143 Mo. 150 | Mo. | 1898
Lead Opinion
The defendant, a negro, was awarded twenty years in the penitentiary for shooting and killing with a musket a negro boy some sixteen or seventeen years old. The killing was done at Taylor’s house.
Lee Smith, the deceased, went to Taylor’s the evening of the homicide, as did a number of other negroes of both sexes. After being there a short time, Smith became involved in a quarrel with defendant; both parties threw off their coats and after exchanging a few blows, Smith was led out or put out of the room, and walked away with a friend. Having proceeded a short distance, Smith remembered that his coat had been left in Taylor’s house, and saying he would return for it, went back toward Taylor’s house, and in a very short space of time the report of the shot was heard which took his life, and his friend returning to Taylor’s, found Smith shot through the body and dead, but without any weapons on his person, nor does it appear that he attempted to draw or use any. He was shot just as he entered the room which he had so recently left. There was testimony to show that he knocked or kicked the door open as he entered, and there was testimony of a contrary effect.
On Smith’s return for his coat it seems his approach was heard, and Taylor was told that Smith was outside, when he ran into another room and seizing his musket returned and said: “I will kill the first one that comes in.” Thereupon Caldwell, another negro, grabbed the musket and expostulated with Taylor, but to no purpose, and as Smith entered the door,
The court gave of its own motion eleven instructions, one at the instance of the State and two at the request of defendant, and refused three asked by the latter. The instructions given by the court embraced murder in the first and second degrees, manslaughter in the fourth degree and self-defense. The jury returned a verdict for murder in the second degree. There was ample evidence to support the-verdict, indeed to have justified a finding of ■ murder in the first degree. It is difficult to see what evidence there was of self-defense, but of this defendant can not complain.
The instructions were in substance such as are usually given, and finding no error in the record, we affirm the judgment.
Rehearing
ON REHEARING.
The defendant was indicted in the Audrain circuit court for the murder of Lee Smith and was convicted of murder in the second degree and his sentence fixed at twenty years in the penitentiary. This cause was heard at the beginning of this term and the judgment of the circuit court was affirmed, but counsel for defendant having moved for a rehearing on the ground that this court had not considered certain instructions which the circuit court refused, it was granted.
The facts disclosed by the record are as follows:
The defendant, á negro man, lived in Mexico, Missouri, and on the night of the thirtieth day of
The instructions given by the court embraced murder in the first and second degrees, manslaughter in the fourth degree and self-defense.
I. The instructions for murder in the first and second degrees were in the form often approved by this court and for that reason are not reproduced here. Indeed they are not challenged by counsel for defendant. This appeal is based upon the contention that the circuit court misapprehended the law as to the right of a man to defend his dwelling house, from an unlawful trespass. To present the point we here copy the court’s instructions which are so earnestly controverted by defendant.
“6. If the jury find from the evidence that the defendant and deceased engaged in a mutual altercation, and each inflicted blows' and violence upon the other in the dwelling house of defendant, and that they were separated from each other during the fight, and the deceased ejected from the house, and the door thereof shut and fastened, and shortly thereafter the deceased either kicked or struck said door and forced it open, and was in the act of entering said house when the defendant shot and killed him, and at the time he so shot deceased, defendant had no reasonable cause to apprehend on the part of deceased a design to do him
“7. The court instructs the jury that the defendant had the legal right to eject, or cause to be ejected from his dwelling house, the deceased, Lee Smith. And the deceased had no right to re-enter the said house against the known wishes and consent of defendant, and if the jury find that the deceased after being ejected from said house, shortly thereafter forced open the door of said dwelling house- and was in the act of entering said house, then the defendant had the legal right to resist and prevent the entrance into his said
Those asked by defendant and refused were as follows :
“15. The court instructs the jury that the right of one to dwell undisturbed in his own house is a right which the law not only concedes to all men, but guarantees it to them. Under the law the house of every one is to him as his castle and fortress, as well for his defense as for his repose, and the law never requires one to retreat from an attack made upon him or any member of his family while within the dwelling house; and the jury are further instructed, that so long as one occupies his habitation, no private person has a right to enter or to attempt to enter the same by violence or surprise against the known will of the occupier, and the occupier has the right to forbid such attempt or entry by words or acts and to use all necessary force to prevent the same. In resisting such attack or intrusion, the law authorizes the occupier of the habitation to act upon appearances and justifies him in meeting force with force and will hold him blameless if he slays the attacking party at a time and under such circumstances as would cause a reasonable man in his position*159 to believe that such killing was reasonably necessary to preserve the peace oí the family, prevent the intruder from gaining entrance to his habitation, and to protect himself or any member of his family then present from great bodily harm.
