Davis v. State

45 Ark. 464
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 45 Ark. 464 (Davis v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. State, 45 Ark. 464 (Ark. 1885).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Davis was convicted of an assault with intent to kill, upon an indictment which charges him with the murder of one Adams, committed by' shooting him with a gun, loaded with gunpowder and a leaden bullet. The bill of exceptions does not set out the testimony, but expressly admits that it was ■sufficient to prove the offense of which the jury found the defendant guilty. One of the directions to the jury was as follows:

“If you believe from the evidence that the defendant, in September, 1883, went to the office of the deceased, in Garland county, Arkansas, and there assaulted him with a deadly weapon, a loaded gun, by pointing it at him and demanding money, and did then shoot at the deceased with said gun,, with intent to kill him, but that the shot, so fired by the defendant, missed the deceased, you will find the defendant guilty of an assault with intent to kill and murder, although you may find that the defendant, after firing such shot, really and in good faith abandoned the conflict, and retreated to a place of apparent safety, and there shot and killed the deceased, in order to save his own life, or to protect himself from great bodily injury.”

And the court refused to charge that, under the indictment, the defendant could not be convicted of assault with intent to kill and murder.

Is the verdict responsive to the issue? Can a defendant, accused of murder, be convicted of an offense less than manslaughter, under any possible state of the proofs ?

Indictment for murder. Conviction for assault with intent to murder.

It has been frequently décided that a person indicted for rape may be found guilty of an assault with intent to ravish, or of an assault and battery, or a simple assault. Commonwealth v. Drum, 19 Pick,, 479; Same v. Dean, 109 Mass., 349; State v. Johnson, 30 N. J. Law, 185; Prinderville v. People, 42 Ill., 217; Stephen v. State, 11 Ga., 225.

In State v. Scott, 24 Vt., 127, a conviction of an assault and battery, upon an indictment for manslaughter, was sustained. But a contrary result was reached in Wright v. State, 5 Ind., 527, where it is declared that, in a case of felonious homicide, the assault and battery are merged in the felony. See also, People v. Adams, 52 Mich., 24, to the effect that a criminal assault, resulting in death, is either murder or manslaughter, or else not punishable at all.

In McBride v. State, 7 Ark., 374, the prisoner was indicted for biting off the ear of one Hubble, with intent to maim him. He was acquitted of the mayhem, but found guilty of an aggravated assault. The court said: “Every attempt to commit a felony against the person of individuals involves an assault. Prove an attempt to commit such felony, and prove it to have been done under such circumstances that, had the attempt succeeded, the defendant might have been convicted of the felony, and the'party may be convicted of an assault with intent to commit such felony. If you fail in proving the intent, but prove the assault, the defendant may be convicted of the common assault.”

In Cameron v. State, 13 Ark., 712, a party indicted for an assault with intent to kill was convicted of a simple assault. And it was held, Chief Justice Watkins delivering the opinion of the court, “that upon an indictment for a felony, the accused may be convicted of a misdemeanor, where both offenses be- , long to the same generic class, where the commission of the 1 higher may involve the commission of the lower offense, and where the indictment for the higher offense contains all the substantive allegations necessary to let in proof of the misdemeanor.”

It 'was admitted that the rule at common law was different, but it was said that the rule owed its origin to certain peculiarities of the English law, never adopted in this country, and was not applicable to our condition. These decisions were made without any special statute on the subject, but upon general principles of American law. And they have been- frequently followed.' Guest v. State, 19 Ark., 405; State v. Cryer, 20 Id., 64.

But our code of criminal procedure, since enacted, contains the following provisions:

Mansfield’s Digest, Section 2288. “Upon an indictment for an offense, consisting of different degrees, the defendant may be found guilty of any degree not higher than that charged in the indictment, and may be found guilty of any offense included in that charged in the indictment.”

Sec. 228g. “The offenses named in each of the subdivisions of this section shall be deemed degrees of the same offense, in the meaning of the preceding section: First. All offenses of homicide. Second. All injuries to the person by maiming, wounding, beating and assaulting, whether malicious or from sudden passion, and whether attended or not with the intent to Till.....Sixth. An offense and an attempt to commit the offense.”

An assault with intent to kill, though a felony by our law, is not one of the degrees of homicide: but it is an attempt to •commit murder, and is virtually included in every murder that is committed with violence. All the elements of murder, except the actual killing, must conspire to constitute the crime. McCoy v. State, 8 Ark., 451; Cole v. State, 10 Id., 318; Lacefield v. State, 34 Id., 275.

Accordingly, in Stapp v. State, 3 Texas Court of Appeals, 138, under similar statutory provisions, the accused was indicted and tried for murder, and convicted of an assault with intent to murder. The circumstances were that the deceased received from the accused a stab, which was probably, but not •inevitably, fatal. Two days afterwards he died, but his death, according to the testimony, resulted solely from engorgement •of the lungs, caused by drunkenness and exposure.

We, therefore, conclude that, following the analogies oí previous decisions of this court, reinforced, as they are, by dir rect provisions of the criminal code, if the proof fails to establish all the allegations of the indictment, so as to warrant a conviction of the offense presented, but at the same time shows the defendant is guilty of a substantial crime, necessarily contained in the terms of the indictment, he may be found guilty of the minor offense. Cases may readily be supposed where any other rule would operate to defeat justice; as, if the proof should show that the person alleged to have been murdered was not in reality dead, or that he died after the lapse of more than a year and a day, or from other causes than the wounds inflicted by the accused.

But this doctrine has its limits, one of which is that the indictment must contain all the substantive allegations necessary to let in proof of the inferior crime. Childs v. State, 13 Ark. 204; Sweden v. State, 19 Id., 205; Bryant v. State, 41 Id., 359.

The present indictment is in the abbreviated Code form, and does not in terms charge an assault upon the person of Adams, as the common law form does. Yet, as it sufficiently charges murder in the second degree, and as the offense for which the prisoner was convicted is necessarily included in that charged,, it may suffice for the purpose, though there be no - words-specifically designating the offense so included.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Ark. 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-state-ark-1885.