Gray v. Combs

30 Ky. 478, 7 J.J. Marsh. 478, 1832 Ky. LEXIS 130
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 9, 1832
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 30 Ky. 478 (Gray v. Combs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gray v. Combs, 30 Ky. 478, 7 J.J. Marsh. 478, 1832 Ky. LEXIS 130 (Ky. Ct. App. 1832).

Opinion

Judge Nichoi.as

cLlivcred the opinion of the court.

To an action on the case, brought by ■Gray against Combs, for killing a negro tnan slave, the latter plead in substance, that as clerk and store keeper, he had the care and custody of a brick ware-house, containing a variety of goods of great value, that before the killing said slave, some person having been in the habit of entering said Ware-house, at night, and stealing goods therefrom, though well secured with good doors and locks, and the defendant not being able to apprehend said thief, for the protection of said property and prevention of such stealing, set up a loaded gun on the inside of the1 house, with a string tied to the trigger; that said slave, in the dead hour of the night, witli the intent-of stealing said goods, broke and entered said house, pushed against said string, and thereby caused the gun to go off and himself to be shot and killed, &c. To this defence the plaintiff demurred, and the court having overruled the demurrer and given judgment for the defendant, the plaintiff prosecutes tiiis writ of error.

For the defendant, it is contended, that his act is only to he viewed in this suit, with an eye to the civil code, and the killing of the slave to be treated no otherwise than the killing of an ox under similar [479]*479diroumstances, anil that if lie has infringed any part of the criminal code, he must he left to a criminal prosecution for his punishment. This cannot be. If what lie has done is illegal, he is none the less responsible to remunerate the master for the value of the slave, because he may also lie responsible to the state for taking the life of a human being. His act, whether viewed civily or criminally, must be adjudged of in all its consequences, according to its legality, and it is perfectly immaterial whether the rule for testing its legality be found in the civil or the penal code. But conceding the distinction attempted, we should, by no means, be prepared to concede the consequence deduced from it. A similar process of reasoning would justify the destruction of human life, in the prevention of any mere trespass, by the use of like indirection in the mode of defence.

For the plaintiff it is contended, first, that the use of means calculated to produce death, by whatever indirection they may have been used, areas obnoxious to the censure of the law, and render the user as culpable, as if they had been used directly and immediately by himself.

Second, That the theft or robbery attempted by the slave, if perpetrated, would have been no felony, but only a misdemeanor, punishable by stripes alone.

Third, That the law does not allow the taking of human life, except for the necessary prevention of a crime, which, if committed, would be punished by the law, with death.

The first of these propositions may well be conceded. The second is undeniably correct. By the 19th section of an act of 1802, II. Dig. 1160, it is declared that a slave convicted of any other offence than murder, arson, rape, robbery from the person, and burglary, shall be sentenced to receive any number of lashes not exceeding thirty-nine. rI he third section of an act of 1806, Dig. 1161, declares in substance, that any offence in a slave, for which stripes are imposed as the only punishment, shall be deemed a misdemeanor only.

The ralo, as InU1 down by Sir William Blachbtime, Chai (he law wll not “suffer any crime to bo prevenfed by death, unless (he same, if committed, would be punished by death,” is incorrect. In mo«t civilized countries (he uuIhoiizod ex tent of rpsirtanoe in the nece^nry dpftuce of the

In support of the third proposition, tve are referred to the language used by judge Blackstone on this subject, IV Com. 181 After citing the instances in which the law justifies killing to prevent the perpetration of various dimes, he alludes to another which he makes no doubt may be equally resisted bv (he death of the unnatural aggressor. “For, says lie, the one uniform principle that runs through our own and all other laws, seems to he this, that where a crime which in itself is capital, is endeavored to he committed by force, it is lawful to repel that force, by the death of the party attempting.” “The law of England, like that of every other well regulated community, is too tender of the public peace, too careful of the lives of the subjects, to suffer, with impunity, any crime to be prevented by death, unless the same, if committed, would also be punished by death.” If the law be as thus laid down, it is difficult, if not impossible to escape the conclusion, that the act of the defendant in this case, was illegal, and he consequently responsible for the value of the slave. For as the crime would not, if committed, have been punished with death, it would, according to this rule, have been unlawful to kill him.

But we cannot accede to the correctness of this rule, no authority is cited in support of it, and we believe none, sufficient to sustain it, can he found. Its recognition, would singularly and essentially curtail the right of self defence in this state, as here-, tofore supposed to he and long acted upon, with the approbation of all the virtue arid intelligence of the community. In such a community, where the rights of seif defence are so dearly cherished and so well maintained by the sentiments of our population, it would not merely be with reluctance, but extreme regret that we should acknowledge ourselves compelled to adopt or follow so restricted a rule. The result would be, in t.he present state < f our criminal code, that neither highway robbery, rape, or a variety of other equally atlrocious crimes could be lawfully prevented by the death of the aggressor. Indeed, we apprehend that it would l>£ as futile, as unwise, for even the legislature to an[481]*481nounce such a rule. Public sentiment is so deeidedy an.I unalterably opposed to it, that it would be vain to attempt ils enforcement. In vain would the way-fairer be directed to surrender his horse and his purse to a robber, rather than protect them by the death of the assailant. In vain would juries he called on to punish with the gallows, « necessary defence of female chastitv. W© fear not the imputation of temerity, in hazarding the opinion, that Blackstone has misconceived both the rule and the reason of it. In every civilized community except where there prevails such a draconic code as exists in England, the authorized extent of resistance in the necessary defence of the person or property against the perpetration of crimes, must greatly exceed the amount of punishment prescribed bv law for their perpetration. The final sanctions of all wise codes are framed in a spirit of true clemency, and with a view rather to deter from the commission and repetition of crime, than thoroughly to avenge an injury done. Much of the punishment is left to the conscience of the criminal, and to th© ultimate avenger of all human crime. On the other hand, the right of necessary defence, in the proteo tion of a man’s person or property, is derived to him from the law of nature, and should never be unnecessarily restrained by municipal regulation. However proper it may be for every well ordered community to be tender of the public peace, and careful of the lives of its citizens, there can be neither policy or propriety in extending this tenderness and care so far as to protect the robber, the burglar and the nocturnal thief, by an unnecessary restraint of the honest citizen’s natural right of self defence.

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

Related

Mondie v. Commonwealth
158 S.W.3d 203 (Kentucky Supreme Court, 2005)
Bishop v. State
356 S.E.2d 503 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1987)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 Ky. 478, 7 J.J. Marsh. 478, 1832 Ky. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-combs-kyctapp-1832.