“16. The court instructs the jury that the occupant of a house has a right to resist, even unto the death, the entrance of a person to force himself into it against his will when no action less than killing is sufficient, or when on reasonable grounds nothing less appears to be sufficient to defend the house from entrance; and in this case, if yo.u believe that the deceased was making a forcible entry into the house of the defendant and nothing less than killing was sufficient to prevent such entrance, or on reasonable grounds it appeared that nothing less than killing would prevent such entrance and that defendant shot to prevent such entrance, then he is not guilty and you will acquit him.
“17. The court instructs the jury as a matter of law: That the dwelling house of every man is to him as his castle and fortress, as well for defense against injury and violence as for his repose; and so long as he or his family occupies said dwelling house, no private person has the right to break into or by surprise or by violence enter or attempt to enter said dwelling house against the will of the occupier; and the occupier of such dwelling house is invested by the law with authority to employ all the means within his reach, all the energies under his control, and to take life, if reasonably necessary, to prevent an entrance into his habitation. Therefore, if you believe from the evidence in this case that Lee Smith, in the night was endeavoring to make a forcible entrance into defendant’s habitation against his will, and that while so doing, defendant shot, and that such*160 shooting was apparently necessary to prevent Smith’s entering, then you will find defendant not guilty.”
In a word it will be seen that defendant insists that defendant’s dwelling house being “his castle” he had a right to defend it from a trespass even to the killing of deceased; that he had a right to take the life of deceased because of the trespass upon the dwelling house alone, irrespective of the nature of the trespass, whether it was committed with a design to commit a felony thereon or therein or upon its inmates, or was a mere trespass upon the property. That “one’s dwelling house is his castle” is a maxim of the common law. This was ruled in Semayne’s case, 5 Coke’s Rep. 91 A.: “The house of every one is his castle and if thieves come to a man’s house to rob or murder and the owner or his servants kill any of the thieves in defense of himself and his house it is no felony and he shall lose nothing.” 3 Thos. Coke’s Rep. 188. The principle is of feudal origin and essentially necessary in the early history of England when men were compelled to defend themselves in their homes, by converting them into fortified castles. It will be observed that in Semayne’s case the right to kill was limited to the resistance of the commission of a felony. It is insisted by defendant that at common law one was justifiable in killing a mere .trespasser upon his dwelling house. We do not so understand the sages of the law.
Thus Lord Hale in his Pleas of the Crown, 1 Hale P. C. 485, says: “I come to consider what the offense is in killing him that takes the goods or doth injury to the house or possession of another. And herein there will be many diversities; as, first, between a trespassable act and a felonious act, and between felonious acts themselves.” The learned author then proceeds to comment upon Harcourt’s case as follows: “This was Harcourt’s case (Crompt. 27a): Harcourt being in pos
In that case a verdict of manslaughter was sustained. What then is the significance of the expression in criminal law of the phrase, “A man’s dwelling house is his castle.” The answer we think is found in Hale and East Pleas of the Crown. Thus in 1 Hale P. C. 486, it is said in commenting upon Harcourt'’s case: “And so it had been if A. had entered upon him (i. e. into Harcourt’s house) and assaulted him first, tho’ he intended not to kill him, yet if Harcourt had thereupon killed A. it had been only se defendendo and not manslaughter, tho’ the entry of A. was not with intent to murder him, but only as a trespasser to gain possession (3 E. 3 Coron. 305, Cromp. 27b),.and it seems to mein such a case Harcourt being in his own house need not fly as far as he can as in other cases of se defendendo for he hath the protection of his house to excuse him from flying, for that wottld be to give up the possession of his house to his adversary by his flight.”
