23 Wash. 655 | Wash. | 1900
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The. appellant was charged by information, under § 23 of Hill’s Penal Code (Bal. Code, § 7058) with an assault with a deadly weapon (a revolver) upon one Edward May, with intent to' do bodily injury, no considerable provocation appearing therefor. On the trial upon the information, the jury returned a verdict of guilty of assault and battery, and the court, after denying his motion for a new trial, sentenced the appellant to pay a fine and tó imprisonment in the county jail. It appears from the record that about two o’clock on the morning of October 7, 1898, the appellant, who was then a “merchants’ patrolman” and deputy sheriff, and two- police officers, discovered the prosecuting witness, Edward May, then a youth of the age of seventeen years, together with three companions, in or about a vacant lot near Madison street and Second av
It is claimed by the appellant that the court erred in commenting on the evidence in the presence of the jury. It was admitted by the appellant at the trial that he fired the shot that struck May, but he claimed as a defense that he did not shoot, or intend to shoot, at him; that he fired
Section 16 of article I of the state constitution provides that “judges shall not charge the jury with respect to matters of fact, nor comment thereon, but shall declare the law,” and this court has uniformly held that a violation of
In both of these cases it -will be observed the objectionable remarks were addressed to the jury, and hence were literally violative of the mandate of the constitution. Here the case is different, the observations objected to having been directed to counsel. 'We do not, however, wish to be understood as holding that a judge, under this provision, is at liberty, during the progress of a trial, to- comment in the presence of the jury on the facts which the jury must determine, in a way calculated to influence their' action; yet it is manifest, from the language of the constitution, that its primary and special object was to prevent comments on the facts in evidence in connection with the instructions by which the jury are to- be guided, and at a time when such comments would he likely to- affect their minds. Prior to the adoption of the constitution, it was said to he the custom of some of our judges, either inadvertently or purposely, to indicate their opinions as to the facts in cases before them in their instructions to the jury; and it seems to- have been the object of the framers of the constitution, in formulating the provision in question, to correct this supposed evil. But we do not think it was intended hy this provision to prevent the judges from giving counsel the reasons for their rulings upon questions presented during the progress of a trial, or to prohibit them, in all cases, from stating, when necessary, the facts upon which they base their conclusions.
In regard to the objection first made, that the court below erred in making the statement in the presence of the jury respecting the angle described hy the bullet, if it struck the sidewalk, all we deem it necessary to say is (1) that,, strictly speaking, the observations of the judge did not amount to a comment on the evidence, but simply to an
Nor do we think that the learned counsel for the appellant has any substantial reason to complain of the declaration of the judge that “witness stated several times about buildings in the vacant lot. He has stated that there were things in that lot.” Counsel, as we have seen, was objecting to the method pursued by the opposing counsel in cross-examining the witness, and was insisting that the witness had testified that it was property adjoining this lot — not in or on it — that he was employed to watch, and the remarks of the court which appellant’s counsel now criticises were made in passing upon his objection and as a reason for the court’s ruling. And in view of the further fact that the witness himself, almost immediately thereafter, testified that he had stated that the property he was referring to was on the vacant lot, but meant to say, and to be understood as saying, that it was next to, or adjoining the lot, we are unable to see how appellant could possibly have been prejudiced by the statement of the court. Had the statement under consideration been addressed to the jury when, or even before, the cause was submitted to them, the case would be different, and the rule announced in State v. Walters and State v. Hyde, supra, might reasonably be said to be applicable. While we are not disposed to overrule the prior decisions of this court as to the object and scope of this constitutional provision, we are not prepared to extend the rule enunciated in those cases so far as to hold that every casual, inadvertent or unnecessary
At the trial the appellant offered in evidence a cartridge like that discharged from his revolver, but the court excluded it, and its ruling is assigned for error. It seems, as above indicated, that the object of the evidence offered was to show that a ball propelled by such a charge of powder as the cartridge apparently contained would have inflicted much greater injury than the one did which struck May, if it was not impeded or deflected from its course by striking some solid substance. Before the appellant proposed to introduce this cartridge in evidence, he had shown by his testimony that he had made tests of the power of the pistol when loaded with such a cartridge, and that it would penetrate a two and one-half inch fir plank at a distance of one hundred and fifty feet, and then go about half a mile further. Under this state of facts, it is not apparent that an examination of the cartridge by the jury would have cast any additional light upon the question whether May was struck by a point-blank shot or by a glancing ball. We think the evidence offered was properly excluded, but, even if it was not, its exclusion was not prejudicial to the appellant.
Complaint is made of the action of the court in refusing to permit the appellant to prove his reputation as a careful, conservative and conscientious peace officer in the community in which he resided; and it is insisted that the particular trait of character sought to be proved was in issue,
The court, in its instructions as to the several offenses charged in the information and the proof necessary to a conviction, said to the jury:
“If you come to the conclusion from this testimony, or from the examination of this testimony, you have a reasonable doubt as to whether he intended to shoot this young man, why, you should acquit him of the higher offense; in other words, if you are satisfied that it was a mistake or accident, why probably you would have the right to find him not guilty of the highest offense stated. But that doctrine does not apply to the other offenses embraced in this information at all.”
And it is urged that the court, by this instruction, virtually told the jury that they might find the defendant guilty, even though they found he acted without any criminal intent. If the above-quoted excerpt from the instruction constituted all that the court said with reference to the different offenses charged in the information and the proof necessary to sustain a conviction, there might perhaps be some force in appellant’s contention. But, when the part objected to is read in connection with the whole
But we do not wish to be understood as saying that a crime may be committed without a criminal intent or by inevitable accident; for it is a well established rule that, to constitute a crime in law, there must be an act coupled with an evil intent. But the intent is generally inferred from the doing of the act. It is said by Mr. Bishop that—
And in volume 2, § 692, of his work, the learned author says:
“One who accidentally kills a man by discharging his gun at another’s fowls in sport, the thing he supposes himself to be doing being a mere civil trespass, incurs the guilt of manslaughter. And it is the same when the firing of the gun which results in death is meant, simply to frighten another; or when one carelessly discharges the contents of firearms into the street.”
In State v. Myers, 19 Iowa, 517, the defendant was tried and convicted of an assault with intent to inflict a great bodily injury, and it was held, on appeal, that recklessly shooting into a crowd of people and wounding one of them, though not intended, is criminal, and the conviction was sustained. In the case at bar the appellant’s weapon was recklessly and willfully, not accidentally, discharged, and, under the authorities and the evidence, it seems clear that he was rightfully convicted of assault and battery.
Lastly, it is claimed that the court erred in its instruction as to the right to arrest without warrant. The particular ground of error relied on in this connection is that the instruction given has no application to the evidence in the case. But, in that regard, we think the learned counsel for the appellant is in error.
The judgment is affirmed.
Fullerton and Reavis, JJ., concur.
Dunbar, C. J., dissents.