The indictment in this case, which is set forth at length in the
statement of the case, alleged the murder to have been
committed
"on the high seas, and within the jurisdiction of this Court,
and within the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of the said
United States of America, and out of the jurisdiction of any
particular the said United States of
Page 170 U. S. 482
America, in and on board of a certain American vessel."
Held that nothing more was required to show the
locality of the offense.
The indictment was claimed to be demurrable because it charged
the homicide to have been caused by shooting and drowning, means
inconsistent with each other, and not of the same species.
Held that the indictment was sufficient, and was not
objectionable on the ground of duplicity or uncertainty.
There was no irregularity in summoning and empaneling the
jury.
There was no error in permitting the builder of the vessel on
which the crime was alleged to have taken place to testify as to
its general character and situation.
As there was nothing to indicate that antecedent conduct of the
captain, an account of which was offered in evidence, was so
connected with the killing of the mate as to form part of the
res gestae, or that it could have any legitimate tendency
to justify, excuse, or mitigate the crime for the commission of
which he was on trial, there was no error in excluding the evidence
relating to it.
After the government had closed its case in chief, defendant's
counsel moved that a verdict of not guilty be directed because the
indictment charged that the mate met his death by drowning, whereas
the proof showed that his death resulted from the pistol shots.
Held that there was no error in denying this motion.
While a homicide, committed in actual defense of life or limb,
is excusable if it appear that the slayer was acting under a
reasonable belief that he was in imminent danger of death or great
bodily harm from the deceased, and that his act was necessary in
order to avoid death or harm, where there is manifestly no adequate
or reasonable ground for such belief, or the slayer brings on the
difficulty for the purpose of killing the deceased, or violation of
law on his part is the reason of his expectation of an attack, the
plea of self-defense cannot avail.
The evidence offered as to the general reputation of the captain
was properly excluded.
As the testimony of the accused did not develop the existence of
any facts which operated in law to reduce the crime from murder to
manslaughter, there was no error in instructing the jury to that
effect.
Andersen was indicted in the Circuit Court of the United States
for the Eastern District of Virginia for the murder of William
Wallace Saunders on an American vessel on the high seas, of which
vessel Saunders was the mate and Andersen the cook.
The indictment charged that Andersen,
"on the 6th day of August, in the year of our Lord 1897, with
force and arms, on the high seas, and within the jurisdiction of
this court, and
Page 170 U. S. 483
within the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of the said
United States of America, and out of the jurisdiction of any
particular state of the said United States of America, in and on
board of a certain American vessel, the same being then and there a
schooner called and named
Olive Pecker, then and there
belonging to a citizen or citizens of the said United States of
America, whose name or names is or are to the grand jurors
aforesaid unknown, in and upon one William Wallace Saunders,
sometimes called William Saunders, then and there being on board
said vessel, did piratically, willfully, feloniously, and of his
malice aforethought make an assault, and that the said John
Andersen, alias John Anderson, a certain pistol then and there
charged with gunpowder and leaden bullets, which said pistol he,
the said John Andersen, alias John Anderson, in his hand (but which
hand is to the said jurors unknown) then and there had and held,
then and there piratically, feloniously, willfully, and of his
malice aforethought did discharge and shoot off to, against, and
upon the said William Wallace Saunders, sometimes called William
Saunders, with intent him, the said William Wallace Saunders,
sometimes called William Saunders, then and there to kill and
murder, and that the said John Andersen, alias John Anderson, with
the leaden bullets aforesaid out of the pistol by the said John
Andersen, alias John Anderson, discharged and shot off as
aforesaid, then, to-wit, on the said 6th day of August, in the year
of our Lord 1897, and there, to-wit, on the high seas as aforesaid,
in and on board of the said American vessel, and within the
admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of the said United States of
America, and within the jurisdiction of this Court, and out of the
jurisdiction of any particular state of the United States of
America, piratically, feloniously, willfully, and of his malice
aforethought did strike, penetrate, and wound the said William
Wallace Saunders, sometimes called William Saunders, in and upon
the head of him, the said William Wallace Saunders, sometimes
called William Saunders (and in and upon other parts of the body of
him, the said William Wallace Saunders, sometimes called William
Saunders,
Page 170 U. S. 484
to the said jurors unknown), giving to him, the said "
brk
William Wallace Saunders, sometimes called William Saunders,
then and there, with the leaden bullets aforesaid, so as aforesaid
discharged and shot off out of the pistol aforesaid by the said
John Andersen, alias John Anderson, with the intent aforesaid, in
and upon the head of him, the said William Wallace Saunders,
sometimes called William Saunders (and in and upon other parts of
the body of him, the said William Wallace Saunders, sometimes
called William Saunders, to the said jurors unknown) several
grievous, dangerous, and mortal wounds, and the said John Andersen,
alias John Anderson, did then and there, to-wit at the time and
place last above mentioned, him, the said William Wallace Saunders,
sometimes called William Saunders, piratically, feloniously,
willfully, and of his malice aforethought cast and throw from and
out of the said vessel into the sea, and plunge, sink, and drown
him, the said William Wallace Saunders, sometimes called William
Saunders, in the sea aforesaid, of which said mortal wounds,
casting, throwing, plunging, sinking, and drowning the said William
Wallace Saunders, sometimes called William Saunders, in and upon
the high seas aforesaid, out of the jurisdiction of any particular
State of the United States of America, then and there instantly
died.
"And the grand jurors aforesaid, upon their oath aforesaid, do
say that, by reason of the casting and throwing of the said William
Wallace Saunders, sometimes called William Saunders, in the sea as
aforesaid, they cannot describe the said mortal wounds with greater
particularity."
The case coming on before Goff, Circuit Judge, and Hughes,
District Judge, defendant
"demurred to the said indictment on the ground that it does not
specify the locality on the high seas where the alleged offense
occurred, and for other reasons not assigned. Thereupon the United
States joined in said demurrer as to the said cause so assigned,
and objected to the said demurrer being in any wise considered, for
reasons not assigned. Whereupon, after argument, the court
overruled the said demurrer for the cause assigned as aforesaid,
and admonished the accused that he must state any
Page 170 U. S. 485
other grounds of demurrer on which he relied, as the court could
not otherwise consider them. No other grounds being alleged by the
accused, the said demurrer was overruled."
Defendant was duly and formally arraigned, and pleaded not
guilty, and then
"moved to quash the writ of
venire facias for the petit
jury to be used in the trial of this particular case on the ground
that the said writ must show that said venire were summoned for the
trial of this particular case, and not the general venire for
offenses in general to be tried at this term of the Circuit Court
of the United States for the Eastern District of Virginia."
This motion was overruled, and defendant excepted.
A jury was thereupon duly impaneled and sworn, and the trial
proceeded with, and during its progress, exceptions to the
admission and exclusion of evidence and the giving and refusal of
instructions were preserved by defendant. At the close of the
government's case in chief, defendant's counsel moved the court to
instruct the jury to bring in a verdict of not guilty on the ground
that defendant was indicted for the murder of Saunders by drowning,
whereas the evidence showed that he met his death by the discharge
of a pistol. The court overruled the motion, and defendant
excepted. A verdict of guilty having been returned, defendant made
successive motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, which
were severally overruled, whereupon he was sentenced to be
executed. This writ of error was then sued out, the cause docketed,
and duly argued at the bar.
