Court Opinion

ID: 7998390
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:46:45.93116+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:37.806185
License: Public Domain

Hardy, J.:
Dissenting, as I do, from the opinion of the majority of the court, reversing the decision of the circuit judge in this case, I will proceed to state very briefly the reasons which, I think, lead to the conclusion, that the evidence in the record shows a clear case of murder.
The material facts of the case, as shown by the record, are briefly these:
The deceased was a school-teacher, in conjunction with a. gentleman named Eearnster, in the town of Pontotoc, at whose school two-of the brothers of the prisoner were pupils. Brown had punished one of the brothers for improper conduct in the school, and the other had resented it, and acted in such a manner, as to destroy the discipline and government of the school. *880Upon consultation between tbe two teachers, it was determined that the case required expulsion, and accordingly, the pupil who had been guilty of the insubordination, was expelled, and he left the school, with great resentment towards Brown. This occurred on Monday morning, the 11th June, shortly after the school met. About ten o’clock of the same morning, the prisoner, an elder brother of the expelled pupil, came to the office of Drs. Fountain and Cain, in the same town, much excited, and wanted to borrow a pistol from Dr. Fountain, who asked him what he wanted with it, and he would not say. He made the same request of Dr. Cain; and when asked by him what he wanted with it, replied: “ he would see if he would let him have it,” and mentioned the name of Brown in connection with the remark. Shortly after this, he went to the printing-office, and asked for a pistol, much agitated, and mentioning the name of Brown, and muttering something which was not understood by the witness. The witness, Heard, cautioned him to act prudently, and not lay himself liable to tbe law. He went into another room, where the witness had a bowie-knife and a pistol, and had the latter loaded, and came out, having these weapons upon him. As he came out, he said, that if he had a difficulty with Brown, he would use a stick, and if the boys interfered in Brown’s behalf, he would use his weapons, to defend himself; stating, in reply to an offer of a third party, to accompany and assist him in the difficulty, that he did not expect a difficulty. Upon being told, as he came back from the room where he had got the weapons, into the printing-office, that he had better take another pistol, which had been placed there, which was thought to be better than the one he had, he replied, that he was satisfied with what he had. He was next seen talking with Miller, the president of the board of trustees of the academy, who stated that he told the prisoner that he ought to see about his brother’s expulsion from the school. Shortly after this, he went to the academy, and called Mr. Fearnster, and was very much agitated, and very angry, and requested to see Brown, in relation to the expulsion. Fearnster advised him to go away, and take time to deliberate and become cool. He urged his request to see Brown, saying that he “ wished to settle the difficulty now.” Upon being *881told that his seeing Brown would interrupt the school, he requested Fearnster to say to Brown, that he “ would see him on his way to town or to dinner, when we will settle the difficulty.” He then left, and his request was communicated to Brown, who desired Eearnster’s advice, as to the course he ought to pursue; but he declined giving any advice, and they both left the academy together, shortly afterwards.
Brown left the academy, and walked on in the path he always walked, in going to his dinner. The prisoner had stationed himself on this path, and when he saw Brown approaching the place where he was, he accosted him, and the first word that was heard was, that the prisoner told him he had been imposing upon his brother. Brown replied, that he had whipped him upon very reasonable cause, and he would leave it to any reasonable man in the town. The prisoner then called him a damned dog. Brown stepped back, and the prisoner struck him with his fist, Brown’s hand then hanging down by his side. Brown then took from his coat pocket a small leather whip, of flexible leather, which he was in the habit of wearing in his pocket, with a leathern handle, at the end of which there was lead, of about two ounces, or two and a half ounces weight. The witnesses speak of it as a small whip, and when they saw it in Brown’s hand, some of them thought it a hickory withe. Upon receiving the blow, Brown commenced striking the prisoner over the head with the little end of the whip, and the prisoner striking with his fist, Brown continuing to advance upon him and striking him with the whip, and once when Brown struck him, he fell nearly to the ground; and when he got up, he commenced backing, and endeavoring to draw his weapon, Brown continuing to whip him over the head. So soon as the prisoner drew the bowie-knife, he commenced striking Brown with it, and in a short time Brown fell. The knife was about twelve inches long, and the blade seven or eight inches. Brown died very shortly of the wounds inflicted, which were six in number.
Dr. Fountain dressed the wounds of the prisoner, after the fight. He had a contused wound on the side of the head, extending to the bone, about half an inch long, and nearly as wide, *882supposed to be made by some blunt instrument; and some bruises on bis shoulders and back,—some four or five.
The prisoner is. not shown to have had any stick or cane, nor does it appear that there was any interference by the boys, in behalf of Brown.
The question which lies at the foundation of this case is, whether the evidence shows previous malice, on the part of the prisoner.
It seems to be considered by the majority of the court, that • in order to constitute malice, it is necessary to show a previous settled purpose, absolutely to take away the life of the deceased, or a threat showing such an intention.
I think such a position wholly unsustained by authority, and unfounded in legal principle.
Malice, which is essential to murder, is defined by Blackstone, to be “ any evil design in general, the dictate of a pricked, depraved, and malignant heart,” and may exist without any fixed purpose to take the life of the individual. The evidences of this malice towards an individual, are lying in wait, antecedent menaces, former grudges, etc. 4 Black. Com., 199. Eoscoe says, “ the malice necessary to constitute the crime of mürder, is not confined to an intention to take away the life of the deceased, but includes an intent to do any unlawful act which may probably end in depriving the party of life.”
Roscoe Crim. Ev., 108, 4th Am. Ed.
