saying, or did not. say. The fact that Mr. Hill had lost the paper containing the declarations in
The fact that Flanders made his statement in intervals between vomitings, does not touch the question of the competency of the evidence, unless it should appear that by such vomitings, ho was prevented from expressing his meaning in relation to the facts that he was undertaking to state. By recurring to the testimony of Mr. Hill, given in full in the reporter’s minutes, it will be seen that the facts are few and simple, about which the dying mail undertook to speak ; and there is nothing in their nature that would seem to require any thing more to have been said in order to get the meaning that he intended to convey in respect to them. The manner and circumstances of the making of the dying declarations are proper for consideration, in giving effect to them as evidence in the case, much the same as if the deposition of the dying man had been taken, and given in evidence on the trial.
II. The court charged the jury that if they were convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that the death of Flanders was occasioned by the shot fired by the respondent, then the prosecution had made put the killing in the manner charged in the indictment * * * / that all killing is presumed to be unlawful; and when the fact of the killing is established, it devolves on the party who committed the act, to excuse’ that killing — to show that it was justified — in order to escape the legal consequences whicii attach to the commission of the act.” In this we think there is error. As to the rule of presumption, as affecting the burden of proof, as it is ordinarily found in the books on criminal law, especially the older ones, it suffices to refer to the remarks of Ch. J. Redfield, in State v. McDonnell, 32 Vt. 538-9. Yet, with reference to that rule, as it was applied to the present case, the statement of it in Foster, 255, is worthy of notice. “ In every charge of
In York's case, 9 Met. 91, the meaning of the rule is peculiarly indicated by the manner in which Ch. J. Shaw stated it: “ That where the killing is proved to have been committed by the defendant, and nothing further is shown, the presumption of law is that it was malicious, and an act of murder.” That meaning is made palpable and is illustrated by the same great judge in Hawkins's case, 8 Gray, 465, in which he says, that this was inapplicable to this (Hawkins's) case, where the circumstances attending the homicide were fully shown by the evidence.” And on this point he instructed the jury that “ the murder charged must be proved ; the burden of proof is on the commonwealth to prove the case ; all the evidence on both sides, which the jury find true, is to be taken into considération; and if, the homicide being conceded, no excuse or justification is shown, it is either murder or manslaughter ; and if the jury, upon all the circumstances, are satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that it was done with malice, they will return a verdict of murder ; otherwise, they will fin,d the defendant guilty of manslaughter.”
In MoKie's case, 1 Gray 61, on an indictment for assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, the subject of the burden of proof in that class of offenses was fully considered by the court, and instructively discussed by Bigelow, J., in the opinion of the court drawn up by him. He says: “It appears that the justification on which the defendant relied was disclosed, partly by the testimony introduced by the government, and in part by evidence offered by the defendant; and that it related to and grew out of the transaction or res gestee which constituted the alleged crim
Wo adopt the views thus shown, in iheir application to the present case, so far as to hold that, with reference to the state of the evidence given on the trial, the jury should not have been instructed as they were in the parts of the charge above recited, but should have been instructed, in substance, that upon all the (evidence, they must find beyond a reasonable doubt that the crime charged in the indictment was committed by the respondent, in order to warrant his being found guilty, — with proper adaptations of the instruction to this feature of the case, as presented in the course and manner of the trial.
III. The exception to the communication of the presiding judge with the jury, and sending to them a copy of the statutes, with a reference to a particular section, is maintained. The prevailing idea in this state has been that all communications between judge and jury, after a case has been submitted to the jury and while they have it in consideration, should bo in open court, and, so far as we know, the practice has been conformable to this idea.
In 1 Pick. 242, Sargent v. Roberts et al., Ch. J. Parker says : “We are all of opinion, after considering the question maturely, that no communication whatever ought to take place between the judge and jury after the cause has been committed to them by
As to furnishing the jury with a copy of the statutes, we regard the rule to be equally distinct and decisive, not only in this state, but elsewhere. 3 C. & P. 310, Burrows v. Unwin. In Merrill v. Nary, 10 Allen, 416, a copy of the statutes was carried to the jury at their request, and with the consent of the judge. This was held to be improper ; and the proper views applicable to the subject arc so amply set forth in the opinion delivered by Ch. J. Bigelow, as to render it needless to do more than refer to that opinion.