The bill of exceptions contained the following preliminary
statement of uncontroverted facts:
"That the American three-masted schooner
Olive Pecker
sailed from Boston, Massachusetts, on the 20th day of June, 1897,
for Buenos Ayres, South America, with a cargo of lumber under and
on deck. She had on board a captain, J. W. Whitman; a mate, William
Wallace Saunders, sometimes called William Saunders; an engineer of
a donkey engine, William Horsburgh; a cook,
viz., the
defendant, John Andersen, and four seamen,
viz., Martin
Barstad, a native of Norway; John Lind, a native of Sweden; Juan de
Dios
Page 170 U. S. 486
Barrial, a native of Spain, and Andrew March, a native of
Newfoundland. That the said
Olive Pecker was an American
vessel, belonging to citizens of the United States. That the said
vessel proceeded from Boston on her course to her port of
destination until the morning of August 6, 1897, when, on the high
seas, and about one hundred or one hundred fifty miles off the
Brazilian coast, between nine and ten o'clock on that morning, the
captain, Whitman, was shot in his cabin, and shortly thereafter the
mate was shot on the left-hand side of the forecastle head, and his
body immediately thrown into the sea. The body of the captain was
also thrown into the sea. Several hours thereafter, the said vessel
Olive Pecker was burned, and the cook, engineer, and four
seamen took to the sea in an open boat. Twenty-eight or thirty
hours thereafter, they reached the Brazilian coast, where, having
spent the night on shore, they separated the next morning, the
accused and John Lind going in a northerly direction, and the other
four going in a southerly direction. That the accused and Lind
within a few days reached Bahia, in Brazil. Both shipped -- the
accused on a vessel called the
Bernadotte, bound for
Pensacola, in the United States, and Lind on a Brazilian barkentine
bound for some point in Spain. The other four men, having the
Spaniard as their spokesman (he being familiar with the language of
the country and not finding an American consul), made known to the
Brazilian authorities what had transpired on the
Olive
Pecker, with the request that telegrams be sent along the
coast for the arrest of the accused, John Andersen. These four men,
having secured passes on a vessel to Bahia, arrived there several
days after the arrest of the accused, and were placed in charge of
the American consul at that port. The accused handed to the
American consul a statement, in his own handwriting, purporting to
be an account of the voyage of the
Olive Pecker, and also
made to the American consul a sworn statement, as did also the
other five men, which said statements were duly transmitted to the
Department of State at Washington, and, upon the call of
defendant's counsel, were produced for his use at the trial, but
were not produced in evidence. "
Page 170 U. S. 487
"At the direction of the government at Washington, the American
consul at Bahia kept the accused and the five men in custody at
Bahia until the arrival at that port sometime in the month of
September, 1897, of the United States man-of-war
Lancaster, when they were put on board of that vessel, and
brought into Hampton Roads, Virginia, in the Eastern District of
Virginia, that being the first district into which the accused was
brought after the commission of the alleged offense, and the said
accused, together with the five men, was turned over by the
officers of the
Lancaster to the United States marshal on
the 7th day of November, 1897, and were duly placed in confinement
in the city jail at Norfolk, Virginia."
The evidence introduced on the trial was given in full, and
included the testimony of the four seamen, Barstad, Lind, Barrial,
and March, and the engineer, Horsburgh, on behalf of the
government, and that of the defendant on his own behalf. A
considerable portion is set forth in the margin.
*
Page 170 U. S. 489
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER, after stating the facts in the
foregoing language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
1. The cause assigned in support of the demurrer to the
indictment was that it did "not specify the locality on the
Page 170 U. S. 490
high seas where the alleged offense occurred." The objection was
without merit. The indictment alleged the murder to have been
committed
"on the high seas, and within the jurisdiction of this Court,
and within the admiralty and maritime
Page 170 U. S. 491
jurisdiction of the said United States of America, and out of
the jurisdiction of any particular State of the said United States
of America, in and on board of a certain American vessel. . .
."
Nothing more was required to
Page 170 U. S. 492
show the locality of the offense.
St. Clair v. United
States, 154 U. S. 134,
154 U. S. 144.
But the point is now made that the indictment was demurrable
because it charged the homicide to have been caused by shooting and
drowning, which are means
Page 170 U. S. 493
contended to be inconsistent in themselves, and not of the same
species. This ground of demurrer was not brought forward in the
circuit court, although defendant was admonished that he must state
all the grounds on which he relied. But, treating
Page 170 U. S. 494
it as open to consideration, we think the indictment was clearly
sufficient, as ruled, in effect, in
St. Clair's case.
In that case, defendant was charged with the murder of
Fitzgerald on board the bark
Hesper, on the high seas,
by
Page 170 U. S. 495
striking and beating him with a weapon unknown, and thereby
giving him "several grievous, dangerous, and mortal wounds," and
then and there casting and throwing him from the vessel into the
sea, and drowning him, "of which said
Page 170 U. S. 496
mortal wounds, casting, throwing, plunging, sinking, and
drowning," Fitzgerald "then and there instantly died." The language
used was much the same as that employed in
United
States v. Holmes, 5 Wheat. 412. The indictment was
sustained,
Page 170 U. S. 497
though the particular objection under consideration was not
commented on. The indictment in this case was evidently drawn from
that, and charged that Andersen assaulted Saunders with a pistol
with intent to kill him, by the
Page 170 U. S. 498
discharge of which he inflicted on him "several grievous,
dangerous, and mortal wounds," and that he did
"cast and throw from and out of the said vessel into the sea,
and plunge, sink, and drown him, the said William Wallace Saunders,
sometimes called William Saunders, in the sea aforesaid, of which
said mortal wounds, casting, throwing, plunging, sinking,
Page 170 U. S. 499
and drowning"
Saunders "then and there instantly died." And it was further
said, as in the indictment against St. Clair, that, by reason of
the casting and throwing of Saunders into the sea as aforesaid, the
grand jurors "could not describe the said mortal wounds with
greater particularity."
In
Commonwealth v. Webster, 5 Cush. 295, the first
count charged an assault and a mortal wound by stabbing with a
knife, the second by a blow on the head with a hammer, and the
third by striking, kicking, beating, and throwing on the ground.
The fourth count charged that the defendant feloniously, willfully,
and of his malice aforethought deprived the deceased of life "in
some way and manner, and by some means, instruments, and weapons to
the jurors unknown." The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
was unanimously of opinion that the latter was a good count. The
court, speaking through Chief Justice Shaw, said:
"From the necessity of the case, we think it must be so, because
cases may be imagined where the death is proved, and even where
remains of the deceased are discovered and identified, and yet they
may afford no certain evidence of the form in which the death was
occasioned, and then we think it is proper for the jury to say that
it is by means to them unknown. . . . The rules of law require the
grand jury to state their charge with as much certainty as the
circumstances of the case will permit, and if the circumstances
will not permit a fuller and more precise statement of the mode in
which the death is occasioned, this count conforms to the rules of
law."
In explaining the indictment and the setting out of several
modes of death, the Chief Justice also said:
"Take the instance of a murder at sea: a man is struck down,
lies some time on the deck insensible, and in that condition is
thrown overboard. The evidence proves the certainty of a homicide
by the blow or by the drowning, but leaves it uncertain by which.
That would be a fit case for several counts, charging a death by a
blow and a death by drowning, and perhaps a third alleging a death
by the joint result of both causes combined."
Commonwealth v. Desmarteau, 16 Gray 1, was an
indictment
Page 170 U. S. 500
for murder containing three counts. The first charged that the
murder was committed by casting, throwing, and pushing the deceased
into the Connecticut River, and so choking, suffocating, and
drowning her; the second, that the death was caused by the blows of
some weapon or instrument to the jurors unknown; the third, that
the death was caused by the blows and drowning both. It was held
that all the counts were in proper legal form, and related to a
single offense, and that, as a conviction on any one required the
same judgment and the same sentence as a conviction on all, the
jury were properly instructed that if they found the prisoner
guilty of the murder as set forth in either, they might return a
verdict of guilty generally.
So an indictment which alleged that death was caused by a
wounding, an exposure, and a starving was held in
Commonwealth
v. Macloon, 101 Mass. 1, not to be bad for duplicity, and it
was ruled that it was sufficient to allege that the death resulted
from all these means, and to prove that it resulted from all or any
of them.
And see Joy v. State, 14 Ind. 139;
Woodford v.
People, 62 N.Y. 117;
State v. Fox, 25 N.J.L., 536,
601;
State v. Johnson, 10 La.Ann. 456;
People v.
