125 A. 397 | Md. | 1924
The indictment in this case charges, in separate counts, that the appellant assaulted Robert Hawkins with intent to kill, to maim, to disfigure and to disable, and there is a final count charging assault and battery. The trial resulted in conviction on the last count. A sentence of imprisonment in the House of Correction for the period of twelve months was imposed. In the course of the trial thirteen exceptions were taken to rulings on the admissibility of evidence, and these present the only questions to be decided on appeal.
The assault was committed on the afternoon of Sunday, March 25th, 1923. The appellant, standing with his wife and children on the porch in the rear of his dwelling, in the *684 village of Klondyke, in Allegany County, fired a shot-gun at Hawkins, who was in an alley about fifty-five feet distant, the shot taking effect mainly in his right leg. It was testified by Hawkins, and other witnesses for the State, that he had gone to the alley, across a lot which it separated from the appellant's premises, because of insulting and challenging remarks addressed to him by a man named Edward Gwinn, and that when he reached the alley and was accosting Gwinn there, the appellant, without being previously involved in the altercation, declared his intention to shoot Hawkins, and at once proceeded to carry the purpose into execution. According to testimony for the defense, the gun was fired while Hawkins, without provocation from the appellant, was making a hostile demonstration and homicidal threats against him and his family, and was apparently about to draw a pistol from his hip pocket and to climb the wire fence between the alley and the appellant's lot. There was thus an irreconcilable conflict in the evidence as to whether the appellant or the prosecuting witness was the aggressor.
The most important exceptions refer to unsuccessful efforts of the defense to prove that during a period of an hour or two before Hawkins was shot he had been engaged in disorderly and dangerous conduct, including the threatening use of a pistol, toward other persons, which the appellant witnessed, and had made certain threats to kill which had not come to the appellant's knowledge. In so far as the proffered evidence would have tended to prove prior acts of violence by Hawkins which the appellant had observed, it was designed to support his theory that he had reasonable ground for believing himself or his family to be in danger of serious bodily harm when Hawkins approached in the menacing manner which the witnesses for the defense described. The excluded testimony as to the threats which the appellant did not hear would have been to the effect that Hawkins, about an hour and a half before he was shot, declared *685 a purpose to kill every "union man" in the village. It was proved that the appellant was a union miner. The proof of the threats was intended to reflect upon the question as to whether Hawkins or the appellant committed the first hostile act on the occasion with which the case is specially concerned. In refusing to admit the testimony to which the principal exceptions relate, the trial court expressed the view that evidence as to prior threats and acts of violence of the prosecuting witness toward others, on the afternoon of the shooting, was irrelevant, and that the material inquiry was whether he made any such hostile demonstrations against the appellant at the time and place of the assault alleged in the indictment.
In Jenkins v. State,
The same considerations, of course, apply to the present question as would be pertinent if the wound inflicted by the appellant had been mortal and he were under indictment for a homicide. Stockham v. Malcolm,
In 3 Bishop's New Criminal Procedure (2nd Ed.), 1599, it is said, upon the authority of many cases there cited: "Under a claim of self-defense, where the necessity for the defendant's resorting to it should be judged of by the facts as theyappeared to him, whatever they truly were, he may give in evidence whatever he knew of the character, prior conduct, threats or other utterances of the person with whom he was contending, which, not as showing that the man was bad, but that in the special instance and circumstances he *687 was dangerous, might reasonably have place among the considerations guiding his actions."
The case of Sneed v. Territory,
The Supreme Court of Michigan, in the case of People v.Harris,
In our opinion the proffered testimony as to the appellant's knowledge of violent demonstrations by the prosecuting witness just prior to the shooting charged in the indictment should have been admitted.
The rejected evidence relating to homicidal threats by Hawkins which were not communicated to the appellant would obviously not have been admissible to account for his *688
action in committing the assault for which he was tried. But it might have reflected upon the issue, in regard to which the testimony was conflicting, as to who was really responsible for the attack. The opinion of the Supreme Court in Wiggins v.People,
In the opinion delivered by the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, in Trapp v. Territory of NewMexico, 225 Fed. 971, it was said: "It is the general rule that on the trial for a homicide uncommunicated threats are not admissible in evidence, because such threats cannot have had any influence upon the mind or intent of the defendant. But there is an exception to this rule as well established as the rule itself. It is that where the alleged crime was committed in a sudden affray, and there is a conflict in the evidence upon the question, and there is doubt which party fired the first shot, made the first assault, *689
or was the aggressor, uncommunicated threats of death or great bodily harm to the defendant, his father, or other near relatives he claims to be trying to defend, are admitted in evidence, not on account of their influence on the mind or intent of the defendant, but because they tend to prove the probability that he who made the threats, rather than his opponent, fired the first shot, made the first assault or was the aggressor." In support of that statement the opinion cited Wiggins v. People, andAllison v. United States, supra, and some of the other cases already noted, and also State v. Felker,
If, shortly before the event to which the indictment refers, the prosecuting witness in this case threatened to kill every union man in the village, that fact would be relevant to the question raised in the evidence as to whether he approached the appellant, a union minor, with hostile and dangerous gesture and intent, on the occasion of the assault which resulted in this prosecution. The testimony which was offered to prove such threats for that purpose should not, in our judgment, have been rejected.
The exceptions we have discussed were the first, second, fourth, sixth, and eighth to twelfth inclusive.
The third exception was taken because the prosecuting witness was not permitted to be asked, on cross-examination, whether he was acting in a peaceable manner during a period of several hours preceding the assault for which the appellant is indicted. The witness had been closely cross-examined as to his conduct prior to the shooting and had fully testified on the subject. An inquiry which invited his general characterization of the conduct which he had described in detail could not well have benefited the defense. In so far as it may *690 be supposed to have related to actions of the witness like those indicated by the exceptions already considered, it is subject to the conclusions we have stated.
The question raised by the fifth exception is obviated by the subsequent admission of uncontradicted proof of the fact to which it refers.
The seventh exception relates to the refusal of the court below to allow the appellant to be asked what was the state of his mind when he saw Hawkins approaching. The next question propounded to the appellant, which was: "Why did you shoot Hawkins?" was allowed to be answered, and the reply was: "Because I thought he was going to shoot my wife or some of the children." This was a sufficient statement of his apprehension, and of the reason for his act, to meet the purpose of the preceding question.
The thirteenth exception has reference to testimony offered by the State which was clearly admissible evidence in rebuttal.
Because the rulings with which this opinion has been mainly concerned have had the effect of excluding evidence which we think the appellant was entitled to introduce, we find it necessary to reverse the judgment and remand the case for a new trial.
A motion was filed to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the record was not transmitted to this Court within the prescribed period. The affidavits filed in opposition to the motion sufficiently explain and excuse the delay, to justify the view that the appeal ought not to be dismissed. The motion is accordingly overruled.
Judgment reversed and new trial awarded.
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