Court Opinion

ID: 7121647
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:53:30.474+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:14:07.747949
License: Public Domain

Per Curiasi,
Masok, Chief Justice.
The plaintiff in error, was indicted in the court below under the statute for punishing an assault with a deadly instrument with the intent to inflict a bodily injury. The indictment charged him with assaulting one Jasper Koons with an axe; and that he threw and hurled the said axe at the said Koons with intent to inflict a bodily injury, &c., following the language of the statute sufficiently in every particular, except the omission to aver that the axe was a deadly instrument. The defendant was found guilty, and a motion was made in arrest of judgment in consequence of this omission. This was overruled, for which reason the cause was brought here on writ of error.
In order to render the defendant punishable under the statute, the assault must certainly have been made with a deadly weapon. As a general rule, that fact should be distinctly avered. Such at all events is the safer and better course. But tbere are some weapons and instruments which we think the court, from its knowledge of the English language, may judicially know to be of a deadly character, without a distinct averment to that effect. If the allegation had been that the assault had been made with a drawn sword, or with a gun loaded with powder and ball, would it be necessary to a.ver that these were deadly weapons? We think not.
An axe when hurled by one man at another is scarely less a deadly weapon than a drawn sword or loaded gun, and the court is equally qualified to judge of its character in this respect. It is true that either of these instruments might have been so constructed as to shape, size and material, as not to be a deadly weapon, but the language of an indictment ought not to be tortured into an unnatural meaning even in favor of the accused. Nothing, it is true, should be left to inference, but words should receive their ordinary interpretation; and where a *235distinct and unequivocal meaning is thus conveyed, further precision is not necessary. Such we think is the case in the present instance.
This perhaps may be thought a deviation from the ordinary current of judicial argument, but if it be so we think it a deviation on the side of reason. Courts should accommodate their decisions, as far as is compatible with justice, to the common sense of mankind, if they would secure for the law its ablest guardian—public respect. There is some reason to apprehend that criminal justice has been already in some instances so disguised by technical refinements and subtleties, as to become a subject of ridicule to men whose minds are unbiased by their peculiar education or interests. This feeling ought not to be increased by increasing the cause, but on the contrary wheje the current of authority is not too strong, we should seize all occasions to bring back the rules of decision to such a standard as the common reason of mankind may sanction and approve.
In the present case, the plaintiff in error is charged with hurling an axe at one Jasper Koons, with the intent to inflict upon him a bodily injury. Every person—the court, the jury and the prisoner is sufficiently informed of the nature of the offence charged. There is no danger of surprise or misapprehension. Nothing further seems to us necessary.
The judgment below ⅛ therefore affirmed.