Colt, 3 Hill, 432;
Jones v. Georgia, 65 Ga. 621;
Rogers v. State, 50 Ala. 102;
Gonzales v. State,
5 Tex.App. 584.
In our opinion, the indictment was not objectionable on the
ground of duplicity or uncertainty.
Granting that death could not occur from shooting and drowning
at the same identical instant, yet the charge that it ensued from
both involved no repugnancy in the pleading. For the indictment
charged the transaction as continuous, and that two lethal means
were employed cooperatively by the accused to accomplish his
murderous intent, and whether the vital spark had fled before the
riddled body struck the water or lingered until extinguished by the
waves was immaterial.
If the mate had been shot in the rigging and fallen thence into
the sea, an indictment alleging death by shooting and drowning
would have been sustainable.
The government was not required to make the charge in
Page 170 U. S. 501
the alternative in separate counts. The mate was shot, and his
body immediately thrown overboard, and there was no doubt that, if
not then dead, the sea completed what the pistol had begun.
2. The venire for the jury in this case was issued after the
term began, and it is insisted that it does not appear that it was
authorized by any order of court. This was a point not made below,
and it appeared on the argument at bar that an order of court
directing the jury to be summoned had been duly entered, but
omitted from the record because no question had been raised in that
regard. A duly certified copy of that order being produced, counsel
for plaintiff in error very properly waived the necessity of
issuing a certiorari, on suggestion of diminution, to bring it up.
This disposed of the objection as made.
On the trial, plaintiff in error moved to quash the venire on
the ground that it should have shown that the jurors were summoned
for the trial of this particular case. The motion was overruled.
The law did not require jurors necessarily to be summoned before
the term began, nor the name of the particular person or persons to
be tried to be inserted in the writ. This was the November term of
the court, and the order was entered on the second day of December,
and the writ was issued on the sixth of that month, after the
commencement of that term, and was in the usual form, directing the
persons named to appear on a day named to serve as petit jurors at
said term. So far as appears, there was no irregularity in
summoning and impaneling the jury, and no exception was taken to
the jury as impaneled. The point was untenable.
3. One A. J. Hall testified for the government that he built the
Olive Pecker, and had sailed her for seven years. He
described the vessel, and, in connection with his testimony,
certain diagrams and an oil painting of the vessel were introduced
without objection. He testified, among other things, that with a
deckload of lumber of a certain height, and the vessel on the port
tack, a man in the wheelhouse could command a view of the port
side. After he had given his testimony,
Page 170 U. S. 502
counsel for plaintiff in error "moved to strike out all
testimony as to the condition of the vessel at the time of the
casualty." Counsel for the government insisted that he had asked
the witness nothing about that, and the circuit judge said:
"The court does not understand that he has so testified.
Anything that would bear that construction, as a matter of course
will be excluded from the jury. I think it is eminently proper that
the jury should understand the character or this vessel. This man
is familiar with it. He built it. He has commanded it. He is
detailing to the jury nothing that took place at the time of the
alleged offense. He is giving the general character and situation
of the vessel, so that you may understand it, which I think is
eminently proper. As he was not on the vessel at the time of this
occurrence, the court will not permit him to testify about anything
that took place then."
The ruling was correct.
Bram v. United States,
168 U. S. 532,
168 U. S.
568.
The witness was asked this question: "Is it customary, in
loading vessels with a deckload of lumber, to leave passageways or
stairways to go down in different parts of the vessel?" He
answered: "We most always do that, when we can, when the lumber
comes right, but sometimes we have to go right over it when we
can't." He was then asked: "Are you, or not, familiar with the
deckload of the
Olive Pecker when she sailed from Boston
on the 20th of June?" He answered: "No; I don't know anything about
that."
Counsel now contends that defendant moved to strike out the
testimony as to what was customary, but the record contains no such
motion, and we think the reference must be to the motion above
mentioned, which was properly disposed of.
4. John Lind had testified on cross-examination that Andersen
asked the mate, "
Won't you protect me until we get to port?'"
and that the mate said: "`Get to port, You will get killed anyhow,'
or some thing like that." The question was then put: "How came he
to ask the mate to protect him?" He answered: "The captain was
cussing and treating him badly." Objection was made by the district
attorney on the ground that counsel had no right to go into any
altercation
Page 170 U. S.
503
between the accused and the captain, but counsel for the
accused insisted that he might
"ask what took place between the captain and Andersen that
morning, whether the mate was present or not, and let the jury
infer whether Andersen was alluding to that, when he asked the mate
for protection."
The court ruled: "You may ask it. We want all the facts in the
case, and, if it is not relevant testimony, it will be excluded."
The witness thereupon gave an account of the quarrel about the
captain's dog. He was then asked: "Do you know of any other
circumstances? Had this captain been brutal or inhuman to this cook
in any other way?" This question was objected to on the ground
"that the character of the captain, and his treatment of the
accused prior to this time was not an issue in this case, which was
a trial for the killing of the mate, and was not a part of the
res gestae of this case."
After argument, the court sustained the objection and excluded
the question, and exception was taken. Counsel for plaintiff in
error immediately remarked, "I mean by the interrogatories I am
going to propound now to confine myself to that morning," and
continued the cross-examination. The record makes it plain that all
evidence offered as to what occurred that morning was admitted, and
that what was excluded in this instance was evidence of the conduct
of the captain prior to the day the mate was killed. And there was
nothing to indicate that that antecedent conduct of the captain was
so connected with the killing of the mate as to form part of the
res gestae, or that it could have any legitimate tendency
to justify, excuse, or mitigate the crime for the commission of
which Andersen was on trial.
5. After the government had closed its case in chief,
defendant's counsel moved that a verdict of not guilty be directed
because the indictment charged that the mate met his death by
drowning, whereas the proof showed that his death resulted from the
pistol shots. There was no error in denying this motion.
We repeat that the indictment charged the death to have resulted
from shooting and drowning, and that the fact was uncontroverted
that the mate was shot, and immediately
Page 170 U. S. 504
thrown into the sea. There was no examination to ascertain
whether he was then dead or not. He was lying face down, and was
picked up and thrown overboard as ordered by the accused, according
to the testimony for the government. Lind and March believed he was
dead, Horsburgh said he appeared so, Barstad was doubtful, and
Barrial testified he told the cook he was alive.
So far as this motion was concerned, it was enough that the
evidence was not conclusive that he was killed by the pistol
shots.
And, as already indicated, the government was not required to
make the charge in the alternative, and elect to proceed in respect
of one means of death rather than the other where the murderous
action was continuous.
6. Several of the errors assigned related to the rulings of the
court limiting the testimony to the transactions on the day of the
homicide. These rulings were made on certain questions propounded
to the accused. His counsel asked:
"Now I want to ask this question to the witness: I want you to
detail with truth to the jury everything that occurred in reference
to this business from the time you shipped, on the 16th day of June
until you left the vessel on the 6th day of August."
This was objected to, and after argument the court, through
Goff, circuit judge, ruled as follows:
"I have no objection to your having the accused commence in his
own way, and detail as to him is best, confining himself to the
truth, just what took place there on the morning of that day, and
without any assistance from you; but I cannot permit him to detail
to the jury the incidents of the voyage from the time they left
Boston in June, as I understand your question to indicate."
Exception was taken. Counsel then proceeded: "Q. Did you ship on
the
Olive Pecker? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you have trouble
with the captain?"
This was objected to, and the court said:
"I must say, Mr. McIntosh, that I fail to see the pertinency of
testimony as to a quarrel with the captain in June or in July.
Suppose the mate was a party; the charge is that of killing
Saunders in
Page 170 U. S. 505
August, and the testimony is confined to that time. You can
show, if you can, what was the feeling between the accused and the
mate, and that it was such growing out of previous quarrels or
threats by the mate to take the life of the accused, or anything in
that line which would tend to explain the standing of the parties
at the time of this occurrence. Now anything that bears upon what
had taken place, so far as the mate is concerned, can go before
this jury."
