People v. Bealoba

17 Cal. 389
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 17 Cal. 389 (People v. Bealoba) 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. Bealoba, 17 Cal. 389 (Cal. 1861).

Opinion

Baldwin, J. delivered the opinion of the Court

Cope, J. concurring.

The main question in this case to which our attention is especially directed, is the charge of the District Judge defining murder in the first degree, and giving a construction to the statute on this subject. The Court told the jury that “ the difference between murder in the first and second degree is so subtle as frequently to puzzle the mind, and render difficult the solution. When the term premeditation or deliberation is used, the juror is apt to consider that some time is necessary for deliberation; but this is not necessary ; it is only requisite that the design to kill has been formed, and it may be executed in a minute, in an hour, or a day, and it is murder; while in all cases of murder in the second degree there must not be any mixture of deliberation, and I cannot more properly illustrate this point than by adopting the language of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. The first inquiry, therefore, of a California jury, after a felonious and malicious homicide is established, and not committed by means of poison or lying in wait, is to determine whether the mortal shot was fired with intent to take life, or merely to do bodily harm; if with the intent to take life, it is murder in the first degree; if merely to inflict bodily harm, it is only murder in the second degree. ‘ Let it be supposed that a man without uttering a word should strike another on the head with an ax, it must, on every principle by which we can judge of human actions, be • deemed a premeditated act.’ Again, where one with a loaded pistol takes deliberate aim, and shoots another, it is held to be murder in the first degree.”

The statute (Wood’s Dig.) is, all murder which has been perpetrated by means of poison, lying in wait, torture, or other kind of willful, deliberate and premeditated killing is murder in the first degree; all other kind of murder, is murder in the second degree. It has been supposed and plausibly argued in this State, and in. other States having a similar statute, that the language of the act defining murder in the first degree was designed only to include homicides committed under like circumstances with those given in ! the first clause, as by means of poison, lying in wait, or torture ; | [394]*394that is, that to constitute murder in the first degree, the act must be premeditated, willful and deliberate, suck as by means of poison, lying in wait, or torture—the latter words being mere examples of the class of murder intended to be embraced; and the clause, therefore, not including other murders than those characterized by the same or similar proofs of deliberation. But this wás not the meaning of the Legislature. The acts of homicide by poison, etc., carry with them conclusive evidence of premeditation, and the jury would have no option but to find the prisoner guilty in the first •degree, upon proof of the crime; but it does not follow that the same result should not flow when other proof of deliberation than that afforded by these circumstances existed. For the statute is express, that “ all other kind of deliberate, willful and premeditated murder is murder in the first degree.” To fall within this class, the crime must be premeditated, willful and deliberate. These adjectives are, as used, nearly synonymous. A man may do a thing willfully, that is, intentionally and deliberately, from a moment’s reflection, as well as after pondering over the subject for a month or a year; he can premeditate, that is, think before doing the act, the moment he conceives the purpose, as well as if the act were the result of long preconcert or preparation. There is nothing in the statute which indicates that the Legislature meant to assign any particular period to this process of deliberation or premeditation, in order to bring the act within the first degree. Nor could it well have done so. A ruffian, out of mere wantonness, firing into a crowd upon a sudden motion, is as guilty as if he had lain in wait for his victim. •These terms deliberate—willful—premeditated,” are used in the English books, and were well known to the framers of our act; and they have the same meaning, and were known to be used in the same sense at the common law, as that which we have here ascribed to them. At the common law there were no degrees of murder. Every homicide committed with malice, express or implied, was • murder. But this malice might be, and frequently was, unaccompanied by deliberation or premeditation, or the intent to kill. A man might kill another in sudden heat, without premeditation, when no provocation, or inconsiderable provocation, existed, and the crime would be murder—as where one slew another in sudden pas[395]*395sion, but without intending to kill him, with a deadly weapon, even after a slight assault—the deceased being unarmed. But our statute was designed to reduce the crime when committed under these circumstances; but this mitigation does not apply when the act of killing and the intent to kill are deliberate and premeditated. In several of the States of the Union, the same or similar provisions as those in our statute are found; and they have been construed as we have intimated. Thus in Pennsylvania, in the case of the Commonwealth v. Green (1 Ashmead, 296) the Court say : “ By the admirable enactment of 1794, the whole doctrine of constructive murder, as it may be called, ceased in Pennsylvania, so far as to involve the life of the accused; such murders being nothing more than murders in the second degree. To constitute murder in the first degree, the unlawful killing must be accompanied with a clear intent to take life. This is the great distinguishing feature between murder in the first and murder in the second., degree; between murder as it is understood in Pennsylvania, and as it is understood in England. In England, if death ensues from any unlawful act of violence, the slayer, although there existed no intention to kill, but only to do bodily harm, is guilty of murder. In Pennsylvania, except in the cases enumerated in the Act of Assembly, -the malice in any act of homicide must be directed against the life of a human being, in order to render the slayer guilty of murder in the first degree. When, however, the facts of a homicide exhibit that the killing is done with an intent to take life, and the act accompanied by no circumstances of justification, excuse or extenuation recognized by law, the crime is murder in the first degree. It is true that the act of Assembly which defined the crime of murder in the first degree makes use of strong language, but that act has received a construction cotemporaneous with, and as fixed as the act itself— a construction calculated to effect the true ends of the Legislature, as to prevent the law from being the shield and panoply of a murderer, as it otherwise would be.

“ The first inquiry then, in these investigations, is whether the act of homicide was committed with an intention to kill. Nothing affords more conclusive evidence of this bloody intent than the instrument used in the killing. If one man discharges a bullet [396]*396through the body of another, if he cuts him down with an ax, or pierces him through a vital part with a sword, the intention to kill is manifest and irresistible. To infer that an intention to kill does not accompany such an act of fierce and deadly violence, is to surrender our common sense when we enter into the administration of justice, and to proclaim to the wicked and licentious that there is a mode of estimating human actions in the jury box calculated to give impunity to the murderer. But the law is not the apologist of human wickedness.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Cal. 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-bealoba-cal-1861.