Court Opinion

ID: 7131813
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 15:19:39.363795+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:14:29.875375
License: Public Domain

JUDGE HOLT
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a conviction for voluntary manslaughter. In a difficulty between the appellant, Levi Hart, and John Veal; a by-stander who was in nowise engaged in it, by the name of Charles Waller, was shot and instantly killed. A jury have found that the appellant did it. If so, it was undoubtedly unintentional upon his part, and done in shooting at Yeal, who was also then killed. The case, therefore, turns upon whether the conduct of the appellant in so shooting was excusable. If he was first attacked by Yeal, and acted only in self-defense, then it was excusable homicide.
*79The testimony is very conflicting as to whether the appellant or Yeal began the conflict. Some witnesses testily that the one, and some that the other, made the first offensive movement, and fired the first shot.
The appellant offered to prove that on the day previous to the killing Yeal said that he would elect his man at the election which was to occur the next day, or kill the appellant. This threat was not communicated to the accused, and the testimony was rejected. It is urged that it was competent by way of showing who brought on the difficulty. The two men were opposing each other, being for different candidates. The threat substantially fixed a time when in a certain event it would be carried out. The difficulty did then occur; the event named was then in progress; and the issue now being, who was the aggressor, is the evidence of the uncommunicated threat by the deceased competent to illustrate it? The question has not been heretofore directly decided by this court, and indeed we have little authority .to guide us to a correct conclusion.
In the case of Cornelius v. the Commonwealth, 15 B. M., 539, the prisoner, who was being tried upon the charge of murder, introduced evidence of threats which had been communicated to him, and which had been made by the deceased. He then offered to prove other threats upon the part of the accused, made a few days before the killing, and which had not been communicated to the prisoner. The lower court excluded them; but this court said: “We think that this testimony should, under the circumstances in this case, have been admitted. It tended to confirm *80the other evidence, that Hopson had made threats against the prisoner, and to' counteract a- presumption of fabrication by the • witnesses who gave that testimony. ' Besides, Hopson’s intention to-malee an attack on the accused was an- - important - matter, as well as the belief of the existence of such -an intention on the part of the prisoner.”
In the case just cited the admissibility of the uncommunicated threats was based upon the fact that they tended to confirm the 1 communicated ' threats, and also evinced the intention of the deceased, and illustrated the question whether the one or the- other 'was the aggressor. In the case now before us no communicated threats were proven'; hence, the naked question is in hand, whether uncommunicated threats by the deceased are admissible for the purpose of showing whether he or the accused began the difficulty, when this is in issue. In determining it, it must be kept in mind that the question before the jury is, whether the accused is excusable upon the ground that the act was done'by him in defending himself against an unlawful attempt by Veal to kill him, or inflict upon him great bodily harm.
Threats to commit the crime for which one is on trial are competent as evidence against him upon the question whether he in fact did it, because they show an intention to do it, and therefore a probability is created that he is the person who did it.
If A enters a house where B is, and just before doing ■so he avows an intention to kill B; and shortly after entering a difficulty between them occurs- in' which A is killed, and it is a question which one of them began *81it, certainly the declaration of A, although uncommunicated to B, would be competent evidence to illustrate the 'question who was the aggressor, and as tending to show that A made the attempt to carry out his threat. There is in principle no difference between this evidence and that which we are now considering, save in degree. In the one case the threat would in point of time be more convincing perhaps; but the •only difference would be in the weight of the testimony. It may be said that threats are often the subject of false testimony; and that mischief will result from such a rule. This is true, however, to a greater or less extent of any species of testimony; and the tendency of the age is to widen the door for the admission of evidence, because it has been found by experience that justice is thereby promoted.
In the case of Jewett v. Banning, 21 N. Y., 27, it was held in an action for an assault and battery, alleged to have been committed in the absence of witnesses, that evidence of former ill-will by the defendant against the plaintiff was competent as a circumstance to show its commission.
In A Wharton’s Crim. Law, section 642, it is said: “Where A is charged with a murderous assault upon B, or with killing B (the plea of self-defense not being set up), remarks or threats affecting A, ■made by B to a third party before the assault, are not admissible in A’s behalf; especially when it does not appear at what time they are communicated to him.
■ “Yet, if the question is whether the deceased was the assailant, the fact that he declared beforehand *82that he meant to attach the defendant is material; nor, on this issue, is it necessary that the defendant should be proved to have had, notice of such-threats.'’'’
Again, in volume 2, section 1027, the author says ;■ “Where the question is as to what was the deceased’s, attitude at the time of the fatal encounter, recent threats may become relevant to show that this attitude was one hostile to the defendant, even though such threats were not communicated to the defendant.”
In the case of Stokes for the killing of James Fisk, 53 N. Y., 164, the question was directly presented; and it was there held that where it was a question before the jury whether the act of the accused was done in defending himself, that recent threats upon the part of the deceased toward him were competent as evidence, although they had not been communicated to him. They, of course, are not competent to show the quo animo of the defendant,, or from what belief he may be actuated, because, not having been communicated, he can have none by reason of them. But where the question is at issue,, whether the one ■ or the other was the aggressor, where there were no witnesses to the transaction, or if there were, the matter is in doubt, we conclude that such testimony, be it worth much or little, is admissible as an aid to its solution.
We perceive no other error in the record; but for that indicated the judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial consistent with this opinion.