24 Mo. 475 | Mo. | 1857
delivered the opinion of the court.
The first point made in this case is, that the venire was not a legal body, being deficient in number. The indictment was for murder, and was preferred on the 15th day of January, 1856. The defendants elected to be tried separately ; and, under the supposition that such would be the case, a venire for thirty-six jurors was issued and returned. Afterwards the defendants elected to be tried jointly, and the panel previously returned in the cause was offered to be used, when the defendants objected, claiming that they were entitled to a panel of fifty-six jurors. This claim was disallowed by the court and the defendants excepted. The counsel for the accused relied on the provisions of the code of 1845, in support of their exception. In this we are of opinion that they are in error. As has been stated, the indictment was found in January, 1856, and the trial took place at the September term following. In the interval the code -of 1855 took effect, viz., on the 1st May, 1856. The 16th section of the act entitled “An act concerning the revised statutes,” approved December 6th, 1855, provides that “ no action, plea, prosecution, civil or criminal, pending at the time any
The second point made by the accused is that the acquittal of .'Sullivan Phillips, the principal in the first degree, operated in 'law the discharge of the defendants from the indictment, and the court ought to have discharged them on motion. In order fully to comprehend this point, it may be necessary to premise that Sullivan Phillips, Presley Phillips and John L. Ross were jointly .indicted for the murder of Robert G. Watson, Sullivan Phillips was'charged as principal in the first degree, or as the actual perpetrator of the deed, and Presley Phillips and John L. Ross were charged as being present aiding and abetting in the commission of the crime. Sullivan Phillips was put upon his trial and acquitted. It -appeared from the evidence on the trial that he actually fired the gun by whose shot Watson was killed. Afterwards Presley Phillips and J. L. Ross, who were charged as aiders and abettors, were put upon their trial, and, producing the record of the acquittal of Sullivan Phillips, they claimed their discharge. This motion was overruled, and the action of the court thereon is now to be reviewed. The question was raised in two ways on the trial below, once by a motion for a discharge before any evidence was heard in the cause, and af-terwards by an offer of the record of the acquittal of Sullivan Phillips as evidence in chief, accompanied with explanatory facts. The same .principle is involved in both the forms adopt
We do not consider that the case of Regina v. Tyler, 8 Car. & Payne, 616, is at variance with the rules of law as above stated. It only decides that where a person of unsound mind is the actual perpetrator of the homicide, others can not be charged as aiders and abettors. In that case there were two counts in the indictment. In one of them the prisoner was charged as principal in the first degree; in the other as principal in the second degree ; and the actual perpetrator of the crime being a madman, and the prisoner being apprised of his ill-intentions, the jury was directed to find him guilty under the count in which he was charged as principal in the first degree.
We see no warrant in the law for reading, against the protest of the accused, the proceedings on the application for the change of venue and the order thereupon. Whether there was’
The next point made in the cause is, that the court erred in permitting Edmund Shelton to detail (as against Ross) what passed between himself and Presley Phillips touching the discharge of the witness as overseer of Phillips ; also in suffering to go to the jury, as evidence against Ross, the conversation testified to by the same witness between himself and Presley Phillips on the Monday preceding the fatal occurrence. It is usual for courts, when evidence proper in itself is given, but which is incompetent against one party or for certain purposes, to explain at the time to the jury the proper application and effect of the evidence received. If the court fail to do this voluntarily, the party should move a direction to the jury as to its application and effect, and on the refusal of the court to give such direction, should except. But if he fail to do this, as the evidence was competent for some purposes or against some of the parties, it is obvious that no assignment of error can be based upon its admission. In such eases, as the evidence is strictly admissible, this court has not relieved a party against whom it may have been prejudicial when he has failed to ask a direction as to its application and effeet. This has been the constant practice.
