1 Indian Terr. 560 | Ct. App. Ind. Terr. | 1898
The defendant, Lon Williams, wfl indicted, tried, convicted, and sentenced on the charge of assault with intent to kill, committed on one Samuel Childers. The indictment, in proper form, alleges that o| John Williams, a brother of the defendant, was the prir pal offender, and that the defendant was present, aiding abetting the said John Williams in the commission of the I fense. John Williams had been previously indicted and cl victed for the assault with intent to kill, under section 2l| Rev. St. U. S. The evidence tended to prove that on day of the alleged assault John Williams and his brotl
As to the first assignment of error, was the proc the conviction of John Williams in this case relevant 1 material? In framing the indictment, it was evidently! tended to charge the defendant as an accessory before fact, and not as a principal. By the common law, an ac| sory before the fact is one who, being absent at the tir the commission of the offense, doth yet procure, counsel command another to commit it. Absence is indispensfl necessary to constitute an accessory, for, if he be actual| constructively present when the felony is committed, an aider and abettor, and not an accessory before the Williams vs State, 41 Ark. 173. So, by the common principals are either in the first degree or in the sel degree. He who actually commits the offense is said t| principal in the first degree; he who is present, aiding