70 Vt. 1 | Vt. | 1896
The alleged assault was committed upon Paul Tinkham, constable of Rochester, and three persons acting under him, while they were effecting an arrest of the respondents and two others, without a warrant, on suspicion of felony. The officer acted upon information received from Brandon by telephone, to the effect that the post office at Ticonderoga, N. Y., had bepn burglarized the night before, and that four persons suspected of the crime had left Forestdale going in the direction of Rochester. When met by the officer and his assistants the suspected party were coming along the highway in a wagon driven by a liveryman from Forestdale. The jury have found under the charge of the court that when Tinkham met the respondents’ party he said to them that he arrested them by the authority of the State of Vermont, and that upon inquiry being made as to which was the officer, Tinkham was designated as such by one of his party. The remainder of the transaction must be taken to have been in accordance with the testimony most favorable to the respondents’ claim. Thepurport of this was that one of the respondents’ party then asked Tinkham if he had any papers, and that Tinkham thereupon pulled a revolver from his pocket, saying that was all the papers he needed, at once returning the revolver to his pocket; and that respondent Taylor then said with an oath, “You can’t take this party without papers,” and that upon this .all four of the suspected persons commenced to get out of the wagon, some of them firing at the constable’s party as they did so.
•The jury were instructed in substance that if Tinkham had reasonable cause to suspect that the respondents had committed a burglary, he could arrest' them without a warrant; and that if he told them that he arrested them by the authority of the State of Vermont, and if they knew he
It has long been held in most of the states that when one charged with the commission of a felony in one state escapes to another, he may be there arrested and detained before a demand for his return has been made by the governor of the state from which he has fled. In most of the cases where this doctrine has been enunciated, the arrest was made upon the warrant of a magistrate. But in State v. Anderson, 1 Hill (S. C.) 327, it was held that an arrest by a private person, without warrant, could be justified by showing prima facie that a felony had been committed in another state, and that the party arrested was the perpetrator. It is clearly the tenor of the decisions that the machinery provided for the arrest of local offenders is available for the arrest of fugitives from another jurisdiction ; and it must follow that when the arrest without warrant is made by an officer, it will be sufficient for his justification if it appear that he had reasonable cause to believe that the person arrested had committed a felony in another state, although more than this may be required for his detention when brought before a magistrate. So, in Re Henry, 20 How. Pr. 185, it was said that the officers were undoubtedly authorized to arrest the prisoner upon reasonable ground of suspicion, although there was no proof on the hearing that the suspicion was well founded.
It is well settled that the person whose arrest is attempted must have notice of the authority and purpose
In Rex v. Woolmer, 1 Moody 334, decided two centuries later, the judges went even further in sustaining a conviction, although not with entire unanimity. This case grew out of an arrest without w;arrant on information of
It is frequently said in the text-books and in judicial discussions that an officer must show his warrant or state the ground of the arrest, if demanded. But an examination of the authorities will show conclusively that this is not a part of the arrest, but a duty which immediately follows it. Upon submitting to the officer the arrested party is entitled to this information, but he cannot put off the arrest and increase his chances of escape by requiring an explanation in advance. In Bellows v. Shannon, 2 Hill (N. Y.) 86, where it is said that either before or at the moment of the arrest the officer ought to say enough to show the party that he is not dealing with a trespasser but with a minister of justice, it is further remarked, “I do not say that the officer is bound to declare the particulars of his authority before he makes the arrest, or that it may not sometimes be
It is evident from the adjudged cases that in the rule above stated, as to what is essential in making an arrest, notice of the officer’s authority means notice of his official character and not of the exact circumstances which authorize the arrest, and that notice of his purpose relates to the purpose to arrest and not to the purpose of the arrest. It is beyond question that in making an arrest by virtue of a warrant the officer cannot be required to show the warrant or state the substance of it until the arrest is accomplished. In this case there was no warrant, and the officer could arrest without one only in certain classes of cases. But we think the officer was no more obliged to state the conditions which authorized him to arrest without a warrant, than he would have been to produce his warrant or state the substance of it in case of an arrest on warrant. All that the respondents could require in the €rst instance was a statement sufficient to show that the person who demanded their submission was an officer acting in his official capacity. This was clearly covered by the designation of Tinkham as the officer, and by his statement that he arrested them by the authority of the State of Vermont.
