Aurand v. State
This text of 21 Ohio C.C. Dec. 314 (Aurand v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In this case Dr. H. C. Aurand was indicted for an assault upoD one Harry Tuck with malicious intent to disfigure him and was con[315]*315vieted in common pleas court of assault only. To reverse the judgment. of the- court of common pleas,, this proceeding is. instituted here.
A number of errors are presented, but specific attention need be given to out one which seems to us of sufficient importance to justify very careful consideration.
The charge of the court given to the jury after argument is brief and in but one .part of it, touches the question of asserted justification of self-defense. The language of the court is found on page 13S ■of the bill of exceptions and is as follows:
“In behalf of the defendant, it is claimed, that if he injured Tuck he was acting in so doing in defense of his own person.
“A person unlawfully assaulted by another may use all the force necessary to repel the assault, but no more. Self-defense under such circumstances is in law a justification.
“The burden is on the defendant to prove by a-preponderances of the evidence that he-acted in self-defense. It is not enough for him to show that he was so acting, but it must further appear that no more force was used by him than the exigency necessarily demanded. If he were guilty of an unreasonable and disproportionate degree of violence toward the person of another, he is liable for the excess of force used by him beyond what, was reasonably necessary., under ,the. circumstances.”
And on page 133, the court is reported to have said:
“While the burden is on the defendant to show by a preponderance of the evidence that if he assaulted Tuck, he was justified by the necessity of self-defense in so doing, in all other respects, as to every material question in the ease, the burden is on the state.”
■ In the case of Marts v. State, 26 Ohio St. 162, 163, in the second paragraph of the syllabus, the Supreme Court laid down this rule applicable to this class of cases and indeed applicable and applied to a case of homicide. The paragraph referred to is as follows:
“Homicide is justifiable on the ground of self-defense, where a ■slayer, in the careful and proper use of his faculties, bona fide believes and has reasonable ground to believe, that he is in imminent danger of death or great bodily harm, and that his only means of escape from such danger will be by taking the life of his assailant, though in fact he is mistaken as to the existence or imminence of the danger.”
The rule so expressed has-,been repeatedly, followed in later adjudications of the Supreme Court and other, courts of the state.
. I would cite without reading, the case of Darling v. Williams, 35 Ohio St. 58, and especially the language of Judge Boynton on page 62;-[316]*316also-the case of Goins v. State, 46 Ohio-St. 469 [21 N. E. Rep. 476]. Í' might cite' others; but it is sufficient "to' say that there' has been5"'no-departure from the rule, and it becomes important-, for this reason, to determine whether the trial court in the case át bar has given the-jury an opportunity to apply it in behalf of' the defendant. There-is1 no reference in the charge from beginning to - end, - to the-belief of the defendant that any action was necessary on-his part-to-defend himself, either in striking Tuck in the first instance, or-"in' continuing to strike him afterwards in the assumed' defense -of his own person. Indeed, hardly any inference could be drawn by the-jury .from the language of' the court other than- that he would - have ño right to use more force than was actually necessary to defend his-person, or, he would have no right to strike' the other except in such an exigency as actually demanded defénse; and although it might, be a case where there was' no danger, yet the surrounding circumstances, taking the appearance'of the other party to the affair, might, be such that the accused fully believed- that he was- in danger and had. reasonable ground "for such ■ belief.
We have been unable to' find añy1 language in the charge' anywhere, or in any instruction given before or after argument at-the-request of' counsel, that relieves' this instruction in the general charge-from the infirmity to which I have invited attention.
Our judgment is that the court’s"language constituted prejudicial-error, and for this reason, the ease should be reversed.
' We have examined critically the testimony of the witnesses and1' such other evidence as appears in the way of exhibits,. and we have-discovered fió other prejudicial error in the case, but for thé instruction to which I have referred, in the general charge, the judgment of the-court below will be reversed and the cause remanded for a-new trial.
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21 Ohio C.C. Dec. 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aurand-v-state-ohiocirct-1909.