There is no error in an instruction that evidence recited by the
court to the jury leaves them at liberty to infer not only
willfulness, but malice aforethought, if the evidence is as so
recited.
There is no error in an instruction on a trial for murder that
the intent necessary to constitute malice aforethought need not
have existed for any particular time before the act of killing, but
that it may spring up at the instant, and may be inferred from the
fact of killing.
The language objected to in the sixth assignment of error is
nothing more than the statement, in another form, of the familiar
proposition that every man is presumed to intend the natural and
probable consequences of his own act.
Mere provocative words, however aggravating, are not sufficient
to reduce a crime from murder to manslaughter.
To establish a case of justifiable homicide, it must appear that
the assault made upon the prisoner was such as would lead a
reasonable person to believe that his life was in peril.
There was no error in the instruction that the prisoner was
bound to retreat as far as he could before slaying his assailant.
Beard v. United
States,
Page 164 U. S. 493
158 U. S. 550, and
Alberty v. United States, 162 U.
S. 499, distinguished from this case.
Flight of the accused is competent evidence against him as
having a tendency to establish guilt, and an instruction to that
effect in substance is not error, although inaccurate in some other
respects which could not have misled the jury.
The refusal to charge that where there is a probability of
innocence, there is a reasonable doubt of guilt is not error when
the court has already charged that the jury could not find the
defendant guilty unless they were satisfied from the testimony that
the crime was established beyond a reasonable doubt.
The seventeenth and eighteenth assignments were taken to
instructions given to the jury after the main charge was delivered,
and when the jury had returned to the court, apparently for further
instructions. These instructions were quite lengthy and were, in
substance, that in a large proportion of cases, absolute certainty
could not be expected; that, although the verdict must be the
verdict of each individual juror, and not a mere acquiescence in
the conclusion of his fellows, yet they should examine the question
submitted, with candor and with a proper regard and deference to
the opinions of each other; that it was their duty to decide the
case if they could conscientiously do so; that they should listen,
with a disposition to be convinced, to each other's arguments; that
if much the larger number were for conviction, a dissenting juror
should consider whether his doubt was a reasonable one which made
no impression upon the minds of so many men, equally honest,
equally intelligent with himself. If, upon the other hand, the
majority was for acquittal, the minority ought to ask themselves
whether they might not reasonably doubt the correctness of a
judgment which was not concurred in by the majority.
Held
that there was no error.
The facts constituting the offence for which Allen was indicted
are set forth in
Allen v. United States, 150 U.
S. 551, and
157 U. S. 157 U.S.
675. The rulings passed upon in the present case are stated in the
opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE BROWN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a writ of error to a judgment of the Circuit Court of
the United States for the Western District of Arkansas sentencing
the plaintiff in error to death for the murder of Philip
Page 164 U. S. 494
Henson, a white man, in the Cherokee Nation of the Indian
Territory. The defendant was tried and convicted in 1893, and, upon
such conviction's being set aside by this Court,
150 U. S. 150 U.S.
551, was again tried and convicted in 1894. The case was again
reversed,
157 U. S. 157 U.S.
675, when Allen was tried for the third time and convicted, and
this writ of error was sued out.
The facts are so fully set forth in the previous reports of the
case that it is unnecessary to repeat them here.
We are somewhat embarrassed in the consideration of this case by
the voluminousness of the charge and of the exceptions taken
thereto, as well as by the absence of a brief on the part of the
plaintiff in error, but the principal assignments of error set
forth in the record will be noticed in this opinion.
1. The third assignment of error is taken to certain language in
the charge, the material portion of which is as follows:
"If you believe the story as narrated by the two Erne boys, who
testified as witnesses, is true -- that is, that the defendant went
up the fence with his pistol; that he went through the wire fence,
and went out in the wheat field, where Philip Henson was, and met
him, first hallooed at him, placed his pistol upon the fence, and
stopped the boys, and then went through the wire fence, and went
out to where he was, and struck him first in the mouth with his
left fist, and at the same time undertook to fire upon him, and
that that firing was prevented by the action of Henson in taking
hold of the pistol, and it went off into the ground, and then he
fired at him, and struck him in the side, and then he fired at him
and struck him in the back -- you have a state of facts which would
authorize you to say that the killing was done willfully, and not
only that, but to say that it was done with malice aforethought,
because that state of case, if that be true, would show the doing
of a wrongful act, an illegal act, without just cause or excuse,
and in the absence of mitigating facts to reduce the grade of the
crime."
