Hawthorne v. State

58 Miss. 778
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 58 Miss. 778 (Hawthorne v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hawthorne v. State, 58 Miss. 778 (Mich. 1881).

Opinion

Campbell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

It is too late, by many years, to dispute here the propositions, that the law implies malice from the unlawful use of a deadhr weapon,-and that every homicide by the use of such weapon is presumed to be murder, and that “ malice aforethought ” is the same as “ deliberate design” or “premeditated design.”

[784]*784There is no difference, in the definition of murder, between the act of February 15, 1839 (Hutch. Code, 954), and art. 165 of the Code of 1857 (p. 600), and sect. 2628 of the Code of 1871. There is a slight verbal difference between the first act mentioned and the others, but that makes no change in the law as to murder. The act of February 15, 1839, has the phrase “premeditated design,” which in the Codes is changed into “ deliberate design,” and these phrases are equivalent, and are used convertibly in defining murder.

Prior to 1839 there was no statute in this State defining murder.

In the first case found in our reports involving an interpretation of the act of 1839 with respect to murder (McDaniel v. The State, 8 Smed. & M. 401), it was held that every homicide is presumed to be committed with malice aforethought, and that the words “ premeditated design” are the same in legal effect as the words “ malice aforethought,” and that the law presumes malice from the use of a deadly weapon ; and that these presumptions, if unopposed, may amount to full proof, and that they stand until a contrary and stronger presumption is raised by the evidence.

In Boles v. The State, 9 Smed. & M. 284, counsel for the prisoner pressed the point that the statute cited above altered the common law, in this : “ that á killing on sudden passion is clearly not with premeditated design,” and, therefore, is not murder; but the court found no fault with an instruction that “it is not necessary for the jury to believe that the defendant previously harbored the design to kill the deceased, if he killed him, even upon a sudden passion, without provocation such as the law recognizes as sufficient,” etc. In Green v. The State, 28 Miss. 687, an instruction that “ every killing is pi’esumed to be malicious, and amounting to' murder, until the contrary appears,” etc., was approved, with the emphatic declaration, “ if anything is to be considered as settled by sound judicial reasoning and authority, this doctrine must be so regarded.”

[785]*785To the same effect are Riggs v. The State, 30 Miss. 635 ; Hague v. The State, 34 Miss. 616 ; Mask v. The State, 36 Miss. 77; Jeff v. The State, 39 Miss. 593; Head v. The State, 44 Miss. 731; Evans v. The State, 44 Miss. 762.

In Mask v. The State, an instruction that “ murder is the unlawful killing * * * with malice aforethought, or premeditated design, which is the same thing. Malice is express or implied,” etc., was approved by the court. In Head v. The State, the true rule is declared to be: “ If there be no excuse or justification for the homicide by the accused shown in the evidence adduced by the State, then the accused is guilty'' of murder, unless he has by his evidence proved excuse or justification ;” and the court in express terms repudiated the idea that “ malice cannot be inferred simply from the fact of the use of such weapon ” as the accused may have had on his person, which he usually carried.

In Evans v. The State, an instruction that “ever}' killing with a deadly weapon is presumed to be malicious, and amounts to murder, until the contrary appears,” etc., was-expressly said to announce the true rule ; and an instruction,, given as a substitute for several asked by the prisoner, and in these words: “ If the jury are satisfied from the whole evidence that the accused deliberately shot and killed the-deceased, at a time when the accused was in no actual danger of great bodily harm, or of his life, then the accused is guilty of murder. But * * * it devolves upon the accused, however, to show to the jury, by clear and satisfactory proof, that there was an actual necessity for killing the deceased before he entered his house,” was said to give the accused the benefit “ of a broader exposition of self-defence * * * than is warranted by the law.”

The case of Anthony v. The State, 13 Smed. & M. 263, is claimed by counsel for the appellant to be decisive of the correctness of the contention that the words “ malice aforethought” are not equivalent to “deliberate design.” Because an indictment charging the accused with having [786]*786committed an offence “feloniously, wilfully, and of liis malice aforethought,” was held to be insufficient to describe the offence, which consisted in an act done with “malice aforethought, express,” it is argued here that “ deliberate design,” as used in the statute defining murder, means more than “ malice aforethought,” and that only killing with malice “express” is made murder. The particular statute with reference to which Anthony v. The State was decided, in terms, made a distinction between implied and express malice, and it was rightly held that the omission from the indictment of the “ most material word in the constitution of the offence” — i.e., “express,” as descriptive of the malice — was fatal. But under the Code it is sufficient to charge, in an indictment for murder, “that the defendant did feloniously, wilfully, and of his malice aforethought, kill and murder the deceased.” Code 1871, sect. 2802. From which it appears that the legislative intent was that the charge of unlawfully' killing a human being, with the deliberate design to effect death, should be made by the words “ feloniously, wilfully, and of his malice aforethought,” which is suggestive of the .legislative understanding and purpose to treat them as equivalent forms of expression.

The law-giver has interpreted the phrase ‘ ‘ deliberate design,” as employed in the statute defining murder, by designating apt' words by which to make the charge of murder. Code 1871, sect. 2802.

We make no reference to the views held by certain law-writers and the courts of some of the other States, because the question of what is murder is not an open one in this State. It has been settled, beyond dispute, by forty years of administration and by repeated utterances of this court. The act of February 15, 1839, defining murder, has been three times reenacted in this State since it was interpreted in McDaniel v. The State, and that interpretation of it must be held to have been deliberately approved and adopted with it.

We do not approve what we have quoted from Head v. The [787]*787State, and Evans v. The State. We do not regard as correct the statement in the opinion in Head v. The State, that the true rule is: “If there.be no excuse or justification for the homicide by the accused shown in the evidence adduced by the State, then the accused is guilty of murder, unless he has by his evidence proved excuse or justification.” The true rule is that the accused should be convicted, if from the whole evidence there is not a reasonable doubt of his guilt.

To require him, by hid evidence, to prove excuse or justification is to impose a greater burden than the law requires or permits.

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58 Miss. 778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawthorne-v-state-miss-1881.