In Utah, it is not necessary that an indictment for murder
should charge that the killing was unlawful.
An indictment which clearly and distinctly alleges facts showing
a murder by the unlawful killing of a human being with malice
aforethought is good as an indictment for murder under the Utah
statutes, although it may not indicate upon its face, in terms, the
degree of that crime, and, thereby, the nature of the punishment
which may be inflicted.
The indictment in this case sufficiently charged the crime of
murder.
After the verdict of the jury that the defendant was guilty of
murder in the first degree, the court, the defendant being present,
announced that he had been convicted of murder in the first degree
without any recommendation, and, as he elected to be shot,
therefore it was ordered, adjudged, and decreed that he be taken,
etc., and shot until he was dead.
Held that this was a
full compliance with the requirements of the statutes of Utah.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 151 U. S. 263
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff in error, Enoch Davis, was indicted in the first
Judicial District court of the Territory of Utah for murder,
alleged to have been committed as follows:
"The said Enoch Davis, on the 6th day of June, A.D. 1892 at the
County of Utah, in said Territory of Utah, in and upon one Louisa
Davis, there being, willfully, feloniously, and of his deliberately
premeditated malice aforethought did make an assault with a certain
revolver, by him, the said Enoch Davis, then and there had and
held, with which said revolver he, the said Enoch Davis, her, the
said Louisa Davis, upon the head did then and there willfully,
feloniously, and of his deliberately premeditated malice
aforethought beat, bruise, and wound, thereby then and there
inflicting upon the head of her, the said Louisa Davis, one mortal
wound, of which the said Louisa Davis then and there instantly
died, and so the grand jurors aforesaid so say that, in manner
aforesaid, he, the said Enoch Davis, her, the said Louisa Davis,
then and there did kill and murder, contrary to the form of the
statutes of said territory in such cases made and provided, and
against the peace and dignity of the people aforesaid."
The defendant demurred to the indictment on the ground that it
did not state facts sufficient to constitute a public offense. The
demurrer was overruled, and he excepted. The defendant then pleaded
not guilty. After trial, the jury returned the following
verdict:
"We, the jury impaneled in the above-entitled cause, find the
defendant, Enoch Davis, guilty of murder in the first degree, as
charged in the indictment. Newell Brown, foreman."
There was a motion for a new trial upon various grounds, and
defendant also moved in arrest of judgment upon the following
grounds: first, the indictment does not charge murder in the first
degree; second, the verdict against the
Page 151 U. S. 264
defendant, of murder in the first degree, was in excess of the
offense charged in the indictment.
Under date of November 3, 1892, appears the following order of
the court:
"The defendant being present in court, the motions for a new
trial and in arrest of judgment having been separately argued by
respective counsel, and the court, now being fully advised therein,
orders that said motions be overruled; to which order the defendant
excepts. Defendant being present in court, and being asked by the
court if he had anything to say why sentence should not be now
pronounced against him, and he answering in the negative, and said
defendant having chosen to be shot instead of hanging:"
"Thereupon the court rendered its judgment: whereas, you, the
said Enoch Davis, having been duly convicted of the crime of murder
in the first degree, without any recommendations whatever, it is
therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed that you, the said Enoch
Davis, be taken hence to the penitentiary of the Territory of Utah,
where you shall be safely kept until Friday, December 30, 1892, and
that between the hours of ten in the forenoon and four in the
afternoon on said day, you be taken from your place of confinement
to the jail or jail yard of the county jail of the County of Utah,
or some other private and convenient place in said County of Utah,
and that you then be shot till you are dead. You are hereby
remanded into the custody of the United States marshal of Utah, who
will see that this judgment and sentence of the court are carried
out and executed. To which orders, defendant excepts."
An appeal was taken to the supreme court of the territory, and
the judgment was affirmed.
"Murder" is declared by the statutes of Utah to be "the unlawful
killing of a human being with malice aforethought." This is
substantially "murder," as defined at common law. 4 Bl.Com. 195; 3
Inst. 47. And such malice may be expressed or implied -- expressed,
when there is manifested a deliberate intention unlawfully to take
away the life of a fellow creature; implied when no considerable
provocation appears or when
Page 151 U. S. 265
the circumstances attending the killing show an abandoned or
malignant heart. 2 Comp.Laws of Utah, 578, §§ 4452,
4453.