Unquestionably Lord Hale correctly states the law when he declares that a man need not fly from his house when he is assaulted therein, but it is submitted that his comments upon Harcourt’s case are not supported by that case nor by his own clear statement of the law elsewhere, nor by the other standard common law authorities. East, in his Pleas of the Crown, volume 1, page 321, challenges Lord Hale’s comments on Cooke’s case (Cro. Car. 537), in which Lord Hale, discussing the right to break the outer door in serving civil process, says: “But, thirdly, had he (Cooke) not known
1 Russell on Crimes [7 Am. Ed.], 668, says: “The rule clearly extends only to cases of felony.” “No assault, however violent, will justify killing an assailant .......unless there be a manifestation-of felonious intent.” 1 Russell on Crimes [7 Am. Ed.], 669; 1 Hawkins P. 0. 108 and 109. It is not deemed essential to quote further from the common law writers to establish that when Lord Hale speaks of the right of the owner to kill a trespasser in his dwelling house when assaulted he must be understood to have meant
Let us inquire as to our own country. Dr. Wharton, in his work on the law of homicide, in section 541, under the head of “Protection of Dwelling House,” says: “When a person is attacked in his own house he need retreat no further. Here he stands at bay and may turn on and kill his assailant if this be apparently necessary to save his own life, nor is he bound to escape from his house in order to avoid his assailant. In this sense and in this sense alone are we to understand the maxim that ‘every man’s house is his castle.’ An assailed person, so we may paraphrase the maxim, is not bound to retreat out of his house 'to avoid violencó, even though a retreat may be safely made. But he is not entitled either in the one case or the other to kill his assailant unless he honestly and non-negligently believes that he is in danger of his life from the assault,” or when a felonious assault is being made upon the house as to commit burglary, arson or other felony therein or against its inmates. This statement of the law is abundantly sustained by Archbold’s Criminal Law, p. 221, and the authorities there cited. Reg v. Bull, 9 C. & P. 22. See, also, People v. Walsh, 43 Cal. 447; Carroll v. State, 23 Ala. 28; De Forest v. State, 21 Ind. 23; State v. Patterson, 45 Vt. 308; Morgan v. Durfee, 69 Mo. 469.
It may. as well' be noted that if the aggressor is about to commit a felony it is wholly immaterial whether it is a felony at common law or by statute. In either case the owner of the house may protect himself or his house from the perpetration of a felony against either without retreating therefrom. Davis, Crim. Law, p. 156. The foregoing view of the law has been •adopted by the General Assembly of this State in defin
We have thus gone at length into a review of the law upon this subject and we deduce from the decided cases and the standard authors that a mere civil trespass upon a man’s dwelling house does not justify him in slaying the trespasser; that the owner may resist the trespass, opposing force against force, but he has no right to kill unless it becomes necessary to prevent a felonious destruction of his property, or the commission of a felony therein, or to defend himself against a felonious assault against his life or person; that if he kills without reasonable apprehension of immediate •danger to his person or property, but in the heat of passion aroused by the trespasser, it will be manslaughter, but if .one deliberately or premeditatedly kills another to prevent a mere trespass upon his property whether that trespass could or could not otherwise be prevented, he is guilty of murder. Arehbold’s Crim. Law, 225. It is clear from a reading of the instructions that the circuit court so understood the law and correctly expounded it to the jury. There was ample evidence from which the jury could have found the defendant guilty of murder in either degree, and as no error was committed on the trial, the judgment is affirmed as first ordered and rehearing denied.