66 Mo. 13 | Mo. | 1877
— The defendant was indicted for the murder of Americus V. Lawrence, and convicted of murder in the first degree. On the appeal to the St. Louis Court of Appeals, the judgment on that verdict was affirmed, and he has appealed to this court.
The principal ground of complaint is that the court
It is impossible to construe properly the first and second sections of our act in relation to murder without a knowledge of the common law in regard to murder and manslaughter. Murder was thus defined by Sir Edward Coke, 3 Inst. 47: “ Where a person of sound memory and discretion unlawfully killeth any reasonable creature, in being and u'nder the king’s peace, with malice aforethought.” Manslaughter was the unlawful killing of another without malice express or implied. “ Manslaughter, which is principally distinguishable from murder in this, that though the act which occasions the death be unlawful, or likely to be attended with bodily mischief, yet the malice, either express or implied, which is the very essence of murder, is presumed to be wanting in manslaughter, and the act being imputed to the infirmity of human nature, the correction ordained for it is proportionably lenient.” [East’s Pleas of the Crown, 1 Yol. 218.] Sec. 1. Wag. Stat. page 445, defines murder of the first degree, as follows: “ Every murder which shall be committed by means of poison, or by lying in wait, or by any other kind of willful, deliberate and premeditated killing, or which shall be committed in the perpetration or attempt to perpetrate any arson, rape, robbery, burglarly or other felony.” By section 2 : “ All other kinds of murder at common law, not herein declared to be manslaughter, or justifiable or excusable homicide, shall be deemed murder in the second degree.” The word malice is not used .in’either section, but is in-
In every case of murder at common law there was an intent to kill either express or implied, and where all the circumstances showed, when the intent was not conclusively presumed, that no such intent existed, tire homicide, if not justifiable or excusable, was but manslaughter.- A ’ and B, acquaintances, between whom no trouble has occurred and no ill-feelings exist, stand talking on the street. A tells B that he lies; B, with a heavy stick, the use whereof will not probably result in death, with no intention to kill, strikes A upon the head and kills him. Blackstone. and East say that the crime of which B is guilty is manslaughter and not murder. £i Words of reproach, how greivous soever, are not provocatives sufficient to free the party killing from the guilt of murder, nor are contemptuous or insulting actions or gestures without an assault upon the person, nor is any trespass against land or goods. This rule governs every case where the party killing, upon such provocation, made, use of a deadly weapon, or othei’wise manifested an intention to kill, or to do some great bodily harm. But if he had given the other a box on the ear, or had struck him with a stick, or other weapon not likely to kill, and had, unluckily, and against his intention killed him, it had been but manslaughter, for no malignant intention can be collected from such acts.” East’s Pleas of the Crown, vol. 1, page 233. To the same effect is Blackstone’s Com., 4 vol., 201.
As the above supposed ease was but manslaughter at common law, it, of course, could not be murder in either degree, under our statute. On page 256,1 East’s Pleas of
"What, then, is murder in the second degree ? It is the wrongful killing of ahúman being with malice aforethought
As was said by the supreme court of Kansas in Craft v. The State of Kansas, 3 Kansas 451, speaking of the provisions of the statutes of that state similar to ours : “ To constitute murder at common law there must be malice prepense or aforethought, i. e., an unlawful intention to take life must jorecede the killing. But£ deliberation and premeditation’were not necessary ingredients. The same penalty was provided for killing with malice aforethought, that was inflicted for malicious, deliberate and premeditated killing. The law recognized no degree of atrocity in the crime. The law-makers of this state, as did those of other
Applying these principles to the case under consideration, should the court have instructed as to murder in the second degree ? If the killing was deliberately done it was murder of the first degree. In every homicide, however great the provocation may be, if there be sufficient time for passion to subside and reason to interpose, it will be murder in the first degree. “ The law assigns no limits within which the cooling time may be said to take place — 'every case must depend on its own circumstances.” A purpose to kill may be conceived and deliberately executed, although but a very brief time elapse between the conception and the execution of the purpose. Deliberation does not mean brooded over, considered, reflected upon for a week, a day or an hour, but it means an intent to kill, executed by the party, not under tile influence of a violent passion suddenly aroused, amounting to a temporary dethronement of reason, but in the furtherence of a formed designed, to gratify a feeling of revenge or to accomplish some other unlawful purpose. It is no easy matter to draw the line of distinction betwixt premeditation and deliberation. It is more easily conceived than expressed. Instances are more satisfactory than definitions.
The facts, as disclosed by the testimony here, are that prior to the 29th day of January, 1877, the defendant and
We have carefully examined the record to find evidence tending to mitigate the offense of which defendant was guilty, but have failed to discover a circumstance to indicate that it was other than a deliberate murder. That he intended to kill; that there was no excuse or justification for,the killing; that the provocation was slight, and that the deceased explained and apologized for it, were clearly proved, and we should have to disregard all the authorities to hold that it was a proper case for an instruction in regard to murder of the second or manslaughter in any degree.
There was nothing in the alleged misconduct of the prosecuting attorney in interviewing the defendant’s witness, or in the remark to the jury in his argument that the murder was admitted, to justify a reversal of the judgment. On these points the observations of the Court of Appeals, in its opinion, are apposite, and we adopt them as very clearly expressing our views. So of the exhibition to the jury of the bones of the vertebral column of the deceased. It served to show to the jury the attitudes and relative positions of the parties when the shot was fired. It was not, an unnecessary parade of the bones of the dead man to excite prejudice against his slayer, but was legitimate and,
We are all agreed that.the judgment should be, and it is, accordingly affirmed.
Arríeme».