It is also provided that
"every murder perpetrated by poison, lying in wait, or any other
kind of willful, deliberate malice and premeditated killing, or
committed in the perpetration of, or attempt to perpetrate, any
arson, rape, burglary, or robbery, or perpetrated from a
premeditated design, unlawfully and maliciously to effect the death
of any other human being, other than him who is killed, or
perpetrated by any act greatly dangerous to the lives of others,
and evidencing a depraved mind, regardless of human life, is murder
in the first degree, and any other homicide, committed under such
circumstances as would have constituted murder at common law, is
murder in the second degree."
Further, that
"every person guilty of murder in the first degree shall suffer
death, or, upon the recommendation of the jury, may be imprisoned
at hard labor in the penitentiary for life at the discretion of the
court, and every person guilty of murder in the second degree shall
be imprisoned at hard labor, in the penitentiary for a term not
less than five or more than fifteen years."
2 Comp.Laws of Utah, 579, §§ 4454, 4455.
In respect to the forms of pleadings in criminal actions and the
rules by which their sufficiency is to be determined, it is
provided that the indictment must contain a clear and concise
statement of the acts or omissions constituting the offense, with
such particulars as to time, place, person, and property, as will
enable the defendant to understand distinctly the character of the
offense charged, and to answer the indictment, and must be direct
and certain as regards the party and the offense charged, and the
particular circumstances of the offense. The words used in the
indictment are to be construed according to their usual acceptance
in common language, except such words and phrases as are defined by
law, and they are to be construed according to their legal meaning.
Words in the statute defining a public offense need not be strictly
pursued in the indictment, but other words conveying the same
meaning may be used. 2 Comp.Laws of Utah, 687-688, §§
4928-4931, 4936, 4937.
Page 151 U. S. 266
In respect to the description of the offense, an indictment is
sufficient under the laws of Utah if the act or omission charged as
the offense is clearly and distinctly set forth, without
repetition, and in such a manner as to enable the court to
understand what is intended and to pronounce judgment, upon
conviction, according to the right of the case. 2 Comp.Laws of
Utah, § 4938.
The first assignment of error relates to the overruling of the
demurrer to the indictment. The point here made is that, as
"murder" is defined by the statute to be the unlawful killing of a
human being with malice aforethought, it was necessary to charge,
in words, that the killing was "unlawful." This position cannot be
sustained, for the facts alleged present, in clear and distinct
language, a case of unlawful killing. It is not necessary, as we
have seen, to use the very words of the statute defining the
offense. It is sufficient if those used convey the same meaning.
The indictment sets forth the case of an assault and battery
committed by the defendant willfully, feloniously, and with
deliberately premeditated malice aforethought, and resulting in
instant death, whereby the defendant did kill and murder, contrary
to the statute, etc. Such facts plainly import an unlawful
killing.
Other assignments of error present the objection that the
indictment is so framed that it will not support a verdict of
guilty of murder in the first degree. This objection is based in
part upon the theory that murder in the first degree and murder in
the second degree are made distinct separate offenses. But this is
an erroneous interpretation of the statute. The crime defined is
that of murder. The statute divides that crime into two classes, in
order that the punishment may be adjusted with reference to the
presence or absence of circumstances of aggravation, and therefore
"whenever a crime is distinguished into degrees," it is left to the
jury, if they convict the defendant, "to find the degree of the
crime of which he is guilty." 2 Comp.Laws of Utah, 715, §
5076. If the defendant pleads guilty "of a crime distinguished or
divided into degrees, the court must, before passing sentence,
determine the degree."
