Hollland v. State

12 Fla. 117
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 1, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 12 Fla. 117 (Hollland v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hollland v. State, 12 Fla. 117 (Fla. 1867).

Opinion

DOUGLAS, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The prisoner, John Holland, was indicted at the Fall Term of Suwannee Circuit Court for the killing of Melvin Brock.

On the trial he was found guilty of murder, and was sentenced by the court to suffer the penalties of the law, from which sentence he has appealed to this court. His counsel have endeavored to show in argument that the offence was manslaughter and not murder, and now asks that the judgment of the Circuit Court of Suwannee county be reversed and a new trial granted to the prisoner.

The material facts in the case, as disclosed by the evidence, are: That on the 2d day of August last, the prisoner and the deceased, together with other persons, had on that day been employed at work pulling fodder j that while thus in company a dispute arose between the prisoner and the' deceased, in relation to a small sum of mouey, claimed to be owing from the deceased to the prisoner — the one claiming more than the other was willing to admit to be due, and both asserting their statement of the amount to be correct. Some offensive language was used by the prisoner, and angry words were employed by both parties. Both were at the -time armed with pocket knives, which they had in their hands at the time the dispute arose. The deceased stated to the prisoner that he did not want to fight him, but that he must retract the damned lie ” which he had -given him, or he would have to fight. The prisoner refused to retract the language complained of by the deceased; and John Barnes, one of the witnesses who was present, seeing that' a difficulty was likely, to occur, told them to shut up their knives. The deceased shut up his knife and put it into his [123]*123pocket, blit the prisoner refused to do so, saying he would not shut up his knife for any man. After this the offensive language was several times repeated by the prisoner, who dared the deceased to strike him. The prisoner then made a gesture as if going to cut the deceased, who. turned from him in the act of running, at which time the prisoner cut at him, and cut his shirt on the shoulder near the under part of the arm, and pursued him until stopped by those present, and the knife was taken from him. The deceased then came back and tried to reason the case with the prisoner, who was much excited, crying and cursing, and saying he would shoot the deceased if he did not pay him.

The parties were together that evening for some time afterwards, but no further difficulty occurred, and they separated without a reconciliation.

On the next afternoon, being the Sabbath, in returning from preaching, the prisoner and deceased met, and the quarrel was again renewed, but it does not distinctly appear who commenced it.

James Holland, the brother of the prisoner, was then present, with one or more of the persons who had been present on the day before. There is a good deal of testimony as to wHat took place at this second meeting, but the important facts are few, and about them there is no conflict of evidence.

From this testimony we learn that the deceased, when talking about the. occurrence of the previous day, said to the prisoner, “ if you will take back the damned lie which you gave me on yesterday, I will settle it with you without a fuss ; if not you have got me to fight.” That the prisoner refused to retract what he had said, and that offers and propositions were then madé by the deceased, who was the larger and stronger of the two, to make it a fair fight. These offers and propositions were refused by the prisoner, who [124]*124said he would not fight him a fair fight, but when he fought him he would go into him.”

After some more words between the parties, the prisoner took his coat off and was about to engage in a combat with ,the deceased, when James Holland, the brother of the prisoner, interposed and said to the deceased, “you shan’t fight where I am.” While these and other word's were passing; between the deceased and James Holland, the prisonel* stepped a short distance and obtained a knife from a person who then had it, and returned to where he had been standing.

During the time the prisoner, had turned away to get his knife, his brother and the deceased had confronted each other, and James Holland had very roughly pushed or struck the deceased in the breast, shoving him out of his tracks, and had received in return a blow in the face which staggered him back. On recovering from the effect of the blow, James Holland and the deceased were in the act of closing in combat, or had hold of each other, the witness does not remember which, when John Holland,, the prisoner, ran up and struck the deceased two blows with a knife, inflicting two wounds which proved mortal, and from the effects of which the deceased died in less than an hour.-

Upon this state of facts, it is argued on behalf of the prisoner that the offence of which he is guilty is not murder* but manslaughter, and that having been convicted of murder, he is entitled to a new trial. There were no exceptions taken to the ruling of, the Judge on the trial in the court below, and the single question for this court to determine .is, whether the evidence shows the homicide to have been committed under such circumstances as will make it murder, or is there such absence of malice as to reduce it manslaughter.

Murder is defined to be the voluntary killing of any person in the peace of the State, with malice, prepense or afore[125]*125thought, either express or implied hy law. The sense of which word malice is not confined to a particular ill-will to the deceased, but is intended to denote an action flowing from a wicked and corrupt motive, a thing done malo animo, where the fact has been attended with such circumstances as carry in them the plain indications of a heart regardless of social duty and fatally hent upon mischief: East’s Pleas of the Crown, eh. 5, sec. 2.

Lord Holt has defined malice, when used in a legal sense, to be a term importing directly wickedness, excluding a just cause or excuse.

In the case of the King vs. Hawey, Best, Judge, said, “the legal import of this term, (malice) differs from its acceptation in common conversation. It is not as in ordinary speech only an expression of hatred and ill-will to an individual, but means any wicked or mischievous intention of the mind. Thus in the crime of murder, which is always stated in the indictment to be committed with malice aforethought, it is neither necessary in support of such indictment to show that the prisoner had any enmity to the deceased, or would proof of absence of ill-will furnish the accused with any defenee, when it is proved that the act of killing was intentional, and done without any justifiable cause. 2 Barn & Cres., 268.

When the question of malice has arisen in cases of homicide, the matter for consideration is, whether the act was done with or without just cause or excuse. A wrongful act done intentionally without just cause or excuse, is said to be done maliciously. 10 Barn & Cres., 272.

The implication of malice arises in every instance of homicide, and in every charge of murder, the fact of killing being first proved, the law will imply that it was done with malice, and all the circumstances of accident, necessity or infirmity, are to be satisfactorily proved by the prisoner, unless they arise out of the evidence produced against him. [126]*126East’s Pleas of the Crown, ch. 5, sec.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Fla. 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hollland-v-state-fla-1867.