Davis v. United States

160 U.S. 469, 16 S. Ct. 353, 40 L. Ed. 499, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2370
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 16, 1895
Docket593
StatusPublished
Cited by594 cases

This text of 160 U.S. 469 (Davis v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. United States, 160 U.S. 469, 16 S. Ct. 353, 40 L. Ed. 499, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2370 (1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Harlan

delivered the opinion of the court.

Dennis Davis was indicted for the crime of having, on the 18th day of September, 1894, at the Greek Nation, in the Indian Territory, within the Western District of Arkansas, feloniously, wilfully, and of his malice aforethought, killed and murdered one Sol Blackwell.

He was found guilty of the charge in the indictment. A motion for a new trial having been overruled, and the court having adjudged that the accused was guilty of the crime of *475 murder, as charged, he was sentenced to suffer the penalty of death by hanging.

At the trial below the government introduced evidence which, if alone considered, made it the duty of the jury to return a verdict of guilty of the crime charged.

But there was evidence tending to show that at the time of the killing the accused, by reason of unsoundness or weakness of mind, was not criminally responsible for his acts. In addition to the evidence of a practising physician of many years standing, and who, for the time, was physician at the jail in which the accused was confined previous to his trial, “ other witnesses,” the bill of exceptions states, “ testified that they had been intimately acquainted with the defendant for a number of years, lived near him, and had been frequently with him, knew his mental condition, and that he was weak-minded, and regarded by his neighbors and people as being what they called half crazy. Other witnesses who had known the defendant for ten to twenty -years, witnesses who had worked with him and had been thrown in constant contact with him,' said he had always been called half crazy, weak-minded; and in the opinion of the witnesses defendant was not of sound mind.”

The issue, therefore, was as to the responsibility of the accused for the killing alleged and clearly proved.

In its elaborate charge the court instructed the jury as to the rules by which they were to be guided in determining whether the accused took the life of the deceased feloniously, wilfully, and with malice aforethought. “ Where,” the court said, “a man has been shot to death, where the facts, as claimed by the government hete, show a lying in wait, show previous preparation, show the selection of a deadly weapon, and show concealment to get an opportunity to do the act, where that state of case exists, if there is a mental condition of the kind that renders a man accountable — why, there is crime, and that -crime is murder.”

Keferring tó the evidence adduced to show that the accused was incompetent in law to commit crime, the court observed: “Now when a man premeditates a wicked design that pro *476 duces death, and executes that design, if he is a sane being, if he is what the law calls a sane man, not that he may be partially insane, not that he may be eccentric, and not that he may be unable to control his will power if he is in a passion or rage because of some real or imaginary grievance he may have received — I say, if you find him in that condition and you find these other things attending the act, you would necessarily find the existence of the attributes of the crime of murder known as ‘ wilfulness ’ and malice aforethought.” But, the court said, the law “ presumes every man is sane, and the burden of showing it is not true is upon the party who asserts it. The responsibility of overturning that presumption, that the law recognizes-as one that is universal, is with the party who sets it up as a defence. The government is not required to show it. The law presumes that we are all sane; therefore the government does not have to furnish any evidence to show that this defendant is sane. It comes in here with the fact established in legal contemplation until it is overthrown. The government takes and keeps that attitude until the evidence brought in the case overthrows this presumption of sanity. Now, let us see what the nature of this defence is. The defendant interposes the plea of insanity, and he says by this plea that he did the killing, but the act is not one for which he can be-held responsible. In other words, that the act was and is excusable in the law, because he was insane at the time of its commission. Now, I say to you in this connection, and it is a fact admitted in argument by the counsel, that under the evidence there is nothing that justifies the act of tho killing; nor was it such an act that the law upholds it or .mitigates it, or reduces it to a grade lower than murder. If it was committed by the defendant while he was actually insane it is excusable.”

Again: “Now, I will undertake or endeavor to tell you, and I bespeak your most earnest attention especially upon this proposition of ‘ insanity.’ The term ‘ insanity,’ as used in this defence, means such a perverted and deranged condition of the mental and moral faculties as to render a person incapable of distinguishing between" right and wrong, or unconscious at *477 the time of the nature of the act he is committing; or where, though conscious of the nature of the act and able to distinguish between right and wrong, and know that the act is wrong, yet his will, by which I mean the governing power of his mind, has been, otherwise than voluntarily, so completely destroyed that his actions are not subject to it, but are beyond his control. Such insanity, if proved to your reasonable satisfaction to have existed at the time of the commission of the act — that is the test — at the time of its commission, is in the law an excuse for it,'however brutal or atrocious it may have been. For a person to be excused from criminal responsibility it is not necessary that he be a raving maniac, but ordinarily it requires something more than mere eccentricity of a natural character. Such insanity does not excuse.”

Later in the charge the court recurred to the defence of insanity and said: “Now, ás I have already told you, the law presumes every person who has reached the years of discretion to be of sane mind, and this presumption .continues until the contrary is shown. So that when, as in this case, insanity,is interposed as a defence, the fact of the existence of l xch insanity at the time of the commission of the offence charged, must be established by the evidence to the reasonable satisfaction of a jury, and the burden of proof of the insanity rests with the defendant. Although you may believe and find from the evidence that the defendant did commit the act charged against him, yet, if you further find that at the time he did so he was in such an insane condition of mind that he did not and could not understand and comprehend the nature of the' act; or that thus knowing and understanding it, he was so far deprived of his will, not by his own passion conceived for the purpose of spurring him on to commit the violence, not by his own passion of mind engendered by some real or fancied grievance; but- that he was so far deprived of his will by disease or other cause over which he had no control, as to render him unable to control his actions, then such killing was not a malicious killing, and you will acquit him of the crime charged against him.”

In concluding its charge the court thus summarized the *478 principles by which, the jury were to be guided in their deliberations:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Emmanuel Earl Trammell
2019 WI 59 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 2019)
State v. Ireland (Slip Opinion)
2018 Ohio 4494 (Ohio Supreme Court, 2018)
Alfredo Suarez, Jr. v. State
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2017
Petric v. People
61 V.I. 401 (Supreme Court of The Virgin Islands, 2014)
United States v. Vigil
478 F. Supp. 2d 1285 (D. New Mexico, 2007)
United States v. Kandirakis
441 F. Supp. 2d 282 (D. Massachusetts, 2006)
Dixon v. United States
548 U.S. 1 (Supreme Court, 2006)
State v. Navarro
35 P.3d 802 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2001)
United States v. Bridget M. Denny-Shaffer
2 F.3d 999 (Tenth Circuit, 1993)
Commonwealth v. Reilly
549 A.2d 503 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1988)
United States v. James Howard
855 F.2d 832 (Eleventh Circuit, 1988)
People v. Hightower
526 N.E.2d 1129 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1988)
Holland v. Scully
797 F.2d 57 (Second Circuit, 1986)
David F. Hagler v. William L. Callahan
764 F.2d 711 (Ninth Circuit, 1985)
United States v. Torniero
570 F. Supp. 721 (D. Connecticut, 1983)
State v. Hickman
337 N.W.2d 512 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1983)
George E. Myers v. State of Washington
702 F.2d 766 (Ninth Circuit, 1983)
People v. Cook
658 P.2d 86 (California Supreme Court, 1983)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 U.S. 469, 16 S. Ct. 353, 40 L. Ed. 499, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-united-states-scotus-1895.