People v. Batchelder

27 Cal. 69
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 27 Cal. 69 (People v. Batchelder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Batchelder, 27 Cal. 69 (Cal. 1864).

Opinions

By the Court, Currey, J.

The defendant was indicted by the Grand Jury of the City and County of San Francisco, for the crime of manslaughter in the killing of Edward Perkins at the Farallone Islands, on the 4th of June, 1863. The defendant pleaded not guilty, and was afterward tried and convicted and sentenced to be imprisoned in the State Prison for one year. From this conviction and judgment he has brought the case to this Court upon a statement embodying all the testimony produced on the trial, in which is contained the charge of the Court to the jury, and also certain requested instructions on the part of the defendant, which the Court refused to give to the jury, together with the exceptions taken hy the defendant to various rulings during the progress of the trial.

The evidence discloses that on the 3d of June, 1863, the defendant and some twelve or fifteen other persons repaired in vessels to the anchorage adjacent to the principal of the Farallone Islands, situated about thirty miles westward from the City of San Francisco, and there remained during the night of that day; that on the morning of the next day, between six and seven o’clock, a portion of this party attempted [71]*71to laud upon the island, when they were met at the shore by a guard armed with guns, who, by words, accompanied by menacing acts, warned them not to land. Upon thus being warned and threatened, the party so attempting to go on shore returned to their companions upon the vessels at anchor, where they were joined by all, or nearly all, the defendant’s party, and were furnished with loaded gun', and the party, thus reinforced and equipped, made another attempt to land at a point upon the island a short distance from where the guard on shore were. Upon nearing the land, the shore party confronted them and again warned them off, but notwithstanding they were thus warned, the defendant’s party continued to approach the island, for the purpose of landing thereon, when the shore guard opened fire upon them, which was immediately returned by a volley from the defendant’s party, who were together in a boat. The shore party fired several shots after the first round, when the defendant’s party retreated. By the first fire from the men on shore several persons were wounded, one of whom subsequently died, and by the fire from the defendant’s party one of the shore guard, Edward Perkins, was killed.

The object which the defendant and his companions had in visiting the Farallone Islands was to gather the eggs deposited there in great abundance by wild sea fowls. Before the time of the collision which resulted in the death of Perkins and another, a number of persons known as the Farallone Egg Company had been engaged in procuring the eggs deposited by the wild sea birds upon this island and selling the same in the San Francisco market; and the shore party, of whom Perkins was one, were in the employment of this egg company. It appears from the testimony of some of the persons composing the shore party that their chief business was to guard the island for the, benefit of the egg company, against the ingress of any other persons who might desire to visit it for the purpose of gathering eggs there. The egg company, it seems, claimed the exclusive right of gathering wild birds’ eggs upon the island, as the prior occupants of it for that pur[72]*72pose. The defendant refused to acknowledge any such right, or to yield to such claim, and in attempting to avail himself of what he deemed a right common to all citizens, he met with resistance from an armed force, who assumed to be acting in the defense of what they claimed as their employers’ prior and paramount right. Upon the trial of the defendant the question as to the right of the respective parties to occupy the island for the object of procuring the eggs deposited there by sea fowls was in some degree involved, and the further question as to whether the defendant and his party were acting in the necessary defense of themselves, when the deceased, Perkins, was slain, was also a legitimate subject of inquiry.

When a person is accused of a criminal homicide, and in his defense undertakes to justify himself on the ground that the person slain was the agressor, and that his death was the result of force used in the necessary defense of the person of the accused, then the character of the conduct of the deceased, with the concomitant circumstances, as well as that of the accused, is a proper subject of investigation. While Courts and juries should be extremely cautious how they excuse the slayer of his fellow upon the pretext that the act was the result of a necessity, they should be equally careful not to find the accused guilty if it appears that the homicide was committed in the necessary defense of himself, or in the defense of those whom he is bound by/natural law to protect and defend.

In charging the jury the Court left it to them to determine from the evidence whether the deceased and those acting with him were, at the time of the fatal rencounter, in the actual possession of the place where the defendant and his party attempted to land, and whether the defendant and his party had actual notice of such possession, and also whether he of they attempted at the time to forcibly enter and intrude into and upon such possession.

■ We have examined the evidence in the record with care and have not been able to find anything therein from which it could be inferred even, that the deceased and those engaged with him in resisting the landing of the defendant and his [73]*73party, or their employers were in the actual possession of the place at which the defendant’s party attempted to land, or had the right to prevent any persons who desired to land upon the island from doing so, or from engaging, in a peaceable manner, in the lawful business of gathering the eggs deposited there by the wild birds of the ocean. Both on the part of the prosecution and defense it seems to have been conceded on the trial, that the island was a part of the public domain of the United States, and it is not pretended that the Farallone Egg Company, or their servants, the armed guard, of which the deceased was one, had reduced the island, or any portion of it, to actual and exclusive occupation for the uses and purposes of husbandry, residence, or commerce. We are not disposed to extend the doctrine which recognizes the actual possessor of land for the uses to which land is ordinarily employed, as its owner, to the casual and temporary occupant, whose use of it is subordinate to the pursuits of hunting and fishing, or the gathering of the eggs of birds whose resting places are upon the islands of the sea. It would be equally reasonable to recognize in the hunter who had first penetrated the mountain wild in quest of game, the exclusive right to it as his hunting ground, as it would to accord to the Farallone Egg Company the right to the exclusive possession of the Farallone Islands, or any one of them, for the business of gathering eggs left there by wild birds. The defendant and his party had the right to enter upon the island, provided the Government, in the legitimate exercise of its proprietary and sovereign authority, made no objection; and we cannot but regard the resistance made by the shore party, of which the unfortunate deceased was one, to the landing of the defendant and his companions, as unwarranted by any principle of right and justice. Hence the fact that others were on the island for the purpose of gathering the wild birds’ eggs there, at the time defendant attempted to land, did not impair in any degree his right to.

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Bluebook (online)
27 Cal. 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-batchelder-cal-1864.