The learned judge was stating in this connection the theory of
the prosecution, and, if the facts were as stated by the
Page 164 U. S. 495
Ernes, there was no error in saying to the jury not that they
were bound to, but that they were at liberty to, infer not only
willfulness, but malice aforethought.
2. The fourth assignment was to the following language:
"How can you find a deliberate intent to kill? Do you have to
see whether or not the man had that intent or not in his mind a
year or month or day or an hour? Not at all, for in this age of
improved weapons, when a man can discharge a gun in the twinkling
of an eye, if you see a man draw one of these weapons and fire it,
and the man toward whom he presents it falls dead, you have a
deliberate intent to kill, as manifested by the way he did that
act. You have the existence of a deliberate intent, though it may
spring up on the spur of the moment -- as it were, spring up
contemporaneous with the doing of it -- evidenced by shooting of
the man, if the act was one he could not do under the law, and then
claim it was manslaughter, or an act that he could not do in
self-defense from the fact that it was done without just cause or
excuse, or in the absence of mitigating facts, and that is
precisely the definition of this characteristic of murder known as
malice aforethought. It does not, as I have already told you,
necessarily import any special malevolence towards the individual
slain, but also includes the case of a generally depraved, wicked,
and malicious spirit, a heart regardless of social duty, and a mind
deliberately bent on mischief. It imports premeditation. Malice,
says the law, is an intent of the mind and heart."
The substance of this instruction is that the intent necessary
to constitute malice aforethought need not have existed for any
particular time before the act of killing, but that it may spring
up at the instant, and may be inferred from the fact of killing.
This is within the authorities as applied to the common law crime
of murder, though where the crime is classified, as in some states,
proof of deliberate premeditation is necessary to constitute murder
in the first degree.
United States v. Cornell, 2 Mason,
91;
People v. Clark, 7 N.Y. 385; Whart. on Homicide §
33; Whart. on Cr.Law, 10th ed. § 117.
Page 164 U. S. 496
3. The sixth assignment is to the following language:
"The law says we have no power to ascertain the certain
condition of a man's mind. The best we can do is to infer it more
or less satisfactorily from his acts. A person is presumed to
intend what he does. A man who performs an act which it is known
will produce a particular result is, from our common experience,
presumed to have anticipated that result, and to have intended it.
Therefore we have a right to say, and the law says, that when a
homicide is committed by weapons indicating design, that it is not
necessary to prove that such design existed for any definite period
before the fatal blow was fired. From the very fact of a blow's
being struck, from the very fact that a fatal bullet was fired, we
have the right to infer as a presumption of fact that the blow was
intended prior to the striking, although at a period of time
inappreciably distant."
This is nothing more than a statement of the familiar
proposition that every man is presumed to intend the natural and
probable consequences of his own act. 1 Greenl. Ev. § 18;
Regina v. Jones, 9 C. & P. 258;
Regina v.
Hill, 8 C. & P. 274;
Regina v. Beard, 8 C. &
P. 143;
People v. Herrick, 13 Wend. 87, 91.
4. The eighth assignment is taken to the following definition of
manslaughter:
"It is the killing of a man unlawfully and willfully, but
without malice aforethought. Malice aforethought, as I have defined
it to you, must be excluded from it -- that is, the doing of a
wrongful act without just cause or excuse, and in the absence of
mitigating facts, in such a way as to show a heart void of social
duty and a mind fatally bent upon mischief, must be out of the
case. If that is driven out of the case, then if it is a crime at
all, it must come under this statute; it must come under this
definition of the crime of manslaughter. The common law, which I
will read to you, defines it in the same way. It tells you in a
little broader terms what kind of conditions it springs out of.
Speaking of voluntary manslaughter, it says it is the willful and
unlawful killing of another on sudden quarrel, or in the heat of
passion. Let us see what is meant
Page 164 U. S. 497
by this definition. The party who is killed, at the time of the
killing, must offer some provocation to produce a certain condition
of mind. Now what is the character of that provocation that can be
recognized by the law as being sufficient to reduce the grade of
the crime from murder to manslaughter? He cannot produce it by mere
words, because mere words alone do not excuse even a simple
assault. Any words offered at the time do not reduce the grade of
the killing from murder to manslaughter. He must be doing some act
-- that is, the deceased, Philip Henson, in this case, the party
killed -- which at the time is of a character that would so inflame
the mind of the party who does the killing as that the law
contemplates he does not act deliberately, but his mind is in a
state of passion, in a heat of passion, where he is incapable of
deliberating."
