Lo Toon v. Territory of Hawaii

16 Haw. 351, 1904 Haw. LEXIS 51
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 27, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 16 Haw. 351 (Lo Toon v. Territory of Hawaii) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lo Toon v. Territory of Hawaii, 16 Haw. 351, 1904 Haw. LEXIS 51 (haw 1904).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

HATCH, J.

This is a writ of error to the circuit court of the fourth circuit. The plaintiff in error was convicted at the November term, 1903, of the circuit court of the fourth judicial circuit of' an assault with a dangerous weapon with intent to commit murder upon one Anama. Three assignments of error are here relied upon. As stated in the brief of the plaintiff in error they are as follows: Eirst, no intent to commit murder was shown by the evidence. Second, mistakes in interpretation from Chinese to English were allowed to go to the jury uncorrected over-defendant’s objections. Third, evidence tending to prove the defendant was near the place where the offense was committed was introduced by the prosecution on rebuttal over the defendant’s objections. The testimony shows that Anama was sitting-in his kitchen talking with his wife on the evening of the third day of October, 1903; that about six o’clock or later the plaintiff, in error suddenly entered the kitchen, swiftly approached Anama, seized him by the shoulder, held a pistol near his head and discharged it and then rapidly left the apartment. It was shown that criminal relations had existed between the accused and the wife of Anama; that she had recently put an end to these relations and had forbidden the accused to approach her. The defense was an alibi. In rebuttal of the alibi the prosecu[353]*353tion offered testimony tending to show that the accused was seen near the scene of the assault not long before it took place.

The first assignment of error relied upon is that no intent to commit murder was shown by the evidence. A preliminary objection is made on behalf of the defendant in error that the errors assigned cannot be raised for the first time in this court,, no exception having been taken at the trial. This was not necessary. This point was settled in Cummings v. Iaukea, 10 Haw. 1. The question presented by this assignment is whether any evidence appears in the record which would support the conviction. We are prohibited from considering the weight of the evidence or any question depending upon the credibility of witnesses. C. L., Sec. 1447. Whether there was any evidence at all, however, is a question of law. Cox v. Drake, 46 N. J. L. 167. The intent to 'commit murder, as is contended by the plaintiff in error, was an essential ingredient of the offense charged and to support the conviction must have been found by the jury as a fact. It is well settled, however, that the intent need not have been shown by direct proof. What is passing in the human mind is rarely to be proved by direct evidence. The law does not require impossibilities. Even if declarations are made by the accused at the time of the commission of an offense, they do not furnish infallible proof of the intent. The intent of a defendant, when it is essential to be shown, is better proved by evidence of his acts than of his declarations. Henderson v. People, 124 Ill. 607. Nor need the intent be shown by direct and positive testimony, as it may be inferred from circumstances. Com. v. People, 116 Ill. 458. “Specific proof of intent is not essential, but the intent may be proved by evidence of the attending facts and circumstances. * * * The jury were justified in taking into consideration the character and manner of the assault; that it was made deliberately with a weapon capable of producing death.” Weaver v. People, 132 Ill. 536. The intent may be inferred from the nature of the weapon. Doolittle v. State, 93 Ind. 272. “The intent with which the act was done is a question of fact either to be shown by the declarations of the [354]*354party or to be inferred from tbe character, manner and circumstances of the assault. * * * Intent- is a matter of fact and cannot be implied as a matter of law, but it may be inferred from the use of a weapon or instrument calculated to produce death, or from an act of violence from which ordinarily in the usual course of things death or great bodily harm may result.” Crosby v. People, 137 Ill. 337. “The intent to kill must undoubtedly be established as an inference of fact to the satisfaction of the jury, but they will draw that inference as they draw all other inferences from any fact in evidence which to their minds fairly proves its existence. Intentions can only be proved by acts as juries cannot look into the breast of the criminal. And where any act is knowingly committed which naturallv and usually leads to certain consequences, a jury certainly has the right, in the exercise of ordinary sagacity, to draw the inference that such results are intended.” People v. Scott, 6 Mich. 287, 295. The cases relied upon by the plaintiff in error do not controvert this position. In Roberts v. People, 19 Mich. 401, chiefly relied upon by the plaintiff in error, the question was as to the instructions given to the jury. It was held that the jury should not have been told that if they should find the defendant made the assault alleged, in the manner and with the instrument charged in the information, the law inferred the intent charged, and they were at liberty to find the defendant guilty, whether they were satisfied of the intent or not as a matter of fact; but the court also distinctly. held as follows: “By saying, however, that the specific intent to murder * * * must be proved, we do not intend to say it must be proved by direct, positive or independent evidence. * * * The jury may draw the inference as they draw all other inferences from any facts in evidence which to their minds fairly prove its existence; and in considering the question they may and should take into consideration the nature of the defendant’s acts constituting the assault, the temper’ or disposition of mind with which they were apparently performed, whether the instrument and means used were naturally adapted to produce [355]*355«death, his conduct and declarations prior to, at the time and after the assault and all the other circumstances calculated to -throw light upon the intention with which the assault was made.” In People v. Mize, 80 Cal. 41, the question arose over instructions which tended to take from the jury the question of intent. The case did not hold that the intent could not be inferred from the facts, but that the jury should not be instructed in such manner as to take from them the right to pass upon the question of intent. People v. Landman, 103 Cal. 577, turned also upon the construction of the charge of the court, the charge being held to have trenched upon the province of the jury in passing upon matters of fact. In People v. Sweeney, 55 Mich. 586, the holding was that the presumption that a sane man must be held to intend the necessary and probable consequences of his own acts, though a very important circumstance in making the proof of intent is not conclusive nor alone sufficient and should be supplemented by other testimony to avoid a reasonable doubt. In the present case no exception was taken to the charge of the court. It nowhere appears that the jury were instructed to give any weight to the presumption above stated. In our opinion there was sufficient evidence, irrespective of the presumption, to support a finding of intent to murder.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Haw. 351, 1904 Haw. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lo-toon-v-territory-of-hawaii-haw-1904.