Exception was taken.
Counsel continued:
"Q. You shipped on board the
Olive Pecker sometime in
June, 1897? A. Yes, sir. Q. Now state to the jury all that occurred
between you and the mate during that time, including all the facts
and circumstances attending the 6th of August."
All that part of the question intended to elicit what occurred
between the mate and the cook from the time they left Boston was
objected to.
The court said:
"The trouble, Mr. McIntosh, is this: in the present condition of
the testimony of this witness, it is hard to see the pertinency of
it now, but I do not say that it may not be pertinent. You had
better first let the witness detail the transactions of the 6th of
August, and if anything is developed thereby which makes it
pertinent to bring in previous incidents as tending to explain what
took place on the 6th, it can come in."
Exception was taken.
The accused was then asked: "Detail to the court and jury all
the occurrences which took place on the morning of the 6th of
August, 1897." Thereupon the accused gave his account of the
transaction of that date, the trip to shore, and the subsequent
arrest. After he had concluded, his counsel put this question: "Now
state what trouble, if any, you had had with this mate previous to
this occasion." The question was objected to on the ground that the
testimony of the witness should be confined to what occurred on the
day of the homicide. After argument, Goff, J., delivered this
opinion:
"The reason I suggested to counsel for the accused that the
statement as to the occurrences relating to the killing of the mate
should be stated as they took place on that day was that
Page 170 U. S. 506
the testimony might be confined to a certain limit. Now there is
no doubt in the world that a party may protect his own life against
the party assailing him. If he believes that he is about to suffer
harm from one who has attacked, if he bases that belief upon a
previous threat, if he bases that upon previous personal
encounters, if he bases that upon the known brutal character of the
party, the law, out of tender consideration for the frailties of
human nature, will permit him to act upon that belief and upon that
understanding. But can we apply that in this case? Now we must look
at the matter as it is before the jury, as it is presented by this
witness. The witness states that he had a controversy with the
captain; that the captain was cruel to him; then, in that hour, he
turned to the mate and advised with the mate; he asked the
protection of the mate. His conduct, at least, does not indicate
that there was any feeling between him and the mate at that time.
If the testimony is admissible, it is upon the theory that it must
tend to explain the situation as it then existed. He had turned to
the mate to ask his protection from the captain. Now if the mate
had attacked him, it would be perfectly competent for Andersen to
show that the mate previous to this day had threatened him or had
been cruel to him. We must look at the testimony as the witness has
given it himself. It was the witness who sought the mate, and not
the mate who sought the witness. I fail to see how a party can,
under those circumstances, show, either by himself or by another,
that he had had a controversy with the party he is about to attack
the day before or the week before, if he has had time to cool. If
there had been a controversy of that kind, even under any
circumstances of that kind, it does not authorize the party to take
the law into his own hands. I must exclude the testimony, and
adhere to the intimation I gave sometime ago on another ruling,
with reference to threats."
To this ruling, exception was taken. Counsel then said:
"Now in order that this matter may go down right, and in order
that I may save the point, but without any disrespect to the court,
I want to propound this question to the witness. "
Page 170 U. S. 507
"Q. I don't want you to answer this, Andersen, until the court
passes upon it. I want it to go down in the record. I want to ask
you whether on the day before you had had a difficulty with the
mate, and, without provocation on your part, the mate had not
attempted to throw you overboard?"
"Mr. McIntosh: I understand that your honor rules that I cannot
ask that?"
"The Court: The question is improper, and cannot be
answered."
And to this, exception was taken.
The preliminary rulings of the court, which required the
incidents of August 6th to be given at the outset, are not open to
criticism. The point to be considered is whether evidence of
transactions previous to that day was admissible in the light of
the testimony of the accused in respect of what passed on that day.
It will be perceived that no specific offer of proof was made. But,
assuming that counsel had offered to show by the accused that he
had had trouble with the mate previously to August 6th, and that
the day before, he had had a difficulty with him, and the mate,
without provocation, had attempted to throw the accused overboard,
would such testimony by the accused have been admissible in view of
his own detailed account of the homicide and its surrounding
circumstances? On what legal principle could it have been held to
have a tendency in justification, excuse, or mitigation?
Andersen's story was that on the morning of August 6th, he had a
difficulty with the captain about the dog. That the captain cursed
him, struck him, and sent him on top the red-hot stove and the pots
and pans. That he subsequently appealed to the mate for protection,
and he treated the application with scorn and profanity. That
sometime afterwards, he went to the cabin to sweep it, and that the
captain glared at him and cursed him. He commenced sweeping the
cabin, and started into the mate's room first. Saw the mate's gun
lying on the shelf, and took it down, thinking that if the worst
came to the worst, he would have to defend himself. He finished the
cabin and started into the captain's room. The captain arose and
was about to assault him with a bottle, and he shot him.
Page 170 U. S. 508
"
Then I thought about the mate. I ran into the
captain's room then, and got his two guns." He ran up on deck.
Asked Lind where the mate was. Was told he was aloft. Looked up and
saw him there, and called him down, or waited for him. As the mate
came down, he asked Andersen where he got the guns, and where the
captain was, but Andersen made no answer to this, and stayed on top
of the forecastle house. Then, as he stood on the house with the
pistols, and the mate was three feet below, on the forecastle head,
but coming towards witness as if "to take the marlin spike off his
neck and shove the marlin spike into me," witness pulled his gun
and shot him. He shot him several times, the mate begging him not
to shoot. Immediately after that, he called up the sailors, and the
body was thrown overboard.
It is true that a homicide committed in actual defense of life
or limb is excusable if it appear that the slayer was acting under
a reasonable belief that he was in imminent danger of death or
great bodily harm from the deceased and that his act in causing
death was necessary in order to avoid the death or great bodily
harm which was apparently imminent. But where there is manifestly
no adequate or reasonable ground for such belief, or the slayer
brings on the difficulty for the purpose of killing the deceased,
or violation of law on his part is the reason of his expectation of
an attack, the plea of self-defense cannot avail.
Wallace v.
United States, 162 U. S. 466;
Allen v. United States, 164 U. S. 492;
Addington v. United States, 165 U.
S. 184.
According to his own statement, Andersen, after he had shot the
captain, thought about the mate, armed himself with the captain's
pistols, went in search of his victim, and finding him aloft on the
mainmast at work, called him down, or, seeing him coming down,
awaited him, and shot him. He was not only the aggressor, but the
premeditated aggressor. The captain being dead, he knew the mate
would assume command, and that it would be his duty to arrest him
and take him ashore for trial. The imminent danger which threatened
him was the danger of the gallows. The inference is irresistible
that to avert that danger, he killed the mate, cast the bodies into
the
Page 170 U. S. 509
sea, burned the ship, and took to the open boat. There can be no
pretense that he was acting under a reasonable belief that he was
in imminent danger of death or great bodily harm at the hands of
the mate. He testified, to be sure, that when he had armed himself,
gone in search of the mate, and stood on the forecastle house ready
to receive him, he thought the mate was going to use against him
the marlin spike which he had been using at his work in the
rigging, and to protect himself against that marlin spike, swung
around the neck of a man standing three feet below him, the accused
shot him down while he was asking for his life. It was indeed the
duty of the mate to attack Andersen as he stood there with three
pistols, fresh from the slaughter of the captain, and in open
mutiny. But, as the accused told his story, he was not repelling
violence, and if the mate attempted to make use of the marlin
spike, it was simply in self-defense.
The case, as Andersen's testimony made it, afforded no basis for
the introduction of evidence of prior provocation, or even of
injuries previously inflicted, for no overt act on the mate's part
provoked the evil intent with which Andersen sought him out on this
occasion. Such evidence would not have been relevant, in view of
the circumstances, as tending either to make out self-defense, or
to reduce the grade of the crime.