Id., § 5101. An indictment
Page 151 U. S. 267
which clearly and distinctly alleges facts showing a murder by
the unlawful killing of a human being with malice aforethought is
good as an indictment for murder under the Utah statutes, although
it may not indicate, upon its face, in terms, the degree of that
crime, and thereby the nature of the punishment that may be
inflicted. Of course, if an indictment is so framed as to clearly
show that the crime charged is not of the class designated as
murder in the first degree, the jury could not find a verdict of
guilty of murder in that degree. But, as already suggested, the
pleader need not indicate the degree, but may restrict the
averments to such facts as in law show a murder -- that is to say,
an unlawful killing with malice aforethought -- leaving the
ascertainment of the degree to the jury, or, in case of confession,
to the court. As the acts which, under the Utah statute, constitute
murder, whether of the highest or lowest degree, constituted murder
at common law, it is clear that an indictment good at common law as
an indictment for murder, in whatever mode or under whatever
circumstances of atrocity the crime may have been committed, is
sufficient for any degree of the crime of murder under a statute
relating to murder as defined at common law, and establishing
degrees of that crime in order that the punishment may be adapted
to the special circumstances of each case.
These views are abundantly sustained by authority. The earliest
legislative enactment in this country by which degrees of murder
were established was the Pennsylvania statute of April 22, 1794,
"for the better preventing of crimes," etc. That statute recites as
the reason for its passage that the several offenses, which were
included in the general denomination of "murder," differed greatly
in the degree of their atrocity, and that it was unjust to involve
them in the same punishment. It was consequently enacted that all
murder perpetrated by means of poison, etc., should be deemed
murder of the first degree, and all other kinds of murder should be
deemed murder of the second degree; leaving the jury, if there was
a trial, or the court, if the prisoner pleaded guilty, to ascertain
from evidence the degree of the crime. In the
Page 151 U. S. 268
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, Chief Justice Tilghman said:
"Now this act does not define the crime of murder, but refers to
it as a known offense. Nor, so far as it concerns murder in the
first degree, does it alter the punishment, which was always death.
All that it does is to define the different kinds of murder, which
shall be ranked in different classes, and be subject to different
punishments. It has not been the practice, since the passing of
this law, to alter the form of indictments for murder in any
respect, and it plainly appears by the act itself, that it was not
supposed any alteration would be made. It seems taken for granted
that it would not always appear on the face of the indictment of
what degree the murder was, because
the jury are to ascertain
the degree by their verdict, or, in case of confession,
the court are to ascertain it by examination of witnesses.
But if the indictments were so drawn as plainly to show that the
murder was of the first or second degree, all that the jury need do
would be to find the prisoner
guilty in manner and form as
he stands indicted."
Yeates and Brackenridge, JJ., concurred in these views, the
former observing:
"Different degrees of guilt exist under the general crime of
murder, which is therefore arranged under two classes of murder, of
the first and second degree. The uniform practice since the act was
passed has been to lay the offense as at common law."
White v. Commonwealth, 6 Binney 179, 182 (1813). The
same principle was announced in
Commonwealth v. Flanagan,
7 W. & S. 415, 418.
So in
Wicks v. Commonwealth, 2 Virginia Cas. 387, 391,
decided in 1824 in Virginia, where the statute dividing the crime
of murder into degrees was like that of Pennsylvania, it was said
that the legislature did not intend to change, much less to divide,
the common law crime of murder into two separate offenses, to be
prosecuted and punished under two distinct indictments, but
intended to graduate the punishment of each murder according to the
circumstances under which it should be committed.
In
Green v. Commonwealth, 12 Allen, 155, 170, the
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, referring to the
previous
Page 151 U. S. 269
cases of
Commonwealth v. Gardner, 11 Gray 438, and
Commonwealth v. Desmarteau, 16 Gray 1, said:
"The reason on which these decisions were founded was this: that
the statute establishing degrees of murder did not create any new
offense, or change the definition of 'murder' as it was understood
at common law; that the forms of indictment previously in use,
descriptive of murder, embodied every shade or degree of the crime,
from that which was most aggravated, malicious, and premeditated
down to that which had only the element of implied malice in its
most mitigated form, and that as the offense was not changed, but
only its punishment mitigated in certain cases, the indictment was
sufficient to embrace every species of murder, whether it fell
within one or the other of the degrees of homicide as defined by
the statute. The logical and necessary conclusion from these
discussions is that an indictment for murder at common law does
charge murder in the first degree."