In other respects, we deem the charge to be conformable to the established principles of the law as promulgated in the text-books and treatises, and applied and illustrated in the decided cases. From what is made known to us by the bill of exceptions as to the evidence given and the facts proved in the trial, we fail to discover in the charge ground or occasion for such a character and spirit of criticism 'as was exhibited in the argument before this court. On the other hand, I am commissioned to express the full conviction of each member of this court, that the utmost fairness towards the respondent, and great painstaking that he should suffer no abatement from the legitimate force of his defense, were exercised by the presiding judge.
From experience at the bar and on the bench, we very fully understand that many things in the features and details of a charge to the jury are prompted by, and are addressed to, peculiar features and details of the argument that has preceded. From the requests and points of exception stated in the record before us, together with the arguments which we have here heard, the present case seems not to be exceptional in that respect. If we had before us the arguments addressed to the«jury, with the same verbal fullness that we have the charge of the court, it seems quite presumable that we should find reason to admire, if not to be surprised at, the self-poise with which the presiding judge bore himself in the charge, as against operating prejudice to the respondent.
Nevertheless, the point was made by-said 3d request. It was indicated in the charge that the case, State v. Hooker, 17 Vt. 670, was invoked in support of it, and it i cited in this court for the same purpose. That case professes to decide only the question involved in and presented by it, viz., whether it was criminal under the statute for the respondent to resist an officer in the service of civil process within his dwelling-house, such officer having unlawfully broken into the house for the purpose of making such
) come, then, to the subject as it is involved in this case under said 3d request. In Foster’s Crown Law, 319, it is said, “ The books say that a man’s house is his castle for safety and repose to himself and family.” In Cook’s case, Cro. Car. 537, an officer, with a capias ad satisfaciendum, went with other officers, for the purpose of executing the same, to the dwelling-house of the respondent, and, finding him within, demanded of him to open the door and suffer them to enter. He commanded them to depart, telling them they should not enter. Thereupon, they broke a window, and afterwards went to the door of the house and offered to force it open, and broke one of the.hinges ; whereupon "Cook discharged his musket at the deceased and hit him, and he died of the wound. “ After argument at the bar, all the justices, seriatim, delivered their opinions, that it- was not murder, but manslaughter; the bailiff was slain in doing an unlawful act in seeking to break open the house to execute process for a subject, and every one is to defend his own house. Yet they all held it was manslaughter; for he might have resisted him without killing him ; and when he saw and shot voluntarily at him, it was manslaughter.”
That was one of the earliest cases, and was fully considered; and it has been cited in all the books on criminal law since its decision in 16jJ) (15th Car. I.), — with some incorrectness of statement, in 1 Hale P. C. 458, and in other books adopting Hale’s text. This is in some measure rectified by a remark, 1 East P. C. 321-322. See, also, Roscoe Cr. Ev. 758; also 1 Bishop Cf. L. § 858, n. 2 (5th ed.) It is to be specially noticed that what made it manslaughter was, that, in order to defend his castle, it was not necessary to kill the bailiff.
The same idea of necessity, in order to relieve the killing from being manslaughter, exists in the case of defending one’s person, as stated in Hawkins P. C. 113 : “ Homicide se defendendo
In a learned note in 2 Archb. Or. L. 225, it is said : “ But when it is said that a man may rightfully use as much force as is necessary for the protection of his person and property, it should be recollected that .this rule is subject to this most important modification, — that he shall not, except in extreme cases, endanger human life, or great bodily harm. * * * * You can only kill to save life or limb, or prevent a great crime, or to accomplish a necessary public duty. It is, therefore, clear, that if one man deliberately kills another to prevent a mere trespass on his property — whether that trespass could or could not otherwise be prevented — he is guilty of murder. If, indeed; he had at first used moderate force, and this had been returned with such violence that his own life was endangered, and then he killed from necessity, it would have been excusable homicide. Not because he could take life to save his property, but he might take the life of the assailant to save his own.”