We are not insensible to the suggestion that persons confined to
the narrow limits of a small vessel, alone upon the sea, are placed
in a situation where brutal conduct on the part of their superiors,
from which there is then no possible escape, may possess special
circumstances of aggravation. But that does not furnish ground for
the particular sufferer from such conduct to take the law into his
own hands, nor for the suspension of those general rules intended
for the protection of all alike, on land or sea.
7. Complaint is made because the court refused to allow a
witness to testify as to the general reputation of the captain. If
there had been any adequate basis for the contention that Andersen
killed the mate in self-defense, by reason of a reasonable belief
in imminent danger from him, evidence of his character for
ferocity, brutality, and vindictiveness might have been
Page 170 U. S. 510
admissible.
Smith v. United States, 161 U. S.
85. But as the record stood, the character of the
captain could have no legal bearing on the issue of the guilt of
the accused of the murder of the mate.
8. Various instructions were asked on behalf of the defendant as
well as on behalf of the government which were respectively refused
by the court except so far as included in the instructions given.
But the only ruling in this regard pressed on our attention is the
alleged error of the court in instructing the jury as follows:
"The other felonious homicide to which I called your attention,
manslaughter, is the unlawful killing of a human being without
malice, either express or implied. I find it to be my duty,
gentlemen of the jury, to say to you that if the defendant has
committed a felonious homicide, of which you are the only judges,
there is nothing before you that reduces it below the grade of
murder."
This instruction was similar to that given by MR. JUSTICE
McKENNA, then circuit judge, which was reviewed and approved in
Sparf v. United States, 156 U. S. 51,
156 U. S. 63.
That case is decisive of this, for the evidence disclosed no ground
whatever upon which the jury could properly have reached the
conclusion that the defendant was only guilty of an offense
included in the one charged, or of a mere attempt to commit the
offense charged. The testimony of the accused did not develop the
existence of any facts which operated in law to reduce the crime
from murder to manslaughter.
The law, in recognition of the frailty of human nature, regards
a homicide committed under the influence of sudden passion, or in
hot blood, produced by adequate cause and before a reasonable time
has elapsed for the blood to cool, as an offense of a less heinous
character than murder. But if there be sufficient time for the
passions to subside and shaken reason to resume its sway, no such
distinction can be entertained. And if the circumstances show a
killing "with deliberate mind and formed design" -- with
comprehension of the act, and determination to perform it, the
elements of self-defense being wanting -- the act is murder. Nor is
the
Page 170 U. S. 511
presumption of malice negatived by previous provocation having
no causal connection with the murderous act, or separated from it
by such an interval of time as gives reasonable opportunity for the
access of fury to moderate. Kerr on Homicide § 68
et
seq.; 2 Bishop New Cr.L. § 673
et seq.;
Whart.Cr.L. § 455
et seq., and cases cited.
There is nothing in
Stevenson's Case, 162 U.
S. 313, to the contrary. The doctrine of
Sparf's case is there reaffirmed -- that
"the jury would not be justified in finding a verdict of
manslaughter if there were no evidence upon which to base such a
finding, and in that event the court would have the right to
instruct the jury to that effect."
No other error assigned requires notice.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA dissented.
* Barstad, who was at the wheel when the mate was shot,
testified:
"I last saw William Saunders, the mate of the said vessel, alive
on the morning of August 6, 1897, on the left side of the
forecastle head of that vessel. It was between nine and ten o'clock
of that morning. He was shot at that time and place by John
Andersen, the cook of the vessel, and the prisoner here. I saw him
shoot him. I was at the wheel of the vessel, in the wheel house,
just aft of the after cabin."
"I heard a report of a shot in the captain's cabin, which was
connected with the wheel house by the after companionway.
Immediately after, I saw John Andersen, the accused, come running
up the after companionway and through the wheel house, with a
pistol in each hand and one in his hip pocket. He ran up to John
Lind, who was standing amidships by the rigging of the middle mast.
He said something to Lind, but I did not hear what it was. I heard
him sing out to the mate, Saunders, who was up on the cross-tree of
the foremast at work in the rigging, and say, 'Come down, Mr.
Saunders.' The mate said, 'What do you want, steward?' In a little
while, the mate finished the job, and started down the rigging.
When about midway down, and when the cook, Andersen, was standing
on top of the forward house, the mate started down, and said, 'What
you got in your hands, cook?' 'I got guns,' he says. 'Where you get
them?' says the mate. 'Down in the cabin,' he says. The mate came
down, and stepped on the forecastle head, not on the forecastle
house. Then Andersen fired a shot. The mate reeled and faced him,
and said. 'For God's sake, don't shoot me, cook.' The cook fired
another shot, and the mate kept on reeling, and the cook fired
another one, and a third one, when the mate fell, and he shot him
once after he had fallen. Then the cook sung out to the men who
were in the forecastle: 'I am in charge of this vessel. I am next
to the mate.' He sung out again: 'Won't you fellows come out?' They
came out, and I saw them throw the mate's body overboard. I was at
the wheel all the time. Then he marched the whole gang aft, and
went down in the cabin, and brought the captain up and threw him
overboard. He then said, 'If any man like, he can put me in irons.'
He had two or three pistols, one in his hands then. He had said he
was in charge of the vessel, and had ordered the men to throw the
mate and captain overboard. I was at the wheel all the time. Then
he says, 'Boys, come down and have a drink.' He went down in the
captain's cabin, and handed a bottle of whisky, about two parts
full. He gave each a drink, and took one himself. Then he marched
the whole gang up on deck, just outside the door of the wheel
house, and said, 'You know all you men is guilty for helping me
throw the bodies over the side.'"
"The Spaniard told him to keep the vessel off; to clew up the
gaff topsails and jibs, the outer jib, and make for port. The cook
said: 'Damn, you want me to get hung.' We said: 'No, steward, we
don't want you to get hung.' All the time, he was armed. After a
little, he said to the Spaniard: 'You the only sensible man amongst
the crowd. I want to speak to you.' Then he called John Lind,
afterwards, and spoke to him. I don't know what he said. He ordered
the men to do so and so. I left the wheel, and went to the
forecastle. The rest of the men came forward to get their clothes.
He ordered us to get our best clothes, and no more. He said, 'Take
no discharges, bank books, nothing.' He ordered the men down in the
booby hatch to get up a barrel addressed to the American consul at
Buenos Ayres. Then he told me to go down in the galley to tap some
paraffin oil. I said 'No.' He says, 'You go,' and handed his pistol
in my face. 'All right,' I says, 'steward.' I filled three buckets
and passed them up, and Andrew March took it and threw it on the
deck load. He was standing there armed all the time. Then he (the
cook) ordered me to take the wheel. I went. The first fire
commenced at the booby hatch. The next was forward. The boat was
lowered, and provisions put in it. . . . It was twelve or one
o'clock when we left the
Olive Pecker. No vessels were in
sight which could have picked up the bodies of the mate and
captain."
He then gave the particulars of the sail to the shore, the
arrest, etc.
This witness further said that when Andersen called to Saunders
to come down
"The mate asked him, 'What do you want, steward?' He finished
his job, and hung the marlin spike around his neck, and came down
the rigging. The marlin spike had a half hitch on the point, which
put the point upwards. That is the way sailors do it, to keep the
point from striking them as they go up and down the rigging."
"There was nothing to keep me from seeing the mate in the
rigging, and when he came down, and all along the vessel on her
port side to where the shooting occurred. The sails were all
swinging to starboard. The lumber was so piled on the deck that a
man running along on it would run right on top of the forward
house. John Andersen was standing on top of the forward house when
he shot the mate, and the mate was standing on the forecastle deck.
The forecastle deck is about three feet lower than the top of the
house where the cook was standing. The body of the mate was lying,
when picked up, on the forecastle head, on the left side of the
vessel."
