Court Opinion

ID: 5448244
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-08 18:14:45.676824+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:32:16.036087
License: Public Domain

Henshaw, J.
The defendant, charged with murder and convicted of manslaughter, rests his appeal upon a single specification of error. He contends that the court -erred in giving the following instruction:
*19“In order to justify the homicide, the danger menacing the defendant must have been present, apparent, and imminent, and the killing must have been done under a well-founded belief that it was absolutely necessary for the defendant to kill the deceased, at that time, to save himself from great bodily harm.
“The apprehension of danger to life or limb which justifies a man for taking the life of another must be an honest one—one that is well-grounded, and must arise out of a reasonable cause; but a cause which originates in the fault of the person himself—in a quarrel which he has provoked, or in a danger which he has voluntarily brought upon himself by his own misconduct— cannot be considered reasonable or sufficient in law to support a well-grounded apprehension of imminent danger to his person. Error of apprehension the law overlooks when a man is called upon to act on appearances, but it does not overlook dishonesty of apprehension. Hence, a real or apparent necessity, brought about by the design, contrivance, or fault of the defendant, cannot be availed of as a defense for the commission of a crime.
“ And no man, by his own lawless acts, can create a necessity for acting in self-defense, and thereupon, killing the person with whom he seeks the difficulty, interpose the plea of self-defense. The plea of necessity is a shield for those only who are without fault in occasioning it and acting under it.
“Undoubtedly, the defendant can show in justification that, although he brought upon himself an imminent danger, he, in the presence of that necessity, changed his mind and conduct, and honestly endeavored to escape from it, but could not without striking the mortal blow. But in the absence of such circumstances, when the defendant seeks and brings upon himself a difficulty with the deceased, in which he willingly continues until he involves himself in the necessity to kill, the law will not hold him guiltless. The right of self-defense which justifies a homicide does not include the right of attack.”
It is «insisted that this instruction is in legal intent *20identical with that condemned in People v. Button, 106 Cal. 628; 46 Am. St. Rep. 259.
In People v. Button, supra, the instruction under review was the following:
“And no man, by his own lawless acts, can create a necessity for acting in self-defens'e, and then, upon killing the person with whom he seeks the difficulty, interpose the plea of self-defense, subject to the qualification next hereinafter set out. The plea of necessity is a shield for those only who are wdthout fault in occasioning it and acting under it. The court instructs the jury that, if you are satisfied that there was a quarrel between the defendant and deceased, in which the defendant was the aggressor and' first assaulted the deceased by means or force likely to produce, and actually producing, great bodily injury to the deceased, and that the defendant thereafter, in the same quarrel, fatally shot the deceased, then you must find the defendant guilty, subject to this qualification.”
The vice of this, as the opinion clearly demonstrates, lies in its failure to recognize that circumstances might arise whereunder one who was the first aggressor might slay his opponent and still avail himself of the plea of self-defense, as after an honest withdrawal from the combat, which withdrawal was fairly made known to his adversary who thereafter forced a new strife upon him.
The qualification which the trial court gave to the instruction in the Button case, as the opinion declares, was not made evident by the record. Counsel for the state nowhere directed the attention of the court to the matter. The statement in the opinion that no explanation or qualification could validate it had reference to any explanation not embracing the principle expounded. This is too plain to need amplification. Any other interpretation would result in the merest stultification of language. It could be equivalent to saying that this court had held that no qualification could cure the incomplete instruction, while in the next sentence it proceeds to set forth the very modification which, if read *21into the original instruction, would have made it a sound enunciation of the law. It is not to be supposed, in other words, that if the explanation which the court sets forth had been given with and as a part of the instruction in the Button case it would still have been held to be erroneous.
But, as. has been said, this court did not there have the'qualification before it, and whether or not any particular qualification would have been sufficient to cure the imperfection could not have been and was not decided.
In the instruction here under consideration the part italicized is in language identical with that of People v. Button, supra, but with this all-important difference: the court, in the next sentence and in immediate connection with what it has said, proceeds to give the circumstances under which one who is the first aggressor may kill and still be justified.
If a judge should say to a jury: All contracts may rest in and be proved by parol. But there is this important qualification: those required by the statute of frauds and perjuries to be in writing must be evidenced by a writing, etc.—it would not be held permissible to consider the language piecemeal, and to say that the first sentence contains an incorrectible error.
So here the general doctrine announced in the italicized portion is defective merely by reason of its incompleteness; but, when read with what immediately follows, the whole is a fair declaration of the principle.
We do not mean by this to commend the instruction as a full exposition of the law; nor to invite its continued use by trial judges; but merely declare that in and of itself it contains no error. It may be open to some criticism for lack of clearness and for a failure fully to expound the principles governing the right of self-defense which will be found set forth at length in People v. Hecher, 109 Cal. 451; but, while it may thus fail in completeness, in so far as it goes it lays down no erroneous doctrine.
*22The judgment and order are affirmed.
Harrison, J., Van Fleet, J., Temple, J., McFarland, J., and Beatty, C. J., concurred.