People v. Batting

49 How. Pr. 392
CourtCourt Of Oyer And Terminer New York
DecidedApril 22, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 49 How. Pr. 392 (People v. Batting) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court Of Oyer And Terminer New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Batting, 49 How. Pr. 392 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1875).

Opinion

Judge Westbrook’s Charge.

We have reached the conclusion of this most painful trial. It is painful from any stand-point from which we see fit to look at it. It is painful to think that a person could deliberately take the life of a fellow-being if that person was conscious of the act. It is equally painful to think that any person should so far craze himself as to unconsciously do so awful a deed and commit so terrible a crime. This case is such an exhibition of our poor fallen human nature that we will always carry it with us, and it will ever cause us to remember that man is by nature a weak, wayward being, addicted to great sins and inclined to do desperate deeds.

On the 21st day of October, 1871, about half-past ten o’clock at night, Batting came into the Shaffer House. The deceased arrived there shortly after and sat down in a chair. He was injuring no person ; he was disturbing no person. He seems to have been in a semi-unconscious drunken or sleepy state, reposing his head in his right hand and unconscious of all his surroundings. The prisoner discovering him goes up to him and asks him, in substance, this: “Are you following me around to whip me % ” The answer which the man gives is either yes or humph. The witnesses seem to differ somewhat as to what the exact answer was. Hpon receiving this answer, or some answer, the prisoner, in the twinkling of an eye, passed his hand into the inside breast pocket of his coat, [394]*394draws* from there a dangerous weapon, a deadly weapon, I might say, and with great rapidity strikes the deceased, while his head was still reclining upon his hand, three dangerous blows, one below the shoulder blade, another right by the shoulder blade, the weapon striking against and chipping o£E a piece of it, passed through the second and third rib, through the lungs and into the cavity of the chest. Then a third blow is given near the left ear, which passes through the face and throat to the opposite jaw, completely severing the external carotid artery. The last two wounds — that penetrating the lungs and the one cutting the artery in two — were necessarily mortal, of which the deceased died.

That is, in short, the act. It is for the jury to first find whether the facts are as I have just detailed them; and, second, it is for the jury to find the intent with which the blows were struck. There is no dispute or disagreement in the evidence. All the witnesses concur in the narration of facts; and in arriving at the intent of the prisoner you will be guided by the rules of law which the court will lay down for your direction.

The law infers an intent - to do what a party does do. If I come to one of you and draw a pistol and shoot you, it infers that I intend to kill you, if you die from the wounds; or if I take a weapon from my pocket and run that weapon into your body in a vital part and you die, the law infers that I intended to kill you; and so in regard to the prisoner at the bar. He is presumed to have intended to do exactly what he did do. Having drawn this dagger and most deadly weapon and inflicted three most grievous and mortal wounds we are to infer, in the absence of any explanation, that he intended to do exactly what he did do, to wit, to take the life of John Tompkins.

This, at common law and under our statutes, until they were recently amended, would have undoubtedly sent the prisoner to the gallows and to the hands of the executioner.

It is said in his behalf that he was not conscious of what [395]*395he did do; that his mind had become crazed, and the brain, which ordinarily directed and controlled all his movements, was fired by rum, so that he is not responsible for the act which he did do. However strong the argument may be in the forum of conscience, in the dispensation of criminal justice, it can find no place. It would not do to expose society to a doctrine so pernicious as this. It would never answer for us to say that a party who, in a drunken freak, comes into your house and murders you whilst you are harmless and inoffensive shall go free and unpunished. Life is too sacred and too ■dear—too valuable a gift from the Father and Source of all life to be taken in this manner. The books contain but one rule upon this question from the earliest time down to the present, and that is, if a person voluntarily becomes drunk he shall be accountable for what he does while in that condition. This is for the purpose of preventing men from becoming drunk, from putting themselves in a condition where they shall be like beasts preying upon society. Human safety, human life and the protection of the citizen requires ‘this rule. Without this society could not exist. That you may see this rule very clearly I will read to you from a single authority, which is one of many:

The law often implies malice from the manner in which the killing was done, or the weapon with which the blow was stricken. In such case it is murder, though the perpetrator were drunk. And no degree of drunkenness will excuse in such case, unless by means of drunkenness an habitual or fixed madness be caused. The law in such cases does not seek to ascertain the actual state of the perpetrator’s mind, for the fact from which it is implied having been proved, the law presumes its existence, and proof in opposition to this presumption is irrelevant and inadmissible. Hence, a party cannot show he was so drunk as not to be capable of entertaining a malicious feeling. The conclusion of law is against him.”

Judge Westbbook proceeded: The doctrine which I have [396]*396just read to you is from Wharton's Law of Homicide (page 371), and has been fully approved in several eases in this state. The exact question was also before our court of appeals, in the case of The People agt. Rogers (18 N. Y., 9), and I will read to you a portion of the opinion of judge Denio. In giving the judgment of the court in that case, he says:

When a principle in law is found to be well established by a series of authentic precedents, and especially where, as in this case, there is no conflict of authority, it is unnecessary for the judges to vindicate its wisdom or policy. It will, moreover, occur to every mind that such a principle is absolutely essential to the protection of life and property. In the forum of conscience there is no doubt considerable difference between a murder deliberately planned and executed by a person of unclouded intellect, and the reckless taking of life by one infuriated by intoxication; but human laws are based upon considerations of policy, and look rather to the maintenance of personal security and social order, than to an accurate discrimination as to the moral qualities or individual conduct. But there is, in truth, no injustice in holding a person responsible for his acts committed in a state of voluntary intoxication. It is a duty which every one owes to his fellow-men and to society, to say nothing of more solemn obligations, to preserve, so far as it lies in his own power, the inestimable gift of reason. If it is perverted or destroyed by fixed disease, though brought on by his own vice, the law holds him not accountable. But if by a voluntary act he temporarily casts off the restraints of reason and conscience, no wrong is done him if he is considered censurable for any injury which in that state he may do to others or to society.” The judge proceeds: The opinion is quite lengthy, and I only read to you a part of it. This doctrine laid down by the court of appeals in that case, is again affirmed and followed by the same court in Kenny agt.

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Related

People v. Gerdvine
31 N.Y. Crim. 54 (New York Court of Appeals, 1914)
The People v. . Clark
7 N.Y. 385 (New York Court of Appeals, 1852)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 How. Pr. 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-batting-nyoytermct-1875.