Chapman v. People

39 Mich. 357, 1878 Mich. LEXIS 298
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 39 Mich. 357 (Chapman v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chapman v. People, 39 Mich. 357, 1878 Mich. LEXIS 298 (Mich. 1878).

Opinion

Campbell, C. J.

Defendant below was convicted of the murder of John E. Morley and brings error. The principal error which induced this court to reverse the judgment, at the last term, was that the crime set forth in the information is not the same in description as the one which the prosecution was allowed to put in proof.

The information, which is very meager in its allegations, sets forth that Chapman “on the twelfth day of [358]*358November, one thousand eight hundred and seventy-six, at the township of Meridian, in said Ingham county, with force and arms did make a felonious assault in and upon the body of one John F. Morley, in the peace of the People of the State of Michigan then and there being, and then and there willfully and of his malice aforethought did kill and murder the said John F. Morley,” etc.

The proof offered and admitted against objection was that on the day named in the information (November 12, 1876), Chapman committed an assault on Morley at the town of Meridian. That Morley was subsequently removed to his home in Lansing, where he lived until November 27th, 1876, and then died, as was claimed, of the injuries- which he had received fifteen days before in the former town. The averments in the information laid the whole transaction in Meridian, and averred the assault and the death as simultaneous. It was objected that under such averments it could not lawfully be shown against respondent that an assault made in one town was followed after an interval of time by death in another place.

The difficulty which is presented does not relate to the frame of the indictment as a sufficient pleading, aside from the proofs. Although very far short of being a good common-law indictment for homicide, most of the deficiencies are within the statute which dispenses with setting forth the manner of killing. Comp. L., § 7916. The common law required the nature of the weapon to appear, as well as the nature and position of the wound, while it was competent to show the assault to have been made with any weapon or implement which could produce a similar injury. The statute dispenses with these averments which had never been construed according to their real meaning. But it does not follow, even as to such averments, that where the information or indictment does go into details, it will not be inter[359]*359preted on common-law principles far enough to prevent repugnancy. It here avers an assault, which is á crime of violence, and the death sought to be proven was the result of an assault, so that there was in that respect no lack of conformity.

Neither is the information defective for not containing sufficient- averments of time. It does contain averments which would unquestionably make out a murder where the death was simultaneous with the stroke. There is no occasion, therefore, to refer to § 7923, •which applies to indictments and informations deficient on their face in this respect.

The difficulty here is that the offense is misdescribed in two respects: first, in setting-forth the assault and death as concurrent in time, and second, in averring them — which would perhaps have necessarily followed— as concurrent in place.

The pleader seems to have supposed, and such is the argument made, that the murder is considered in law as occurring when the blow was given which resulted in it. The time and place of the blow are given — as they always should be, if. possible — in strict accordance with the facts. The whole transaction is averred to have been a single occurrence.

The Legislature has never undertaken and it is reasonable to suppose they never will undertake, to allow criminal charges to be so drawn as to mislead any one concerning the offense which they purport to describe, and we have no statute which authorizes prosecutors to misdescribe or omit any thing which at the common law was regarded as an essential element of the crime, whatever may be the case as to matters indifferent. And when a description is found in an information which uses common law phrases and references, it must be assumed as intended to have its common law interpretation. As has been frequently remarked, the rules of pleading are framed on the supposition that accused [360]*360persons may be innocent, and they cannot be construed except in that light. They are assumed as necessarily containing, according to the constitutional requisition, enough to inform an innocent man of the facts intended to be shown against him. Brown v. People, 29 Mich., 232; People v. Marion, 28 Mich., 255; People v. Olmstead, 30 Mich., 431. Making all due allowance for the averments which at common law need not be strictly made out, the offense must not at any rate he misdescribed, nor can the indictment omit any thing essential to its description. Enders v. People, 20 Mich., 233; Merwin v. People, 26 Mich., 298.

From the earliest history of the common law, all homicides have been regarded as composed of two distinct elements, neither of which has been allowed in theory or in legal practice to merge the other. The injury which causes death is never regarded as constituting the crime of murder or manslaughter. The death of the victim not only within a year and a day, but also within the same jurisdiction was the controlling element which distinguished the guilt of the assailant from a common assault. The time and place of death were always considered as necessary to he averred, and were required to be averred as independent of the averments of assault. Until provided for by statute, death in one county from an attack in another did not make murder in either county. 2 Hale P. C., 163; 1 Russ. Cr., 548-9; Regina v. Gt. Western Rw., 3 Ad. & El. (N. S.), 333. And a statute which provided for the- punishment of crimes commenced in one county and finished in another has been applied to such cases. 1 Russ. Cr., 548. It is only under modern statutes that death on land from an injury at sea, or death at sea from an injury on land, could be reached by either common law or admiralty courts. See cases referred to in People v. Tyler, 7 Mich., 161. When this case came up a second time in Tyler v. People, 8 Mich., 320, it was held by a majority of this court that the fact of death within this State was so impor[361]*361tant a part of homicide as to give jurisdiction where the blow which caused it was beyond the jurisdiction. It is enough for the present case to say that the fact of death is an essential ingredient in homicide, and until it occurs there'is no such crime, and one who aids the assailant between the blow and the death is not an accessory before or after the fact. 2 Hawk. P. C., 448, 320; 4 Bl. Com., 38; 1 Russ. Cr., 38; Archb. Cr. Pl., 10; 1 Hale P. C., 622. The time for bringing-a prosecution-by appeal ran from the death and not from the injury. 1 Hale P. C., 427. And it has been expressly held that an indictment which correctly showed the dates of the stroke and subsequent death, was bad if ■ it charged the murder as of the former day, and good if it charged it as of the latter, although better if it connected the offense with both. 1 Hale P. C., 427, 428.

It certainly would not strike any one who is not a criminal lawyer that there could be any identity in two descriptions, one of which described a murder where death was immediate, and another where it occurred at a different place and after a considerable interval.

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Bluebook (online)
39 Mich. 357, 1878 Mich. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapman-v-people-mich-1878.