On cross-examination, he said:
"I mean to tell the jury that five of us were intimidated by
that one man, the cook -- the cook with the pistols. He intimidated
us so that, when he ordered us to burn the ship, we obeyed. He was
following us up all the time. He ordered one to go there and
another to go there, and another one there. We had to follow the
man at the point of the pistol, or else get killed. We did what we
were told to do through his pistol. . . . When the mate came down
out of the rigging, he asked the cook, 'What have you got in your
hands, steward?' The steward said, 'I got guns.' The mate came
down, stepped on the forecastle head, and John Andersen fired a
shot. The marlin spike was not in the mate's hand, but was hanging
around his neck, with the point up. I am sure of that, though I was
a hundred and fifty feet away. I did not have a glass. The mate was
standing with his hands at his side, with the marlin spike around
his neck. He did not make any hostile demonstration towards the
cook. He did not come at him to strike him. I am positive of that.
I do not know the mate had threatened the cook's life."
Lind testified:
"I last saw Mate William Saunders on the 6th of August of this
year. He was killed that morning by John Andersen in the forecastle
head, on the left or port side thereof. I saw Andersen just before
the shooting of the mate that morning, coming up from the cabin
through the after companionway and through the wheelhouse. I was
standing amidships. He came up with a revolver in each hand. He
came right up to me, and asked me where the mate was, and said, 'I
have killed the captain, and now the mate goes, too.' The mate was
then aloft, in the rigging of the foremast. I went then down on the
lee or starboard side of the vessel to the forecastle house. I went
and called the watch below in the forecastle house. I said, 'You
better look out, because the cook is on deck with revolvers.' As I
was calling through the window, I could not see on the left of the
vessel. While I was calling to the men, I heard a shot on the port
side, on the forecastle head. I heard three or four shots. I don't
know exactly know how many. I heard the steward call to the men to
come out -- for all of them to come up there. He was calling the
men in the forecastle house. He said he wanted us to throw the body
overboard. When I came up, all hands were there except the man at
the wheel, Martin Barstad. The mate was on the forecastle head,
with his face downward. He had a marlin spike tied around his neck.
A marlin spike is used for splicing ropes -- an instrument that all
sailors carry aloft when they go up to splice a rope. It is carried
around the neck by a long lanyard, and a half hitch on the point to
keep it from sticking in his legs. We threw the body overboard.
Then the cook told us to come aft and get the captain's body
overboard. We went in the after cabin and found the captain sitting
in his chair -- sitting like this, sir, with his hands folded in
his lap. He looked as if he was alive. I saw blood on the side of
his head, on the left side. We were told to take him up by
Andersen. He helped. He was taken up and thrown overboard. Andersen
was armed all this time. Before throwing the captain's body
overboard, Andersen took hold of the captain's arm and felt his
pulse. When the body was thrown overboard, Andersen cursed it. The
captain's body was sitting in a chair in the after cabin, near the
sofa on the starboard side of the cabin. He was facing forward. I
had only been in the cabin once before, when we were in Boston. On
American vessels, seamen do not go in the captain's cabin unless
they are sent or called there. There are doors opening from the
forward cabin into the after cabin, and from the mate's room into
these cabins."
"After the captain's body was thrown overboard, Andersen told us
to go down, and he would give us a drink. We went down in the cabin
-- in the forward cabin, where the dining room table was -- and got
a drink. I don't recollect whether Andersen drank with us or not.
There was not much liquor in the bottle; a little over half a
bottle, I think -- not enough to make anyone drunk. I didn't see
anyone drunk. After taking a drink, we went up on deck and talked
about making the small sails fast. The Spaniard and myself
suggested that the small sails be made fast, and to make for land.
This was not done. Andersen said, 'No, keep her up to her course'
-- she was off a little. 'Keep her up to her course,' he said, 'you
want me to be hanged?' He then said to the Spaniard: 'You are about
the sensiblest man. I want to speak to you.' I did not hear what he
said to him. He then called me. I went to the lee side of the
wheelhouse and he asked me what I thought was best to do with the
vessel. I said, 'The only thing we can do now is to try to make for
some land.' He said, 'No; nothing is going to be done but to
destroy the vessel.' He did not say anything more to me after that.
If he spoke to any of the rest, I didn't see or hear it. He then
ordered everything to make ready for to leave the ship. The old
boat sail was all tore up, and I started to patch that. I was
engaged about it about an hour, I should think. He then gave orders
to lower the boat. Me and the Spaniard lowered the boat. It was the
big boat you see hanging at the stern in the picture. Me and the
Spaniard did lower the boat, and Andrew March went down and
unhooked the tackle, and we hauled the boat up alongside the
vessel, and got some provisions down there. Then the cook called
Andrew, and he went up. After I was through with that, I went up on
the house again, and I saw flames coming out of the after hatch.
She was afire then. Then they all went down in the boat, and all
hands cut the boat adrift, rigged up the mast, and started to sail.
The cook helped us to rig up the mast and sail. He was armed all
that time with pistols. I do not think any other members of the
crew had pistols. I did not see any of them have pistols. . . .
There were no vessels sighted after the bodies of the captain and
mate were thrown overboard which could possibly have picked up the
bodies."
On cross-examination, this witness gave an account of a
difficulty between the cook and the captain that morning about the
captain's dog. About 8 o'clock, the captain's dog was down by the
galley door, and the cook threw some water on him. The dog ran up
on the deck load, "hollering." The captain came up, and said to the
cook, "Did you throw hot water on that dog?" Andersen replied that
he did not throw hot water on him; that it was cold. The captain
felt the dog's back, and then called the cook a liar, cursed him,
and struck him. Lind did not see the captain strike the cook, but
heard the noise in the galley. Shortly after this, the cook
appealed to the mate, "Won't you protect me until we get to port?"
To this, the mate replied, "Get to port, You will get killed
anyhow," or something like that. "Go to hell, You will get killed
anyhow," or something like that.
March testified:
"After the shooting the cook came and called us out of the
forecastle. He says: 'Come out here, boys. Lower the boat and put
me ashore. The captain and mate is dead, and I am in charge of this
ship.'"
I got out of the bed and put on my shoes in a hurry, and the
cook came back a second time and says, "Come out here, won't you?
Come out here, Manuel;" and he says, "Yes." We went out, and went
on the topgallant forecastle, and he ordered us to throw the mate
overboard. The mate was lying on the forecastle head, on the
left-hand side. The sails of the vessel were swinging at that time
to the starboard, which left the left-hand side of the vessel
clear, back to the wheel house. The cook was armed when he ordered
the mate's body to be thrown overboard, and he claimed then to be
in charge of the vessel. I do not remember whether he caught hold
of the mate's body and helped to throw it overboard or not. The
mate had a marlin spike tied around his neck when the body was
thrown overboard. A marlin spike is a big awl used to stick through
the rope in splicing it. When it is used by a man going up and down
the rigging, a half hitch is taken over the point, so it won't
stick in his legs, or get between the rigging going down. When it
is around the man's neck, it is tied with a string, and with a half
hitch on the point. He can't use it without taking the hitch off,
so as to hurt anybody with it. The top of the forecastle house,
where the cook was standing when he shot the mate, is about three
feet higher than the forecastle deck, where the mate was standing
when he was shot. To get to where Andersen was when he was shot,
the mate would have had to step up those three feet on top of the
forecastle house. . . . I couldn't say whether the half hitch was
around the point or not.
"After the mate's body was thrown overboard, we were ordered to
the cabin, to take the captain up and thrown him overboard. The
cook was armed at that time. When the mate's body was thrown
overboard, Andersen swore oaths at it. When he swore oaths at the
body, the Spaniard asked him not to curse the body that way. We all
obeyed the cook, and went aft, and found the captain's body in the
after cabin. (Here, the witness identified the diagram, showing the
inside of the after cabin, and marked 'No. 2.') The captain's body
was found sitting in his chair, dead, with both arms folded in his
lap. He looked as if he was alive, with his head back on one side,
and a wound in the left part of his head, about an inch above the
left ear. The captain was sitting in his chair, near the sofa, on
the starboard side of the vessel -- the point marked on the diagram
'A.' John Andersen ordered the captain's body to be taken up and
thrown overboard. Andersen was at that time armed. He assisted in
throwing the body overboard. He swore at it when the body was
thrown into the sea, calling it 'a mean bastard.' After the body of
the captain was thrown overboard, the steward ordered us to get
ready the boat. He then invited us down into the cabin to get a
drink of whisky. There was about two-thirds of a bottle of whisky.
