OPINION
The state appeals as of right the grant of the defendant’s motion to dismiss the charge of first-degree felony-murder.
The sole issue on appeal is whether the trial court erred in its grant of the defendant’s motion to dismiss the charge of felony-murder when the victim of an attempted larceny kills the defendant’s co-perpetrator.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
On May 13, the grand jury for Knox County, Tennessee, returned a two-count presentment against the defendants, Darrell Severs and Clarence Weaver, as follows:
1. Darrell Severs, Clarence Weaver and Thomas Moore:
On the_day of July, 1986, in the state and county aforesaid, unlawfully and fe-loniously did attempt to steal, take and carry away the personal goods of Marquis Burnette with the intent to deprive the true owner thereof, and during the perpetration of said felony, to wit: attempted larceny, the said Marquis Bur-nette shot and killed Thomas Moore, and therefore Thomas Moore, was murdered during the perpetration of a felony by the said Darrell Severs, alias, and Ciar *936 ence Weaver, alias, and the said Darrell Severs, alias, and Clarence Weaver, alias, did thereby commit the offense of first degree murder, in violation of T.C.A. § 39-2-202 and against the peace and dignity of the state.
2. Darrell Severs and Clarence Weaver:
On the_day of July, 1987, in the state and county aforesaid, unlawfully, willfully and feloniously did attempt to commit a felony, to wit: a larceny, that is to say, the said Darrell Severs, alias, and Clarence Weaver, alias, did attempt to take, steal and carry away a chainsaw, the further kind, type, brand and description thereof to the grand jurors unknown, of the goods and chattels of Marquis Bur-nette, then and there being found, with intent to deprive said owner thereof against his will, contrary to the statute and against the peace and dignity of the state.
The deceased, Thomas Moore, was named in the original count as a co-perpetrator with the defendants of the offense of attempted larceny.
The intended victim of the larceny, Marquis Burnette, was arrested on an affidavit of complaint charging involuntary manslaughter. After a preliminary examination, the charge was dismissed by the Knox County General Sessions Court on August 18,1986, on the basis that the homicide was justifiable.
The trial court dismissed the count of felony-murder against the defendants on July 1, 1987, after which the state filed its notice of appeal. The stipulated facts upon which the judgment was based are as follows:
The defendants, accompanied by the deceased, were in the process of committing a larceny upon a Marquis Burnette when Marquis Burnette, the victim of the larceny, resisted and in so resisting killed the deceased.
T.C.A. § 39-2-202 provides, in part, as follows:
First-Degree Murder. — (a) Every murder ... committed in the perpetration of, or attempt to perpetrate, any murder in the first degree, arson, rape, robbery, burglary, larceny, kidnapping, aircraft piracy, or the unlawful throwing, placing or discharging of a destructive device or bomb, is murder in the first degree.
(b) A person convicted of murder in the first degree shall be punished by death or by imprisonment for life.
(c) Murder in the first degree is a Class X Felony.
The trial court in this instance relied on
Farmer v. State,
The trial court in the case sub judice held that Farmer stood for the proposition that the killing must have been done in pursuance of the unlawful act and not collateral to it; Moore’s death, the court said, fell into the latter category.
The state argues that Farmer represents the proximate cause theory of the felony-murder doctrine:
When the death which results from the affray is a natural, probable consequence of the defendant’s actions, a felony-murder conviction will be affirmed.
See Johnson v. State,
A majority of states have adopted an agency theory:
[T]he felony-murder rule will not be applied if the killing is attributable to the act of one other than the defendant or those associated with him in the unlawful enterprise.
*937
The 1958 case of
Commonwealth v. Redline,
The holding in
Redline
comports with the rule established in common law and is cited by other jurisdictions as having a significant influence in the development of the doctrine. The formulation of the felony-murder principle by such authorities as Lord Coke, Foster, and Blackshire indicates that it applies only when the “felon or a confederate did the actual killing.”
State v. Canola,
Late in the 18th Century, the rule provided that “if one intends to do another felony, and undesignedly kills a man, this is also murder.” 4 Blackstone,
Commentaries,
200-201. Although there is a division of views in this country, the English courts “never applied the felony-murder rule to hold a felon guilty of the death of his co-felon at the hands of the intended victim.”
Id.
The felony-murder doctrine in relation to criminal responsibility for the lethal acts of non-felons has undergone a series of transformations in this country. From its beginnings in the common law the rule appears to have come full circle in the last half-century. The trend toward non-culpability has evolved into a clear, jurisdictional majority.
Id.
In addition to Farmer, the state and the defendant cite numerous Tennessee cases which each asserts is supportive of their respective theories.
The oldest opinion suggested as authority in this state is that of
Moody v. State,
[I]f a party go upon an unlawful purpose, and one of the company kill one of the adverse party, in pursuance of that design, all are guilty.
It must be a killing in the pursuit of an unlawful act that all are engaged in; and in carrying out the original design, if any one of the party kill any one that oppose them, it would be murder in all the rest of the company that come with the intent to do that unlawful act, though there was no express intention to kill any person in that first enterprise....
Id. at 305-306.
In
Letner v. State,
In
Smith v. State,
In a rather classic application of felony-murder, the Supreme Court held in
Dupes v. State,
In
State v. Randolph,
Finally, the rulings in
State v. King,
It does not appear that the standard in this state has changed since Farmer; to sustain a conviction of first-degree felony-murder, the killing must have been in pursuance of, rather than collateral to, the unlawful act described by the statute. Citing Wharton on Homicide, 3rd Ed., § 126, the court in Farmer held that the “killing must have had an intimate relation and close connection with the felony, and not be separate, distinct, and independent from it....” 296S.W.2dat883.
Under either a purely statutory analysis or an application of the Farmer rationale, the stipulated facts in this instance do not fall within the definition of felony-murder.
The statute provides that the murder be in the “perpetration” or “attempted perpetration” of, among other things, “a larceny.” In this instance, the death resulted from the effort to thwart rather than to perpetrate the felony. The same conclusion was reached in
People v. Washington,
Any extension of the meaning of the statute to the current facts would be in derogation of the common law definition of felony-murder.
Similarly, the theory of proximate cause in relation to felony-murder is limited to acts committed by the accused or his accomplices which actually produce the death. This interpretation is not only consistent with the traditional concepts of felony-murder but constitutes the only explanation for this state’s lack of historical precedent for the proposition suggested by the state. The death of Moore was collateral to, not in furtherance of, the unlawful act of the defendants.
In conclusion, it appears that extension of the felony-murder rule beyond its common law limitation to acts by the felon and his accomplice, to include the lethal actions of those not acting in pursuance of the felonious scheme, is an appropriate action for the legislature ... not the courts. The “language of the statute does not compel it and ... is entirely compatible with the traditional limitations of the rule.”
Canola
The death of the co-perpetrator, when a justifiable homicide, is not within the purview of the statute.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
