Darry v. People

2 Park. Cr. 606
CourtCourt Of Oyer And Terminer New York
DecidedMarch 15, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2 Park. Cr. 606 (Darry v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court Of Oyer And Terminer New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darry v. People, 2 Park. Cr. 606 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1854).

Opinion

Denio, J.

The offence of murder, though the most heinous crime that can be committed against an individual, had not, either in England or in this state, been subjected to a legislative definition, until it was done in the enactment of the Revised Statutes in the year 1830. By the ancient common law the distinction in felonious homicide between killing with or without malice, was merely nominal, both being indiscriminately punished with death. It was said that although the malice made the fact more obvious, yet it was nothing more than the manner of the fact, and not the substance; and the term manslaughter was used to define the offence in both cases. But [623]*623when the benefit of clergy was by statute taken away from murderers with malice prepense, the more modern distinction between that more aggravated form of homicide and the inferior grades came to be recognized. So that at the period when we succeeded to the English common law, the legal definition of murder was well established. (4 Reeves’s Hist. Eng. Law, 393, 534, 536; 5 id. 220-223; Foster’s Crown Law, 302-306; 4 Bl. Com. 201.) The act concerning murder in the revision of 1813, did not attempt a definition of the offence, but was limited to a reenactment of several (English statutes, providing for a few particular cases of homicide, bringing them within or exempting them from the penalties of murder. (1 R.L. 66.) The description of the offence then, which had prevailed for several centuries prior to 1830, was this: Where a man of sound memqry and of the age of discretion unlawfully killeth any reasonable creature with malice prepense {or aforethought.”') {Coke’s 3 Inst. 47; 1 Hale’s P. C. 449, 450; 4 Bl. Com. 195.) The terms malice prepense acquired a peculiar significance on account of their use in the statute, (23 Henry VIII, ch. 1.) That act provided that if any not actually in holy orders should be found guilty (among other crimes) of any willful murder of malice prepensed,” they should be utterly excluded from the benefit of their clergy and suffer death in such manner and form “ as if they were no clerks.” From that time the words referred to became 'indispensable in the definition of the offence, as only a nominal punishment could be inflicted, if malice were not established by the verdict; and from hence, also, the inferior grades of homicide came to be called manslaughter, while the capital offence was denominated murder. And where a capital conviction was sought it was said to be indispensable that the indictment should contain the words ex malitia sua prcecogitata inter fecit áud murdravit.” (1 Hale P. C. 450.) Though the words in their ordinary sense conveyed the idea of deadly animosity against the deceased, and by a strict interpretation, would perhaps only embrace cases of a killing from motives of revenge," they were not so limited by the construction of the courts. All homicides for which no excuse or palliation was [624]*624proved, and a large class of cases where there was no actual intention to effect the death of the party killed, were held to be murder. To justify these convictions an artificial meaning was attached to the words malice prepense, by which they were made to qualify the taking of human life in all cases where sound policy or the demerits of the offender were supposed to require that he should be capitally convicted. Hence the definitions of murder to which I have referred contain the addition that the malice may be express or implied. But in drawing the distinction between the two classes, great confusion was introduced. Coke, for instance, classes amongst the instances of implied malice, the cases of poisoning and all cases of the killing of another without any provocation in him that is slain; though it would seem that deliberate poisoning afforded the strongest evidence of deliberate malice, while in the other case, ' supposing no explanatory evidence to be given, actual malice ought to be proved as a matter of fact upon the evidence. (3 Inst. 52.) Hale includes in the class of malice in fact, the case of killing from a deliberate compassing and design to do some bodily injury, and instances Holloway's case, where the prisoner tied a lad, who was found trespassing, to his horse’s tail, and he was dragged till his shoulder was broken, whereof he died. [Hale P. C. 451, 454; Holloway's case, Cro. Car. 131.) So, he says, if a master designeth an immoderate and unreasonable correction of his servant, either in respect to the measure or the instrument, and death ensues, it is murder from express malice; and so of a school master toward his scholar, (p. 454.) This author in his chapter of “ murder by malice implied, or malice in law,” includes in that class, cases where the homicide is committed without provocation, where it is upon an officer or minister of police, and where by a person that intends theft, burglary, &c. In the first division, (murder without provocation,) the cases present merely a rule of evidence, as, the law holds that a man intends the natural consequences of his own acts, it determines that where there has been no provocation, or where there has been time for the blood to cool, the killing must be designed and intentional. As was said by Coleridge, [625]*625J., in Regina v. Kirkham, (6 Carr & P. 115,) “ Every one must be intended to presume the natural consequences of his own acts. If you throw a stone at a window it must be taken that you intend to break it, because it is a brittle substance. That being so, if you had heard nothing more than simply that the prisoner taking a knife in his hand had stabbed his son, that would have put it on him to clear himself from the charge of murder.” In cases of this kind, if the prisoner could show positively that his intention was not to kill the deceased, he would of course be acquitted. In the other instances on account of the intention to do some other illegal act not touching life, the presumption is juris and de jure, and the most conclusive evidence that death was not intended would not help the prisoner. Take, for example, the case of a homicide by one engaged in committing a burglary. The party killed may have been a stranger, or even the nearest friend of the prisoner, and he may be able to show in the most conclusive manner that lucre was his only object, and that murder was not at all in his thoughts, and yet he was by law guilty of murder with malice aforethought.

These references are sufficient to show that the term malice prepense, had been made the subject of much, and not always intelligible, refinement. Malice in law, or implied malice, was sometimes simply a conclusion from the facts and liable to be overcome by the other facts, and at other times it was an irresistible legal inference, which could not be rebutted. So far from being a descriptive term to be applied as a test to cases as they should arise, it had become simply a part of the name to be given to the offence, when its existence had been ascertained by other tests. It was probably for this reason that the expression was wholly omitted in the revised code. The object of the revisors and of the legislature was to define the offence by the use of language in its ordinary sense, omitting a phrase which, though it tended to mislead rather than instruct, had become technical. The provision respecting murder, as proposed by the revisors, was as follows:

[626]*626§4.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Park. Cr. 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darry-v-people-nyoytermct-1854.