Duncan v. People

24 N.E. 765, 134 Ill. 110, 1890 Ill. LEXIS 947
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 24 N.E. 765 (Duncan v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duncan v. People, 24 N.E. 765, 134 Ill. 110, 1890 Ill. LEXIS 947 (Ill. 1890).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bailey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Ernest Duncan, the plaintiff in error, was indicted in the Circuit Court of Williamson county for the crime of manslaughter, and, on the trial, was convicted and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for the term of five years. The grounds upon which he now seeks to have the conviction set aside and to be awarded a new trial are, first, that the verdict of the jury is unsupported by the evidence, and, second,, that the jury were misled by the instructions as to the law given to them by the court.

The circumstances under which the h-omicide was committed are briefly as follows: On the 4th day of July, 1888, at about nine or ten o’clock in the evening, George White, th&deceased, in company with his brother William, left, a saloon situated at the south-east corner of the public square in Marion, Williamson county, and walked along the south side of the square to South street, a street running south from a point opposite the center of the square. On the west side on South, street fronting on the square, is a building known as Cantor’s-store, said building having also a door opening on to South, street near the corner. The defendant and one Gibbs were at the time sitting in said door opening on to South street. The deceased and his brother crossed South street and halted on the corner at Cantor’s store. The evidence as to what then-occurred is to some degree conflicting. The night was quite-dark, and the only witnesses who were upon the spot, or near-enough to see what occurred with distinctness, were William White, the brother of the deceased, and Gibbs who was sitting-in the door-way with the defendant.

William White testifies that he and the deceased reached' the corner and halted just north of the door of Cantor’s store,, and that two men were sitting in the door; that one of them spoke up and said: “Where in hell are you fellows going?"' and that the deceased replied: “It is none of your damned, business;” that the defendant then jumped up in front off them and said that he would make it his business; that witness stepped in front of the deceased and told the defendant-to “hold up;” that when he said that, the defendant struck the witness, and the witness thereupon threw up his arm and shoved or knocked the defendant off from the sidewalk into the-street; that when the defendant went off from the sidewalk,. the deceased was standing behind and north of the witness; that the defendant, on reaching the street, fell partly or entirely down, but got up immediately and returned to the sidewalk, taking a north-westerly direction so as to get onto the sidewalk north of the deceased; that immediately after reaching the sidewalk he struck the deceased a blow; that the witness, finding that he himself had been wounded, proposed to the deceased that they go to a certain drug store which was near by, saying that he thought that he had been cut; that the deceased consented, saying that he also had received a blow on his arm; that on reaching the drug store, it was found that both the witness and the deceased had been wounded, the wound of the latter being on the upper part of the left arm, and made apparently with a knife, and the knife having, as was ascertained upon subsequent examination, penetrated the bone and splintered off portions of it.

Witness Gibbs testifies that, as the deceased and his brother stopped on the corner near Cantor’s store, the deceased- commenced doing something which indicated that he was about to urinate; that the defendant, seeing what he was about, called out, saying: “I would not do that if I were you; you might get arrestedthat one of them, which the witness thinks was the deceased, replied: “What business is that to you, you damned son of a bitch?” that defendant jumped up and said: “You don’t know who you are talking to, do you?” that at about that time William White struck the defendant and knocked him into the street, but witness admits that the first blow was struck by the defendant, although he thinks it was received by the deceased and not by his brother; that defendant returned to the sidewalk in a south-westerly direction, so as to reach the sidewalk some seven or eight feet south of the door; that the deceased and his brother had in the meantime advanced down the sidewalk so that when the defendant got back, they were all together; that several blows passed between them, and that the witness thereupon got up and interposed, saying that it was not fair for two men to be fighting one, and took hold of them and finally succeeded in parting them. This witness testifies that just before the first blow was struck, and before the defendant was knocked off the sidewalk, William 'White run his hand into his pocket, but there is no pretense that either he or his brother drew or had in his possession any weapon at that time.

Some other witnesses who were so far away that, owing to the darkness, they could not see the affair with distinctness, heard portions at least of the colloquy between the defendant and the deceased which immediately preceded the affray, and testified to what they heard, and their testimony as to the words used corresponds in the main with that of Gibbs. The evidence also tends to show that during the day and evening preceding the affray, the deceased was to some extent under the influence of intoxicating liquors, and also that during the day he had in his possession a revolver and a dirk knife, and also that at one time he had in his pocket and exhibited a large rock, but there is no evidence that he had either of those weapons in his possession at the time of the affray, or that the defendant had any reason to suppose that he was armed with weapons of any kind.

It appears that for several days the condition of the deceased, though considered dangerous, was such as to give promise of ultimate recovery, but that blood-poisoning afterward ensued which rendered a fatal result highly probable if not absolutely certain. As a last resort- his arm was amputated, but he survived the operation but a few hours.

It can not be doubted, we think, that the evidence warranted the jury in finding that the defendant inflicted upon the deceased the wound which caused his death. This seems to be a fair conclusion to be drawn from the testimony of the witnesses on both sides. The only attempt to justify or rather to excuse the homicide is on the theory of self-defense, and while there is some evidence on which that theory may be based, we are of the opinion that any candid perusal of the record will produce the conviction that the defendant commenced the affray, and that he was the aggressor throughout. To state the case most strongly for the defendant, the evidence applicable to the issue of self-defense was conflicting, with at least an apparent preponderance against the defendant. Under these circumstances, unless there was error in the instructions to the jury as to the law, the verdict finding against the defendant on that issue must be held to be conclusive.

The only remaining question then is, whether there was any error in the instructions. The first instruction given at the instance of the prosecution consisted of the definition of the crime of manslaughter in the exact language of the Criminal Code. The second instruction was a literal copy of the first clause of the section of said Code defining voluntary manslaughter, viz:

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.E. 765, 134 Ill. 110, 1890 Ill. LEXIS 947, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duncan-v-people-ill-1890.