Buel v. . the People

78 N.Y. 492, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 943
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 11, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 78 N.Y. 492 (Buel v. . the People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buel v. . the People, 78 N.Y. 492, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 943 (N.Y. 1879).

Opinion

Miller, J.

The prisoner was convicted of the crime of murder in the first degree. The indictment contained sixteen different counts ; eight of them were framed charging that the offense of murder had been committed in contravention of the first subdivision of section five of 2 Revised Statutes, 656 [1st ed.] ; and the remaining eight under the third subdivision of the same statute, as amended by chapter 644, S. L., of 1873 and by chapter 333 of the S. L., of 1876. The statute is as follows : Such killing, unless it be manslaughter or excusable, or justifiable homicide, as hereinafter provided, shall be murder in the first degree, in the following cases: First, when perpetrated from a deliberate and premeditated design to effect the death of the person killed, or of any human being. Second, when perpetrated by an act imminently dangerous to others, and evincing a depraved mind, regardless of human life, although without any premeditated design to effect the death of any particular individual. Third, when perpetrated by a person engaged in the commission of any felony. Such killing, unless it be murder in the first degree, or manslaughter, or excusable or justifiable homicide,- as hereinafter provided, shall be murder in the *496 second degree, when perpetrated intentionally but without deliberation and premeditation.”

The latter counts charged that the crime was committed while ravishing or attempting to ravish the deceased, and it was averred in some of them that the prisoner, while engaged in the commission of the rape or felony, and in others, while in the commission, of the assault with the intent to commit the rape or felony, with a rope which he had placed upon the neck of the deceased, strangled and suffocated her, from which she died. The evidence tended to show that the death of the deceased was caused from strangulation produced ■by-a strap or rope drawn around her neck by the prisoner while committing á rape upon her. The proof also showed that a violent blow had been inflicted upon her head. The judge charged the jury, among other things, that if they believed that the prisoner put the rope around the neck of the deceased, or inflicted a blow upon the head of the deceased, ns claimed by the prosecution, with a design to effect death, with premeditation and deliberation, he was guilty of murder in the first degree, under the first clause of the section of the statute cited. The judge also charged the jury that if the deceased resisted, and the prisoner overcame that resistance by putting the rope around her neck, and thus made her incapable of resistance, and under these circumstances committed the offense, even although he did not intend to take .her life, and although his object and purpose was simply to accomplish his purpose of having criminal connection with the deceased, and he did this simply to overcome her resistance, and if that was his purpose and intent, and she died while he was thus engaged in that act, then it was murder in the first degree. At the close of the case, the counsel ■for the prisoner excepted to that part of the charge in which ■the court charged that if death was caused by the commission of the offence, it would be murder in the first degree, and no request was made for any other or different directions than those contained in the charge.

*497 It is claimed by the counsel for the prisoner that the court erred in the charge to the jury that if the prisoner tilled the girl in the commission of a rape upon her person, it was murder in the first degree; that this was a wrong interpretation of the third subdivision of the fifth section of the statute which properly includes only those cases where the felony is a separate and distinct offence from the tilling; and that it has no application to a tilling where the death results directly from the personal violence used in mating the assault, and where the felony is completely merged and lost in the higher crime. The argument is that force is necessary to constitute the crime of rape, and the very gist of the offence is that it must be accomplished against the will and resistance of the female; that it cannot be separated from the camal knowledge, and that the strangling of the deceased to overcome her resistance was an indispensable part of the rape, without which it could not have been committed, and hence the prisoner was not guilty of the crime of murder, and therefore the charge was erroneous. We think that this position cannot be upheld upon any sound legal principle ; and assuming that the charge of the judge embraced the proposition claimed, it was not error. While force and violence constitute an important element of the crime of rape, they do not constitute the entire body of that offence. The unlawful or carnal knowledge is the essence of that crime ; and without this, no matter what degree of force or violence may be employed, rape is not established: (1 Russ. on Crimes [1st ed.], 557, 558; 1 Hawk. P. C., chap. 41, § 2.) It may even be committed where there is a yielding to violence and the consent is procured by fear of death or duress : (Id.) Be that as it may, however, we think it is not important if the death of the deceased was caused by the prisoner while he was perpetrating the crime of rape. He was then engaged in the commission of a felony, within the language, meaning and purpose of the statute ; and if death ensued in consequence of that felony, the offence is brought directly within the definition of the crime of murder in the first degree.

*498 The statute in reference to murder has undergone numerous changes since the enactment of the Revised Statutes. 2 Revised Statutes 657, § 5, defines when the killing shall constitute murder, and the third subdivision is as follows: “When perpetrated without any design to effect death by a person engaged in the commission of any felony.” The killing while engaged in the perpetration of any felony which caused death, even if unintentional, is here express y declared to be murder. An alteration was made by chapter 410 of the Laws of 1860, and it is there provided that “ all murder which shall be perpetrated by means of poison or by lying in wait, or by any other kind of willful, deliberate and premeditated killing, or which shall be committed in the perpetration or the attempt to perpetrate any arson, rape, robbery or burglary, or in any attempt to escape from imprisonment, shall be deemed murder in the first degree.” It will be noticed that this provision specifies the felonies in the perpetration or attempt to perpetrate which the killing would be murder, thus leaving no question but what a killing, under such circumstances, is murder in the first degree.

By chapter 197, S. L. of 1862, the fifth section of the Revised Statutes was re-enacted, with the exception of the third subdivision, which was altered so as to read as follows : “ Third, when perpetrated in committing the crime of arson in the first degree

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Bluebook (online)
78 N.Y. 492, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buel-v-the-people-ny-1879.