It appears then that the words of arrest employed by the
It is also objected that the respondents could not be convicted of more than a common assault without the finding of an actual intent to take life, and that the charge permitted the jury to return their verdict without finding this. It has been repeatedly held in cases not involving the matter of arrest that proof of a specific intent to kill is requisite. The intent is the body of the aggravated offense. If death results from an unlawful act the offender may be guilty of murder, even though he did not intend to take life; but if the assault, however dangerous, is not fatal, the offender cannot be convicted of an assault with intent to kill unless the intent existed. An intent to take life may sometimes be presumed from the fact of killing, but when that fact does not exist the intent must be otherwise established. Any inference that may be drawn from the nature of the weapon and the manner of its use is an inference of fact to be drawn by the jury upon a consideration of these with the other circumstances of the case. 2 Bish. Cr. Law, § 741; Roberts v. People, 19 Mich. 401; Patterson v. State, 85 Ga. 131: 21 Am. St. 152.
Nor do we find any ground for holding otherwise when the assault is made in resisting arrest. Under an indictment framed like this, a respondent may be convicted of an assault with intent to kill or an assault with intent to
So it becomes necessary to consider whether the matter of intent was properly submitted to the jury. The question was not entirely ignored by the court, but it was omitted from the general propositions submitted, and we think the charge as a whole could not fail to leave upon the minds of the jury an impression that if the circumstances of the arrest were such that the killing of the officer would have been murder, the assault was an assault with intent to murder. The attention of the jury was directed almost exclusively to the question of guilt as depending upon the legality of the arrest. They were nowhere distinctly told that unless the respondents were found to have made the assault with an intent to take life they could be convicted of nothing but a common assault.
We think there was also error in the instruction given as to the liability of all for the act of one. The court charged in substance that if the four persons whom the officers were attempting to arrest were acting together with
The testimony of Paul Tinkham that he was constable of Rochester and was acting as such at the time of the arrest, was properly received. It was not necessary to prove his official character by the record. Com. v. McCue, 16 Gray 226.
The testimony of Hoyt and Martin, who assisted the constable in making the arrest, that they were called upon by Tinkham to help him arrest some burglars, was properly received. The requisition of the officer was their authorization, and it was proper to show what the officer called upon them to do.
Four men having been arrested, it was not error to permit the witness Harris, the United States Marshal, to state that he had transferred two of them to another jurisdiction.
It being necessary for the State to show that the officer had reasonable cause to believe that the respondents had. committed a felony, it was proper for the State to show by the witness Hall whatever was communicated by him to the officer as to the information the witness had received, and its source. But the State was at liberty to show that a felony had in fact been committed; and there was evidence,, as to which no question is now made, concerning what had taken place in the post office at Ticonderoga. In this connection, and upon this ground, the entire testimony of Hall, and the testimony of Holbrook and Fletcher, were admissible as tending to trace and identify the respondents in their flight from the place of the burglary to the place of their arrest. Proof that a burglary had been committed,, and that these men were fleeing from the scene of it immediately after its occurrence, bore upon the question whether they fully apprehended the character and purpose of the persons they assaulted, and the question whether they had a motive to fire upon them with intent to kill. People v. Pool, 27 Cal. 572.
The State was permitted to show that near the close of the affray the respondent O’Donald ran off and hid in the bushes, and that he was afterwards brought in by two of the officer’s assistants, and that when the physician came to dress his wounds and inquired as to his name, age and residence, he remained silent. The first was admissible as an incident of the affray, the second as an incident of the general transaction of which the affray was a part, and the third — in the view of a majority — as subsequent conduct indicative of guilt. The alleged offense was one which involved the respondent’s connection with a prior transaction. The question put to him was such as might properly be asked by a physician when called to attend a stranger. The respondent’s failure to give his name and
Exceptions sustained, sentence vacated, and cause remanded.