There is no error in this instruction. It is well settled by the
authorities that mere words, however aggravating, are not
sufficient to reduce the crime from murder to manslaughter.
Commonwealth v. York, 9 Met. 93, 103; Whart. on Homicide
§ 393; Whart. on Crim.Law, 10th ed., § 455a.
5. The ninth alleged error turned upon the statement made by the
court of the circumstances under which the killing would be
justifiable:
"It does not mean that defendant was assaulted in a slight way,
or that you can kill a man for a slight attack. The law of
self-defense is a law of proportions, as well as a law of
necessity, and it is only danger that is deadly in its character or
that may produce great bodily harm against which you can exercise a
deadly attack. If he is attacked by another in such a way as to
denote a purpose to take away his life, or to do him some great
bodily harm from which death or permanent injury may follow, in
such a case he may lawfully kill the assailant. When? Provided he
use all the means in his power otherwise to save his own life or
prevent the intended harm, such as retreating as far as he can, or
disabling him without killing him, if it be in his power. The act
coming from the assailant must be a deadly act, or an act that
would produce great violence to the person, under this proposition.
It means an act that is hurled against him, and that
Page 164 U. S. 498
he has not created it, or created the necessity for it by his
own wrongful, deadly, or dangerous conduct -- conduct threatening
life. It must be an act where he cannot avoid the consequences. If
he can, he must avoid them if he can reasonably do so with due
regard to his own safety."
It is clear that to establish a case of justifiable homicide, it
must appear that something more than an ordinary assault was made
upon the prisoner; it must also appear that the assault was such as
would lead a reasonable person to believe that his life was in
peril.
Wallace v. United States, 162 U.
S. 466.
Nor is there anything in the instruction of the court that the
prisoner was bound to retreat as far as he could before slaying his
assailant that conflicts with the ruling of this Court in
Beard
v. United States, 158 U. S. 550.
That was the case of an assault upon the defendant upon his own
premises, and it was held that the obligation to retreat was no
greater than it would have been if he had been assailed in his own
house. So too, in the case of
Alberty v. United States,
162 U. S. 499, the
defendant found the deceased trying to obtain access to his wife's
chamber through a window in the nighttime, and it was held that he
might repel the attempt by force, and was under no obligation to
retreat if the deceased attacked him with a knife. The general duty
to retreat, instead of killing, when attacked was not touched upon
in these cases. Whart. on Homicide § 485.
6. The fourteenth assignment is to the following language of the
court upon the subject of the flight of the accused after the
homicide:
"Now, then, you consider his conduct at the time of the killing
and his conduct afterwards. If he fled, if he left the country, if
he sought to avoid arrest, that is a fact that you are to take into
consideration against him, because the law says, unless it is
satisfactorily explained -- and he may explain it upon some theory,
and you are to say whether there is any effort to explain it in
this case -- if it is unexplained, the law says it is a fact that
may be taken into account against the party charged with the crime
of murder upon the theory that I have named, upon the existence of
this monitor
Page 164 U. S. 499
called conscience that teaches us to know whether we have been
right or wrong in a given case."
In the case of
Hickory v. United States, 160 U.
S. 408,
160 U. S. 422,
where the same question as to the weight to be given to flight as
evidence of guilt arose, the Court charged the jury that:
"The law recognizes another proposition as true, and it is that
'the wicked flee when no man pursueth, but the innocent are as bold
as a lion.' That is a self-evident proposition that has been
recognized so often by mankind that we can take it as an axiom and
apply it to this case."
It was held that this was error, and was tantamount to saying to
the jury that flight created a legal presumption of guilt so strong
and conclusive that it was the duty of the jury to act on it as an
axiomatic truth. So also, in the case of
Alberty v. United
States, 162 U. S. 499,
162 U. S. 509,
the Court used the same language, and added that from the fact of
absconding the jury might infer the fact of guilt, and that flight
was a silent admission by the defendant that he was unwilling or
unable to face the case against him, and was in some sense, feeble
or strong, as the case might be, a confession. This was also held
to be error. But in neither of these cases was in intimated that
the flight of the accused was not a circumstance proper to be laid
before the jury as having a tendency to prove his guilt. Several
authorities were quoted in the
Hickory case (p.
