Foster v. . the People

50 N.Y. 598, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 466
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 24, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 50 N.Y. 598 (Foster v. . the People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foster v. . the People, 50 N.Y. 598, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 466 (N.Y. 1872).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

Hpon the conclusion of the testimony, the prisoner’s counsel requested the court to charge the jury that upon the indictment and evidence the jury could convict the prisoner of murder in the second degree, and further, that if the prisoner killed the decased by an assault upon him with a dangerous weapon with intent to maim him, but without any intent to effect death, such killing was murder in the second degree.

The court refused to charge either of these propositions, and to this refusal the prisoner’s counsel excepted.

This exception presents the only question argued by the learned counsel for the prisoner, and no ground is suggested for the-reversal of the conviction and judgment except that the court erred in refusing to charge these propositions.

The court charged the jury that the defendant could not be convicted of murder in the first degree, unless he acted from a premeditated designio effect the death of the deceased, and that in the absence of such an intent, his offence was reduced to manslaughter.

*601 The court, by the ruling upon the propositions of the prisoner’s counsel and by the charge, excluded from the consideration of the jury the question whether the prisoner could upon the evidence be convicted of murder in the second degree, and decided, as matter of law, that such a conviction was not warranted by the evidence.

It was the duty of the court to instruct the jury as to the legal effect of conclusions of fact which they were at liberty to deduce from the evidence.

It is the province of the jury to determine questions of fact arising upon the evidence and the intent of the prisoner, but if the facts proved are capable of two constructions, or if in one view of the evidence a particular intent might be found, and yet the facts might justify the finding of an intent involving another degree of guilt, the court was bound, upon the request of the prisoner, to declare the rule of law applicable to the case in either aspect, as the jury might determine the facts.

This rule is fundamental, and is essential to the due administration of the law and to the protection of the accused. It was declared by Judge Nelson, in the case of The People v. Enoch (13 Wend., 164), as follows:

“It is the business of the court to see that a proper direction be given to the jury, in point of law, upon the evidence.”

If there was in this case any evidence tending to prove that the prisoner was guilty of murder in the second degree, the court erred in refusing to give the instruction asked. It becomes necessary, therefore, to. consider whether there was' su'ch evidence in the case, and, to determine it, we must ascertain what constitutes murder in the second degree.

The division of the crime of murder into two degrees was made by the statute of 1862. (Laws of 1862, chap. 197.) The killing of a human being without authority of law, “ when perpetrated without any design to effect death by a person engaged in the commission of any felony,” was murder by one of the definitions of that crime, contained in the Revised Statutes. (2 Rev. Stat., 657, § 5, sub. 3.)

*602 By the.amendment of 1862, the killing of another by a person engaged in the commission of a felony was made murder in the first degree only when perpetrated in committing the crime of -arson in the first degree.

The'other cases embraced in the definition of the Bevised Statutes, above cited, were made murder in the second degree. The law of 1862 declares “that such killing, unless.it be murder in the first degreé, or manslaughter, or excusable or justifiable homicide, * * * or when perpetrated without any design to effect death by a person engaged in the commission of any felony, shall be murder in the second degree.”

It was decided in Fitzgerrold's Case (37 N. Y., 413) that, under this statute, those cases only were murder in the second degree in which the killing was by a person engaged at the time in the commission of a felony other than arson in the first degree.

The question we are now considering depends, therefore, upon the fact whether the evidence discloses or tends to establish that the prisoner, when he inflicted upon Putnam the -blow which resulted in his death, was engaged in the commission of a felony, within the purview of this statute. The prisoner when he struck the deceased intended to inflict a personal'injury.

If any felony, therefore, was intended by the prisoner, other than the killing of the deceased, it was a felonious assault upon him.

It is claimed on the part of-the people that the '.words “ engaged in the commission of any felony,” in the statute, do not include cases in which the killing resulted from intehtiohal violencé to the person killed, and where, although the intent was to commit a felonious assault, there was no intention to kill; or, in other -words, where the felony intended, although not the felony of lÉmicide, was the very act of personal violence which caused the death, that this is not a felony within the meaning of the statute.

A question of the same character has arisen upon 'the con-st .'.fction of the provision of the statute declaring that the *603 killing of a human being, without a design to effect death by the act, etc., of another, while such other is engaged “ in the perpetration of any crime or misdemeanor not amounting to felony,” shall be manslaughter in the first degree. (2 R. S., 661, § 6.) It has given rise to much discussion, and different views have been expressed upon it by judges, but it has never been determined by the court of last resort. (People v. Rector, 19 Wend., 608; Darry v. People, 10 N. Y., 120; People v. Butler, v. Park. Crim. R., 377.)

What the true construction of the statute is, is immaterial in this case, unless the evidence warranted the inference, or unless the jury might have found from the evidence, that the prisoner when he struck the deceased intended to commit some felony other than the homicide with which he was charged.

We think that there is no evidence that the prisoner committed or intended to commit any felony other than the felony of homicide That he intended to inflict a personal injury upon the deceased, is admitted. But an assault and battery upon another is a misdemeanor, except only in the cases where by statute the offence is made a felony. This was so at common law, and the offence was a misdemeanor simply, although the assailant may have had a felonious intent; as an intent to murder or to rob when he inflicted the injury. If the felony attempted ■ was accomplished, then the misdemeanor was merged in the higher offence.

The Eevised Statutes declare (2 R. S., 665, § 36) that “Every person who shall be convicted of * * * an assault and battery upon another, by means of any deadly weapon * * * with the intent to kill, maim, ravish or rob such other person, or in an attempt to commit any burglary, larceny or other felony, * * * shall be punished by imprisonment in a State prison for á term of not more than ten years.”

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Bluebook (online)
50 N.Y. 598, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-the-people-ny-1872.