He drank with us. After that was done, the boat was got ready .
Kerosene oil was thrown over the deck load, and the ship was set on
fire. Then we made for land in the sail boat. It was about two
hours, I think, after the bodies were thrown overboard before we
left the
Olive Pecker. At the time these bodies were
thrown overboard, there was no vessel in sight which could possibly
have picked them up."
"
* * * *"
"That morning, before the captain was shot and before the mate
was shot, I heard a difficulty between the cook and the captain
about the captain's dog. As I was going forward from taking my
dishes back from my breakfast, I heard the dog holler. I was
standing on the forecastle house. I saw the dog come out and run
aft. The captain came out, and went to the galley, and asked the
cook if he had been throwing water on the dog, and he said, 'No.'
The captain went back, and felt the dog. Then I saw the captain go
in the galley, but I did not know what he did there. This was about
fifteen or twenty minutes, I think, before the captain was shot. I
had been at the wheel of the
Olive Pecker many times.
While standing at the wheel in the wheel house, looking forward,
with the sails swinging to the right or starboard side of the
vessel, you can see all the way along the left-hand side of the
ship, on top the forecastle house, or a man standing on top the
forecastle house. The deck load did not interfere with seeing
that."
On cross-examination:
"I say this man intimidated us all at the pistol's point. He
ordered us to throw the mate overboard. I obeyed his orders because
I wanted my life a little longer. After the captain was thrown
overboard, we all went into the cabin and took a drink. I can't say
that we took a drink at the pistol's point, but he made us throw
the mate's body overboard. He did not tell me he would kill me if I
did not, but I knew enough to know he would do it. There were four
of us altogether. I did not have a knife. I do not know whether I
went ahead, or who went ahead, when we went into the cabin to take
a drink. We had to throw the body of the captain overboard because
the cook ordered us to do it. I took orders from the cook because
he gave me to understand he was in charge of the ship. At the time
I knew he was, because he had all the guns. It makes a big
difference when he had all the arms."
Berrial testified:
"I last saw Mate Saunders alive on board that vessel on the
morning of the 6th of August, 1897, when the vessel was about a
hundred or a hundred and fifty miles off the Brazilian coast. On
that morning, I left the wheel of the vessel about 8 o'clock, being
relieved by Martin Barstad, and went after my breakfast; then went
to the forecastle, and to my cabin. While I was lying down, after
that -- I do not know how long -- I heard the captain's dog holler.
Andrew March came in the forecastle, and says, 'The captain is
having a racket with the cook,' and I says, 'What can we do? Let
him racket,' says I, and it was a little while before John Lind
came and knocked at the window where I was sleeping. When he
finished talking to me, I heard the report of four shots. I went in
the forecastle, in a narrow place between the engine room and my
bunk. I went there because I thought the cook wanted to kill us,
too. The engineer jumped on my bunk, and got out, too. I heard the
cook sing out in the door, 'Come out here, boys, Come out here
quick,' 'Yes, sir,' says I, 'Yes, sir,' says I, 'let me finish
dressing.' He says: 'Come out here. I am in charge of the vessel.'
I went out, and the first thing I saw was the mate lying on the top
of the forecastle deck, on the left-hand side, with his face
downwards. The cook says, 'Throw him overboard,' and then I says:
'Don't, cook. Don't throw him overboard. He's alive.' He says:
'Throw him overboard. He's dead enough.' We threw him overboard,
and after we threw him overboard, the cook says: 'Now, go aft and
pick the captain up.' When he threw the body overboard, he cursed
at the body. Then he ordered the men aft to throw the captain
overboard. All the while, he was armed with pistols. We went under
his orders, and into the captain's cabin. When we got in the cabin,
we saw the captain sitting in his chair, with both hands in his
lap, and his head leaning slightly to one side, and on his breast.
I thought he was alive. I saw he had a bullet to go through near
the left side of his head. His body was taken up and thrown
overboard. When his body was thrown overboard, the cook cursed it
also. After it was thrown over, he said. 'Come on boys, I will give
you a drink.' We took a drink, and after we took a drink all came
on deck, and I said, 'We will make the staysails and the topsails
fast, and, if a squall striked her, we can manage the other sails,
and we go right into Rio de Janeiro or Bahia.' I sung out to Martin
Barstad at the wheel, 'Keep her off;' and the cook says, 'No; I
don't want to go to the land.' He was standing close to the rail.
And he said, 'Do you want me to be hung? There is nothing to be
done but destroy the vessel,' he said. Then he called me and said
to me, 'You are the sensiblest man on board this vessel, and I want
to speak to you.' 'All right, cook,' I says. He took me on top of
the galley, and says, 'I am a murderer, and I killed these people
to save my life and your lives. Now, you fellows,' he says, 'you
are guilty of helping me throw the bodies overboard, and before you
leave the vessel, you will be as guilty as I am. You ain't got
nothing to fear.' Says he, 'Many a vessel leaves port, and they
don't know where they go, and there's nobody to look after us for a
long, long time, and we will have time to run away.' I told him I
had nothing to fear with the vessel in port. I says:"
"Look here, cook, destroy the vessel, it's a terrible thing. Its
worse than what you have done already. Call all hands here, and
tell us what you want to do, and where you want us to sail ashore,
and we will help you as much as we can, and let us go into
port."
"'No, no,' he says; 'that won't do. The vessel must be burned.'
He ordered a small boat to be made ready, and everything was made
ready, and then he took us down into the cabin, and he says: 'I
didn't kill these people to rob the vessel. I grant you all,
fellows, clothes out of this large chest.' And we went in, and
everybody took some clothes, and the cook says: 'You fellows can
put on your best clothes,' and he gave me a suit of clothes, and he
says, 'You don't want to take anything.' So we went forward and put
on our best suit of clothes, and the cook had us to pour oil on the
deck. The cook called us to hurry up and spread the oil on the
deck. I didn't want to do this. I went to the forecastle, and the
cook came and said: 'What are you doing there? Come and give your
hand with this oil.' I says: 'Yes, cook. Let me finish shaving, and
I go.' When I went on deck, I could see that the oil was all ready.
It had been spread over the deck. The cook then told us to lower a
boat, and it was lowered, and Andrew March unhooked the tackle, and
we took the boat alongside the vessel, and I jumped in too.
Provisions were then put in the boat, and, when everything was
ready, Andersen called to me, 'Come up and light the fire.' 'Well,'
I says, 'let me keep the lookout on the boat. It might smash
against the vessel.' So he called Andrew March, and the first time
he called Andrew he did not come; so he called him again, in wild
words, and March went up."
On cross-examination:
"Q. After the cook here had killed the mate, didn't he tell you
you might put him in irons? A. Yes, sir; he came and he says, 'Now,
you fellows can put me in irons, and carry me to port, if you
want.' Q. And give me to the American consul? A. No, sir; the same
words I told you, sir. 'Now, you fellows,' he says, 'can put me in
irons, and take me in port, if you want.' I says, 'No, no, cook; I
no put you in irons,' because he looked right in my face, and I
says, 'Why don't you throw your revolvers away?' Q. He offered to
give himself up to you, holding out his hands, and said: 'Put me in
irons?' A. He didn't throw his revolvers away. Q. He didn't? A. No;
he didn't. Q. Did he hold out his hands to put him in irons? A.
With his revolvers, yes, and no, no. Q. Do you mean to say he had
the revolvers in his hands when he offered you to put him in irons?