To the same effect are many other adjudged cases, among which
are
Graves v. State, 45 N.J.L., 203, 206;
Mitchell v.
State, 8 Yerg. 513, 526;
People v. Murray, 10 Cal.
309, 310;
People v. Dolan, 9 Cal. 576, 584;
Kennedy v.
People, 39 N.Y. 245, 250;
People v. Conroy, 97 N.Y.
62, 70;
State v. Lessing, 16 Minn. 64, 66, 67;
State
v. Verrill, 54 Me. 408, 415;
Gehrke v. State, 13 Tex.
573, 574;
McAdams v. State, 25 Ark. 405, 416.
We are of opinion that the indictment in this case sufficiently
charged the crime of murder. The acts constituting the crime are
set forth with such clearness and distinctness that both the
defendant and the court understood the character of the offense
charged, and the court was enabled to pronounce judgment according
to the right of the case. The defendant was charged with having
willfully, feloniously, and of his deliberately premeditated malice
aforethought assaulted the deceased with a revolver, with which he
beat, bruised, and wounded her upon the head, inflicting a mortal
wound, from which death instantly resulted, whereby, in the manner
stated, the defendant killed and murdered the person so assaulted.
The indictment alleges an unlawful killing, with
Page 151 U. S. 270
malice aforethought, and thereby a murder. It was not necessary
to allege in express words an intent to kill, because "murder," as
defined by the statute, may be committed if the killing be
unlawful, and if no considerable provocation appears, or the
circumstances attending the killing show an abandoned or malignant
heart. Under the charge made in this case, it was competent to show
by evidence, under § 4454 of the Compiled Laws of Utah, that
the killing was with willful, deliberate malice, and was
premeditated, and it was perhaps competent to show that the
killing, in the mode charged, was by an act greatly dangerous to
the life of the decedent, and "evidencing a depraved mind,
regardless of human life." In either case, a verdict of murder in
the first degree would have been proper. If the evidence showed a
case of homicide that, under the statute, was not murder in the
first degree, but was nevertheless committed under such
circumstances as would have constituted murder at common law, then
the verdict should have been that the defendant was guilty of
murder in the second degree. But as the evidence was not preserved
in a bill of exceptions, we cannot say that the verdict of guilty
of murder in the first degree was unauthorized by the facts adduced
at the trial. It certainly was within the scope of the
indictment.
Another assignment of error is that the court failed to adjudge
that the defendant was guilty of some offense. This objection is
supposed to be sustained by section 5100 of the Compiled Laws of
Utah, which provides:
"After a plea or verdict of guilty, or after a verdict against
the defendant, on a plea of a former conviction or acquittal, if
the judgment is not arrested, or a new trial granted, the court
must appoint a time for pronouncing judgment, which must be at
least two days after the verdict, if the court intend to remain in
session so long, or if not, as remote a time as can reasonably be
allowed, but in no case can the judgment be rendered in less than
six hours after the verdict."
There is nothing in the record upon which this assignment can be
based. The motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment having
been overruled, and the defendant having been
Page 151 U. S. 271
asked, as required by the statute (§ 5108) if he had
anything to say why sentence should not be pronounced, and having
answered that inquiry in the negative, the court proceeded to
judgment. The appellant insists that it was necessary that the
court itself, in the exercise of its independent judgment upon the
facts, and as a condition of its authority to sentence, should have
adjudged that he was guilty of the crime charged before imposing
the sentence prescribed by the statute. The court, the defendant
being present, announced that he had been duly convicted of the
crime of murder in the first degree, without any recommendation,
and therefore it was "ordered, adjudged, and decreed" that he be
taken, etc., and shot until he was dead. What the court said on the
occasion of the sentence was in effect a judicial determination
that the defendant had been duly convicted of the offense named.
That was the only judgment it was necessary to render, and the
sentence which followed gave legal effect to that adjudication. The
statutes of Utah required nothing more.
There are no other assignments of error which require notice at
our hands.
The judgment of the supreme court of the territory is
Affirmed.