120 Mo. App. 404 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1906
(after stating the facts.)
First. Section four of article two of the Constitution of Missouri of 1875, provides: “That all persons
Second. Section thirty of article two of the Constitution of Missouri, provides: “That no person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law.” The right to have and enjoy the fruits of one’s own industry, is recognized and reserved to the citizen as a natural and inalienable privilege and no authority is delegated to the State by him to deny this sacred privilege, and it follows as a necessary corollary that the citizen has the same natural right to use whatever force, and no more, to protect that property from total destruction as may appear reasonably necessary to one acting in good faith. [Reed v. Goldneck, 112 Mo. App. 310; 86 S. W. 1104.]
Third. Section seventeen of article two of the Constitution of Missouri provides as follows: “That the right of no citizen to keep and bear arms in defense of his home, person or property . . . shall be called into question.” Now it must be conceded if the citizen has reserved to himself the right to bear arms in defense of his home, person or property, he also has reserved the right to effectuate that privilege by employing such arms under the established limitations of the law, when a proper occasion presents itself and renders such employment imperative in order to give life and vigor to this natural right, for the right to bear arms in defense of one’s property, his home or his person, would amount to naught if the rights to use such arms under proper circumstances, were denied. While under the theory of our organic law, the right of the citizen to bear arms in defense of his home and property is identical with that to defend his person, it is true that the right to employ such arms in defense of either home or property is not of that same high and sacred order as the right to defend his person, nevertheless such rights are analogous and nearly allied, as is manifest by the spirit
What has been said on this feature of the case is in the nature of suggestions only, as tending to support the judgment of the learned trial court upon the theory that the ordinance, insofar as its attempted enforcement on the facts in proof, was violative of the constitutional rights of the defendant. Inasmuch as this court is without authority to adjudicate constitutional questions, however, the considerations suggested are not decided, nor will the judgment of the court be rested thereon. The questions are only discussed. From other .considerations, the judgment of the trial court must be affiremed.
The judgment will be affirmed. It is so ordered.