160 U. S. 417)
as tending to establish this proposition. Indeed, the law is
entirely well settled that the flight of the accused is competent
evidence against him as having a tendency to establish his guilt.
Whart. on Homicide § 710;
People v. Pitcher, 15 Mich.
397.
This was the substance of the above instruction, and, although
not accurate in all its parts, we do not think it could have misled
the jury.
7. In the fifteenth assignment, exception is taken to the
following instruction:
"You will understand that your first duty in the case is to
reject all evidence that you may find to be false, all evidence
that you may find to be fabricated, because it is worthless, and if
it is purposely and intentionally invoked by the defendant, it is
evidence against him; it is the basis for
Page 164 U. S. 500
a presumption against him because the law says that he who
resorts to perjury, he who resorts to subornation of perjury, to
accomplish an end, this is against him, and you may take such
action as the basis of a presumption of guilt."
There was certainly no error in instructing the jury to
disregard evidence that was found to be false, and the further
charge that false testimony, knowingly and purposely invoked by
defendant, might be used against him is but another method of
stating the principle that the fabrication of testimony raises a
presumption against the party guilty of such practice. 1 Phillips'
Evidence 448;
State v. Williams, 1 Williams 724; 3 Russell
on Crimes, 6th ed., 358.
8. The sixteenth assignment was to the refusal of the court to
charge the jury that where there is a probability of innocence,
there is a reasonable doubt of guilt. In the case of
Coffin v.
United States, 156 U. S. 432,
156 U. S. 452,
it was held that a refusal of the court to charge the jury upon the
subject of the presumption of innocence was not met by a charge
that they could not convict unless the evidence showed guilt beyond
a reasonable doubt.
In the case under consideration, however, the court had already
charged the jury that they could not find the defendant guilty
unless they were satisfied from the testimony that the crime was
established beyond a reasonable doubt; that this meant:
"First. That a party starts into a trial, though accused by the
grand jury with the crime of murder, or any other crime, with the
presumption of innocence in his favor. That stays with him until it
is driven out of the case by the testimony. It is driven out of the
case when the evidence shows beyond a reasonable doubt that the
crime as charged has been committed or that a crime has been
committed. Whenever the proof shows beyond a reasonable doubt the
existence of a crime, then the presumption of innocence disappears
from the case. That exists up to the time that it is driven out in
that way by proof to that extent."
The court, having thus charged upon the subject of the
presumption of innocence, could not be required to repeat the
charge in a separate instruction at the request of the
defendant.
Page 164 U. S. 501
9. The seventeenth and eighteenth assignments were taken to
instructions given to the jury after the main charge was delivered,
and when the jury had returned to the court, apparently for further
instructions. These instructions were quite lengthy, and were in
substance that in a large proportion of cases, absolute certainty
could not be expected; that although the verdict must be the
verdict of each individual juror, and not a mere acquiescence in
the conclusion of his fellows, yet they should examine the question
submitted with candor and with a proper regard and deference to the
opinions of each other; that it was their duty to decide the case
if they could conscientiously do so; that they should listen, with
a disposition to be convinced, to each other's arguments; that if
much the larger number were for conviction, a dissenting juror
should consider whether his doubt was a reasonable one which made
no impression upon the minds of so many men, equally honest,
equally intelligent with himself. If, upon the other hand, the
majority were for acquittal, the minority ought to ask themselves
whether they might not reasonably doubt the correctness of a
judgment which was not concurred in by the majority. These
instructions were taken literally from a charge in a criminal case
which was approved of by the Supreme Court of Massachusetts in
Commonwealth v. Tuey, 8 Cush. 1, and by the Supreme Court
of Connecticut in
State v. Smith, 49 Conn. 376, 386.
While undoubtedly the verdict of the jury should represent the
opinion of each individual juror, it by no means follows that
opinions may not be changed by conference in the jury room. The
very object of the jury system is to secure unanimity by a
comparison of views, and by arguments among the jurors themselves.
It certainly cannot be the law that each juror should not listen
with deference to the arguments and with a distrust of his own
judgment if he finds a large majority of the jury taking a
different view of the case from what he does himself. It cannot be
that each juror should go to the jury room with a blind
determination that the verdict shall represent his opinion of the
case at that moment, or that he should close his ears to the
arguments of men who are equally
Page 164 U. S. 502
honest and intelligent as himself. There was no error in these
instructions.
Several other assignments were made to which it is unnecessary
to call attention.
For the reasons above stated, the judgment of the court below
will be
Affirmed.