Harcourt's case, 5 Eliz. stated 1 Hale P. C. 485-6, shows that this doctrine is not new. “ Harcourt, being in possession of a house by title, as it seems, A. endeavored to enter, and shot an arrow at them within the house, and Harcourt, from within, shot an arrow at those that would have entered, and killed one of the company. This was ruled manslaughter, and it was not He defendendo, because there was no danger of his life from them without.” What was thus ruled is the key to the author’s meaning in the next following paragraph of his book, which see. ■
The idea that is embodied in the expression that, a man’s house is his castle, is not that it is his property, and, as such, he has the right to defend and protect it by other and more extreme means than he might lawfully use to defend and protect his shop, his office, or his barn. The sense in which the house has a peculiar . immunity is, that it is sacred for the protection of his person .and
This is the meaning of what was said by Holroyd, J., in charging the jury in Meade's case, 1 Lewin C. C. 184. Some exasperated sailors had ducked Meade, and were in the act of throwing him into the sea, when he was 'rescued by the police. As the gang were leaving, they threatened that they would come by night and pull his house down. In the middle of the night a great number came, making menacing demonstrations. Meade, under an apprehension, as he alleged, that his life and property were in danger, fired a pistol, by which one of the party was killed. Meade was indicted for murder. Upon that state of facts and evidence, the judge said to the jury: “ A civil trespass will not excuse the firing of a pistol at a trespasser in sudden resentment or anger, &c. * * But a man is not authorized to fire a pistol on every intrusion or invasion of his house. He ought, if he has reasonable opportunity, to endeavor to remove him without having recourse to the last extremity. But the making an attack upon a dwelling, and especially at night, the law regards as equivalent to an assault on a man’s person; for a man’s house is his castle; and, therefore, in the eye of the law, it is equivalent to an assault; but no words or singing are equivalent to an assault; nor will they authorize an assault in return, &c. * * There aré cases where a person in heat of blood kills another, that the law does not deem it murder, but lowers the offence to manslaughter ; as, where a party coming up by way of making an attack, and without there being any
The sense in which one’s house is his castle, and he may defend himself within it, is shown by what is said in 1 Hale P. C. 486, that “ in case he is assaulted in his own house, he need not flee as far as he can, as in other cases of se defendiendo, for he hath the protection of his house to excuse him from flying, as that would be to give up the protection of his house to his adversary by flight.” Now, set over against 'that what is said in 1 Russell, 662, and the true distinction between the house as property, on the one hand, and as castle for protection, on the other, is very palpable, viz: “If A. in defence of his house, kill B., a trespasser, who endeavors to make an entry upon it, it is, &l least, common manslaughter, unless, indeed, there were danger of life p. 663. “But where the trespass is barely against the property of another, the law does not admit the. force of the provocation as sufficient to warrant the owner in making use of a deadly or dangerous weapon; more particularly if such violence is used after the party has desisted from the trespasg.” In Carrol v. The State, 24 Ala. 36, it is said: “ The owner may resist the entry into his house, but he has no right to kill, unless it be rendered necessary in order to prevent a felonious destruction of his property, or to defend himself against loss of life, or great .bodily harm.” Cited 2 Bishop Crim. Law, § 707, 5th ed. That case impresses us differently from what it does the learned author, as'indicated by his remark prefacing the citation.
As developing and illustrating the prevailing idea of the law as to what will justify homicide se et sua defendendo, it is not without interest upon the point now under consideration, to advert to what is said upon the general subject. In McNally, 562, it is
This covers the cases of statutory justification of homicide, both under our own, and under the English, statutes, and, in principle and in reason, it is in keeping with the common law as to se defendeudo, in defining the scope of which in this respect, it is well laid down that, “ before a person can avail himself of the defence that he used a weapon in defence of his life, it must appear that that defence was necessary to protect his own life, or to protect himself from such serious bodily harm as would give him reasonable apprehension that his life was in immediate danger.” 1 Russell, 661.
The law of the subject, as given in the books thus cited. and referred to, seems to have been adequately apprehended by the court, and, so far as we can judge from what is shown by the record before us, it was not administered erroneously or improperly in the trial, as against the respondent.
If it were to be assumed that the defense might legitimately claim that there was an assault on the house, with,the intent either of taking the life of the respondent, or doing to him great
We have been led to this discussion and exposition of the law as to the defense of the dwelling-house, on account of the somewhat fragmentary and disjointed condition in which it is done up in the books and cases of criminal law, and for the purpose of rendering as explicit as we are able the views of this court on that subject, as it has been brought into question and debate in the case in hand. In this exposition, and in the views embodied in this opinion, all the members of the court concur.
The other subjects involved in grounds and points of defense, as shown by the bill of exceptions, and upon which the court gave instructions to the jury, do not seem to require discussion.
The verdict is set aside, and new trial granted.