Here, it seems to me, there cannot be a reasonable doubt that the prisoner had a previous grudge against the deceased, and that he lay in wait for him ; either of which facts would be sufficient to show express malice. Laboring under a feeling of animosity and a desire for revenge for the alleged injury done to his brother, he is diligent in procuring the most deadly weapons—plainly indicating by his declarations, that he intended to seek a difficulty with the deceased. It is most probable that he intended to inflict some corporal punishmént upon him, sufficient to disgrace him, and consider that, if submitted to, sufficient revenge for the alleged injury. This is the most favorable construction that can be put upon his conduct. But, if that was his expectation, it is manifest that he did not intend to make the experiment without *883being amply p repared, if necessary by a vigorous resistance, to take the life of bis antagonist. .. .
It is said that his declarations to Heard and Winston that heá did not iptend to have a difficulty, (by which, I suppose, it is understood that he did not intend to make an assault upon him with his bowie-knife and pistol, and his declining the proffered aid of Winston, who supposed from his conduct that he was about to enter into such a conflict,) show that he had no idea of provoking a difficulty which would end in the shedding of blood.
But this excuse for his conduct is altogether destroyed by his subsequent conduct. It might possibly have been true that, when he left the printing-office, he merely intended to chastise the deceased with a cane, and not to use his weapons, unless the boys interfered in behalf of the deceased. But his subsequent conduct when he called at the academy, his great excitement, and his declaration to Feamster that he wished to settle the difficulty then, his appointing the place to meet the deceased, his conduct when they met, which altogether excludes the idea that he intended anything else than a personal conflict, and his failure to carry out his intention as declared, to use a stick and not to resort to his weapons, unless compelled by the interference of the pupils—all go clearly to show that he intended to bring on a conflict, and, if necessary by resistance, to use the weapons he had provided himself with against the deceased.
In the case of Green y. The State, it was held by this court that, “ if the defendant went into the fight, having upon his person a deadly weapon, intending from the first to use the same, if necessary to enable him to overcome his antagonist, and did, in the fight, use the same and killed his antagonist, he is guilty of murder,, although lie habitually carried the weapon.” Decided at April term, 1854, and not yet reported.
It appears to me that the, mmd cannot hesitate a moment in saying that all the terms of this rule are filled by the evidence in this case.
I take the rule to be sound and well-established that, whenever a party, having previous malice, provides himself with deadly weapons, intending to use them, if necessary, in a conflict, and he provokes the conflict, and uses the weapons, and kills his adver*884sary, it is clearly murder. Iioscoe Grim. Ev., 724. "Whatever may have been his intention when he left the printing-office as to using the weapons, it is clear that he must have changed it; for he did not use the stick as he there said he intended to do, and his conduct after his visit to the academy is susceptible of no other view than that he then intended to bring on a personal conflict at all hazards, though it might end in blood, for which contingency he was fully prepared.
But, it is said that the killing is extenuated, because, in the conflict, he was hard pressed by the blows of the deceased, and only resorted to his weapon to defend himself against the fierceness of his adversary’s blows; that the killing must be regarded as the result of that furor brevis produced by the violence of the assault upon him, and cannot be ascribed to the original malicious purpose shown by his conduct.
I dissent in toto from this view, and I do not think that a case cam be found to support it, when the conflict was provoked by the prisoner, who had provided himself with deadly weapons, to be used, if necessary, except in some cases of mutual combat, and when the parties fight on equal terms; as was the case of the State v. Hill, 4 Dev. & Batt. Eq. Cases, 491. The true doctrine upon the subject is thus stated by Roseoe, 724: “ It frequently becomes a most important question in the proof of malice, whether the act was done under the sudden influence of such a degree of provocation as to reduce the crime from murder to manslaughter. The indulgence shown to the first transport of passion in these cases, says Mr. Justice Foster, is plainly a condescension to the frailty of the human frame, to thq furor brevis, which, while the frenzy lasts, renders the man deaf to the voice of reason. The provocation, therefore, which extenuates in the case of homicide, must be something that the man is conscious of, which he feels and resents at the instant the fact which he would extenuate is committed ; not what time or accident may afterwards bring to light. "Whenever death ensues from sudden , transport of passion or heat of blood, if upon a reasonable provocation and without malice, or if upon a sudden combat, it will be manslaughter; if without such provocation, or, if the blood has had reasonable time or opportunity to cool, or there be evi*885dence of express malice, it will be murder; for, in no instance cam, a party, Tcilling, alleviate his case l>y referring to a previous provocation, if it appear by any means that he acted upon express malice. When the provocation is sought by the prisoner, it cannot furnish am/y defense against the charge of murder P
It appears to me that the circumstances of this case bring it fully within the condemnation of these just and salutary rules; and, that, the rule by which this case could be reduced to manslaughter, would be equally unsustained by authority, subversive of the wholesome penal laws of the state, and dangerous in the extreme to the peace and safety of society.
But the killing, in this ease, cannot be reduced to manslaughter, even upon the principles applied to cases of mutual combat; for, in order to lessen the crime of manslaughter in such cases, it must appear that the accused sought or took no unfair advantage. “ To save the party making the first assault, upon an insufficient legal provocation, from the guilt of murder, the occasion must not only be sudden, but the party assaulted must be upon an equal footing, in point of defense at least, at the outset.” Roscoe, 788. “ But,” says Mr. Justice Bayley, “if a party enters into a contest dangerously armed, and fights under an undue advantage, though mutual blows pass, it is not manslaughter, but murder.” Whiteley’s case, 1 Lewin C. C., 173, cited Boscoe 739. And this case falls fully within these rules.
In any view in which this case can be.legálly regarded, I think the evidence shows a clear and unmitigated case of murder, and that the circuit judge acted properly in refusing bail to the prisoner.