O'Brien v. State

11 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 495
CourtAshtabula Circuit Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1908
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 495 (O'Brien v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ashtabula Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Brien v. State, 11 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 495 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1908).

Opinion

[496]*496John O’Brien was convicted, under Section 6819 of the Revised Statutes, of the crime of assaulting George Ryle. with a dangerous weapon with the malicious intent to maim and disfigure. The indictment contained three counts: the first of assault with intent to kill, and the second and third of assault with intent ,to maim and disfigure; the last two counts being substantially the same. The jury returned a verdict of not guilty on the first and third' counts and guilty on the second count. lie was sentenced, by the court to the penitentiary and the ease is now beforp us on error.

The circumstances as detailed in the evidence are briefly these:

A construction firm was putting up some structural steel work at Ashtabula Harbor, and the work was being done with non-union labor, which was objectionable to union men; and the union at Cleveland sent several men to the' harbor to look after the interests of the union men, and to see if the non-union men could not be induced to quit working. These special agents of the union were assisted by. a number of other men at the harbor so that there were quite a number of men, union and nonunion, on each side. •

As ordinarily in cases of this character the controversy became quite hot and much bad blood was aroused. About six o’clock in the morning, when the assault took place, Ryle was going to work and passed diagonally across the corner .of two streets when four men came in the opposite direction; coming from behind a small building, and met Ryle about half way across the intersection of the streets. Each of the four, or at least some of them, had a piece of gas pipe about eighteen inches long and one inch in diameter, covered -with heavy brown paper. They were, closely huddled together, and one of them''struck Ryle qver the side of the head with his weapon, making a serious and dangerous wound, but not of sufficient force to fracture the skull. The blow felled Ryle to his knees when he pulled his revolver and shot one of his assailants dead; the other three immediately fleeing in different directions. There is no evidence of any threats being made by O’Brien, or by either of the other three.

[497]*497Two questions of error are made before us, and are strenüously relied upon by counsel for plaintiff in error. First, that the evidence does not sufficiently show that O’Brien was one of the parties that committed the assault. Second, that the evidence wholly fails to show that the assault was made with the malicious intent to maim or disfigure. We have examined the evidence and we think the jury did right in finding that 0 ’Brien was one of the parties that committed the assault. The judgment, therefore, can not be reversed upon that ground.

The second ground of error presents a question of much more difficulty, and that is, whether the malicious striking of a person upon the head with a blunt instrument, of the character and under the circumstances shown in the evidence, is sufficient to show a malicious intent to maim or disfigure. It must be conceded that whatever may be the holding in the different states— and the decisions are directly contrary — in. our own state, in order to convict of an .assault with the malicious intent to maim or disfigure, the act must be done with intent to permanently injure one of the members of the body specifically set forth in Section 6819 of the Revised Statutes, .and to maim the assault must be made with the malicious intent to injure a member that may be used in the defense of the person, or to annoy an adversary.

State v. Johnston, 58th O. S., 417; the first section of the syllabus in that case is as follows:

“1. Maim and mayhem are, at common law, equivalent words, and mean .the same thing; therefore, a count in an indictment charging the defendant with maliciously biting the ear of another with intent to maim, can not be supported as to the particular intent charged, as the biting of an ear does not in law constitute a maiming.”

On page 423 in the- opinion it is said:

“There is no question, we think, but that maim as a noun, and mayhem are equivalent words, or that maim is but a newer form of the word mayhem — the difference being in the orthography and not in the sense. Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary: ‘Maim,’ as a noun, is there defined the’same as mayhem: ‘The privation of the use of a limb or member of the body by [498]*498which one is'rendered unable to defend himself or to annoy his adversary.’ This is the definition of mayhem at common law (1 East, P. C., 393; 1 Whar. Criminal Law, Section 581). Hence the verb ‘to maim’ is accurately defined in Anderson’s Law Dictionary, as follows: ‘To commit mayhem.’ ”

Again, on page 425, it is said:

“If the member be not one of use to the person in defending himself, an injury to it can not be said to have been done with intent to maim.”

In this case it is not claimed by the State that there was any intent to disfigure on the part of O’Brien; neither could there be, as there is nothing tending to show such intent by the injury or by any. circumstance in the case.

The question then arises, is the evidence sufficient to show, under the law as laid down in State v. Johnson, supra, an intent to maim; that is, such privation of the use of .a limb or other member of the body by which one would be rendered less able to defend himself or to annoy his .adversary. The injury in this ease produced no such effect, so that no implication of fact or law arises that the accused intended -that which his act in fact produced, and a specific intent must therefore be shown from the manner of inflicting the blow, the part of the body struck and the circumstances under which the injury was inflicted.

Intent is a mental state, and therefore very difficult of proof. The only manner in which it can be proven is by the circumstances of each particular case, and if the circumstances are of such character as to satisfy the triers of the facts beyond a reasonable doubt, not only that the act was done by the defendant, but that it was done with the felonious intent charged in the indictment, that is sufficient.

The rule is well -stated by Elliott on Evidence, Section 2842 :

[Intent — Inferred from Circumstances.] While it is incumbent upon the state to prove the intent, yet the law, recognizing the difficulty of proving mental states, does not require proof of such intent by direct evidence, but it may be established by proof of such facts- and circumstances from which the intent may naturally or reasonably be inferred. One court very [499]*499aptly stated the rule thus: ‘But it is generally true that the State is not expected and can not be required to make proof of felonious intent, as a fact, by direct and .positive evidence; for as a general rule, men who do or commit acts do not proclaim in public places the intent with which such acts are done.

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11 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/obrien-v-state-ohcirctashtabul-1908.