28 Del. 312 | New York Court of General Session of the Peace | 1914
charging the jury:
Gentlemen of the jury:—It is charged in this indictment that Clarence Rothwell, on the sixth of September of the present year, at a campmeeting in this county, committed an assault on one John Starky with the intent him the said Starky to kill and murder.
In order to convict the accused as indicted you must be satisfied from the testimony beyond a reasonable doubt, (1) that the alleged assault was committed by the accused; (2) that it was committed by him with the intent to murder Starky, and that if Starky had died from the effects of the injuries inflicted the accused would be guilty of murder.
In order to explain the last requirement it is necessary to tell you briefly what would constitute the crime of murder.
In this case the party assaulted did not die, and you are therefore not trying the accused for murder but for an assault with intent to murder. In order to convict the accused of this charge, you must be satisfied, not only that he intended to kill the person assaulted but that he did it with malice in his heart. It is not easy to define just what the law means by malice. You
You perceive from what we have said, that before you can convict the accused in manner and form as he stands indicted you must be satisfied that he committed the assault with the intent to kill and that he did it maliciously.
If you are not satisfied from the evidence that the accused committed an assault upon the prosecuting witness, your verdict should be not guilty. If you believe he did commit the assault but are not satisfied that it was committed with an intent to murder, your verdict should be guilty of an assault only.
If you are satisfied that the assault was committed by the accused maliciously, that is, with an intent to murder, your verdict should be guilty in manner and form as indicted.
Verdict, ■ guilty.
Counsel for the accused' moved for a new trial, and subsequently filed reasons therefor, which are set forth in the opinion 'of the court in refusing the motion.
Pennewill, C. J., delivering the opinion of the court:
The grounds relied on in the motion for a new trial are that—
First, the verdict was against the evidence.
Second, that the verdict was against the law.
Third, “that the Deputy Attorney General had caused warrants to be issued against six of the witnesses who testified for the defendant, charging them with perjury; that said witnesses had been duly and regularly summoned to appear in said court, and in obedience to said summons had appeared and testified and were on their way from the court house to their homes and had just stepped outside of the court house when they were seized and placed under arrest by Frank McCoy, one of the detectives attached to the Attorney General’s office, and by a number of uniformed police officers of the City of Wilmington; that said arrest of said witnesses was made in a spectacular manner in the presence of the members of the jury who had been impaneled to hear the case, and who had heard the said witnesses testify in the case, but had not at that time received the charge of the court and had not reached their verdict.”
Fourth, that it was publicly charged in the presence of the said jurors, that the said witnesses had been arrested charged
Fifth, that the said arrest of said witnesses at the time in which it was made, was unlawful and could not but have influenced the minds of the jurors against the defendant Rothwell.-
Sixth, that said witnesses all resided within the State of Delaware and could have been served -with warrants charging them with the alleged offense at any time, and there was no occasion or necessity for the arrest to have been made in the manner in which it was made.'
That, therefore, there was a mistrial in the above stated cause, and the said defendant, by J. Frank Ball, his attorney, prays the court that the verdict in this case may be set aside and a new trial granted.
The motion is refused.