Further complaint is made that the court rejected proper evidence offered by the defendants, to rebut any presumption of guilt arising from their flight. Upon an examination of the record, we are not prepared to say that there was any error in the court below in rejecting evidence in relation to the flight of
Another alleged error of which complaint is made is, that the court permitted the State to read in rebuttal the whole of the evidence of the witness Shultz taken before the coroner and magistrate. Shultz-, it appears, was examined as a witness for the State. The defendants afterwards, for the purpose of discrediting the witness, read portions of his depositions taken before the magistrate and coroner. The State then read the whole of these depositions. We see no error in this course. As the defendants read parts of the depositions with a view to contradict the witness, the prosecution was entitled to read the whole of them, in order to show his consistency. (Harrison v. Rowan, 8 Wash. C. C. 580; Temperly v. Scott, 5 Car. & Payne, 841; Cow. & Hill’s notes, 934-5.)
It is next objected that erroneous instructions were given to the jury. After instructing as to what constitutes murder in the first degree, the jury were told that “ if they believe from the evidence that Sullivan Phillips wilfully shot and killed the
Our act of assembly provides that “ every murder which shall be committed by means of poison, or by lying in wait, or by any other kind of wilful, deliberate and premeditated killing, or which shall be committed in the perpetration or attempt to perpetrate any arson, rape, robbery, burglary, or other felony, shall be deemed murder in the first degree; and that all other kinds of murder at common law, not herein declared to be manslaughter or justifiable or excusable homicide, shall be deemed murder in the second degree.” It has been a matter of some difficulty to ascertain the object and design of this provision. It is plain that it was intended to affect some change in the law in regard to the crime of murder as it stood at common law. By that law wilful and intentional murders and constructive murders, or murders where the law implied malice and there was no intent to kill, were of the same grade. These offences, however different in enormity, were subject to the same punishment. He who shot at a fowl with a felonious intent, and thereby accidentally killed a man, was punished in the same manner as he who took away his neighbor’s life by poison or by lying in wait. No doubt it was the intention to make all murders, where malice was only implied, and where there was no intention to effect death, murders in the second degree, which were subjected to a milder punishment than murder in the first degree ; and it is no argument against this conclusion, that the same statute has made some constructive murders manslaughter in some one of its degrees ; for,' notwithstanding these provisions, cases may arise which would not be covered by them. The question is, have the provisions respecting murder in the first and second degrees gone further and made any murder, which by the common law was wilful or intentional, only murder in the second degree,
We therefore come to the conclusion that our statute concerning murder in the first and second degrees will receive the construction which accompanied' it when it was adopted into our code ; that under it the distinction between murder in the first and second degree consists in the intention; that where a homicide is shown to have been committed, and there was an intent to do the act, and there is no circumstance of excuse, justification or extenuation recognized by law, it is murder in the first degree ; that the quality of every homicide since the statute is to be determined by the rules of the common law, except so far as they are altered by the provisions concerning excusable or justifiable homicide and manslaughter, and the provision concerning murder in the second degree, which we have seen extends to those constructive murders known to the common law, where there was no intention to kill, and where the malice was implied.
It follows then that this was no case for an instruction as to the law of murder in the second degree ; for there can be no doubt, unless we stultify purselves and refuse to permit our judgments to be influenced by considerations which govern all the rest of mankind, that Sullivan Phillips intended to kill Watson. Nor was this one of those accidental homicides which we have
As the case was not one for an instruction on the law concerning murder in the second degree, and as the defendants were tried for murder in the first degree, it may be thought that the defendants were not prejudiced by such instruction. This idea can not be sustained. We can not say whether the defendants should have been found guilty of murder as charged or not. The jury was improperly led away from that issue by an instruction which induced 'their conviction of the crime of murder in the second degree. They complain of that conviction, and have a right to have the judgment reversed if it has been obtained by undue means. But the instruction is erroneous in itself, even had the case been one for an instruction on the law of murder in the second degree. The jury were told that the defendants might be guilty of murder in the second degree without malice aforethought. Malice aforethought may be malice express or implied. So to say there may be murder without malice aforethought, is to say there may be murder without malice. Now there can be no murder in any degree without malice aforethought, express or implied. The instruction is in its terms inconsistent with itself. It directs the jury that if Sullivan Phillips xoilfully shot and killed the deceased without the intention to consummate by his act the death of the deceased, &c. Now this is the same as saying, if the jury believe that S. Phillips on purpose killed Watson accidentally ; for wilful means intentional, on purpose. Moreover, if the killing was unintentional on the part of Sullivan Phillips, it is
the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.