A. Yes, sir."
Horsburgh was asleep in his berth, in the after cabin, when the
captain was shot. What he supposed was the noise of the shooting of
the captain awakened him, and then Andersen came to the
companionway, and asked him to come on deck, that he had killed the
captain. He came on deck, and went aft along the starboard side,
where he told the crew that the cook had killed the captain.
Directly after the shots, the cook came forward, shouting: "Come
out, boys. I am in charge of the vessel," and ordered the mate's
body to be thrown overboard. The mate was lying with his face down
on the port side of the forecastle head, with a marlin spike
hanging about his neck. After the mate's body was thrown overboard,
the cook ordered them to go aft and throw the captain's body
overboard.
"We went down in the cabin, and found the captain in the chair;
so we took him up on deck and threw him overboard. Then, after
that, he told us to go down, and he would give us a drink; so we
went down in the cabin and had a drink."
After that, the cook ordered them to get the boat ready with
provisions, etc. The cook was armed, and witness was frightened.
The burning of the vessel, and the escape in the open boat, as told
by this witness corresponded with that of the others. On the
cross-examination, the difficulty between the captain and the cook
about the captain's dog was reiterated.
Defendant, Andersen, testified in his own behalf:
"It was just after breakfast, and the dog was standing at the
galley door. He used to keep himself around there all the time. The
captain didn't want him to stay at the galley door, and I took some
water I had left in a bucket -- some dirty water -- to throw it
onto the dog, as I always used to throw some water on him, and he
used to run and holler. I took the bucket, and there was a little
water left at the bottom of it. He was standing right at the door,
and I had been giving him his breakfast. As the dog turned, the
bucket slipped in my hand. I had the handle on the edge of it, and
it hit him here in the leg, and he ran up on deck and made a noise.
I was looking around there for some place to run into and hide, as
the captain was coming down there into the galley, and I was
standing in the middle of the floor of the galley, facing the
galley dresser. He struck me in the side here, and that sent me
right on top the red-hot stove -- on top the pots and pans. He
commenced to curse me and threaten me, and everything, and I
pleaded to him. I says: 'Captain, don't hurt me. Don't hurt me,
captain.' He looked at the ax, and he looked up through the slide.
There is a little slide in the galley. He saw John Lind standing on
top there, and he looked at me. He says, 'You whore's son,' he
says, 'I will have the heart out of you.' And there he left me
standing. I had cut them two fingers into my knuckles. The mate
came along, and it was my last hopes, in that vessel, to see,
maybe, another day; I had been sleeping in the galley for a week. I
didn't know whether I would live to see the next day or not, so I
turned to the mate, with tears rolling down my cheeks, and I said
to him, 'Mr. Saunders,' I says, 'won't you protect me until we get
into port?' He turned around to me with scorn. He says, 'Go to
hell,' he says, 'you will get killed anyhow.' Then I did not know
what I was doing. My mind was in that condition I didn't know
whether to run overboard or to stay there and go and hide. I didn't
know what to do. So I went up in the galley slide and looked around
to see if I could see any vessel. Then I made up my mind if I
should see any vessel I should take a board and jump overboard. So
there I was. My basket of dishes was standing upon the dresser, all
dirty after breakfast, and I was washing them, and I saw at the
time it was twenty-five minutes to ten then. I looked around, and I
didn't "
brk:
know if I had washed my dishes at all. Of course, I was
completely out of my head then, so I thought about the cabin. Now,
I used to sweep that cabin every morning, and dust it, and
everything, before nine o'clock. I used to have my dishes done in
the galley before this time, and I had my dinner to have ready
before twelve o'clock. So I started into the cabin, thinking that
the captain would be on deck, and I came down in the cabin. He was
sitting inside of the door in a chair like this, although bigger,
and he had a bottle on this here lounge which was alongside of the
stool or the chair. He glared at me, and he looked fairly black in
the face with rage. He blurted out and cursed me when I came into
the cabin. Well, I didn't know what to do. If I should run on deck,
I would have to run overboard. That was the only way I have to see
out of it. I commenced sweeping the cabin, and started into the
mate's room first. I saw the mate's gun lying on the shelf, and I
took that down; thinking, if worst come to worst, I will have to
defend myself. So I finished the cabin, and started into the
captain's room. I passed by him in that direction [indicating by
gesture], and he took up that bottle like this. He says, "You
whore's son!" Then he took it up like this, as if to split my head
open, when I pulled my gun out and fired. The bullet struck him in
the left temple. He fell into the chair, and I ran into the
captain's room. Then I thought about the mate. I ran into the
captain's room then, and got his two guns. He used to keep one gun
in under the pillow, and one on the shelf. I ran up on deck, and I
didn't know where the mate was then. I came up to John Lind, and he
was at the main rigging. I says, "Where is the mate?" He says, "He
is aloft." I looked up there, and I think I said something of
calling him down, but I don't think I did do that. The mate came
down and before he came down to the _____, piece next to the rail,
he says, "Where in the hell did you get them guns?" He says, "And
where is the captain?" I never made no answer to him, but I stayed
on top of that house there as the mate came down, and he had this
marlin spike around his neck. I will just show you how he had it,
if you please. He had this hitch on this marlin spike, as
represented to you before. He came down like this, and walked up
like this [indicating by appropriate gestures], (walking towards
the bowsprit), and turned in this direction (to the right), and
came towards me in that direction (on the starboard side). He took
the half hitch out of the marlin spike, like this, and the marlin
spike was hanging down when he came towards me. I was standing
there and had the guns then. I had three of them, and I held them
in my hand all the time. I had an apron around my waist, and I had
no pockets here in the pants. He got this hitch off the marlin
spike, and came around to me like this [indicating by proper
gesture], to take the marlin spike off his neck and shove the
marlin spike into me. I pulled the gun and shot him. The first shot
struck him here somewhere (in the side). He was still coming
towards me, and I shot twice or three times together, when the man
fell dead. In the meantime, John Lind has been running into the lee
side of the house. Now, he stated here yesterday to you gentlemen
that I cam up to him and says, "Now the mate will go, too." But
that belongs on the lee side of the house; to that man. When he
came there, he told them, "Now the mate will go, too."
"Q. You mean by that that you didn't say it at all?"
"A. No. sir, that belongs to John Lind, and into the lee side of
the forecastle. That is where that belongs. So I stood there, and
John Lind -- he was the man that came up first, and there was
nobody else came up. So I says, 'Men,' I says, 'ain't you coming
up?' I says. In the condition I felt, I felt actually frightened of
the men, the way I was, because I was completely gone. We throwed
the mate overboard. I helped them also, so far as I can remember.
And we took the captain out of the cabin and threw him overboard.
And now, when this was done, I told them, I says, 'Now men,' I
says, 'you can do as you like with me,' I says; 'you can put me in
irons, and take me into port, and give me up. You see I had to
defend my own life.' 'Yes,' they says, 'we all know that.' There I
was, broke down completely, like a child, and here they are, coming
up here yesterday to put everything onto me."
He also gave an account of the burning of the vessel and trip to
the shore. On cross-examination, he admitted that he was about
three feet from the mate when he shot him; that he was standing on
the forecastle house, and the mate was down on the forecastle head;
that the mate asked him not to shoot. As soon as he had killed the
captain, what came into his head then was the mate; that he got the
captain's pistols; that he ran up on deck through the pilot house,
where Barstad was, and to Lind, who stood amidships, and asked
where the mate was; that Lind told him the mate was aloft; that he
got on top of the forecastle house, and, in the excitement, may
have called him down. He denied having asked the men to throw the
mate's body overboard, but admitted that he asked them to throw the
captain's body overboard. He denied asking the crew to take a
drink, but admitted that he may have got the whisky. He denied
ordering the vessel to be burned, and said that it was the
engineer's suggestion. He admitted that he took the captain's watch
and sold it, and that the compass was thrown overboard before they
reached the beach.