People v. McCullough

45 N.W. 515, 81 Mich. 25, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 703
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 45 N.W. 515 (People v. McCullough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan 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. McCullough, 45 N.W. 515, 81 Mich. 25, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 703 (Mich. 1890).

Opinion

Long, J.

The respondent Dennis McCullough was informed against jointly with respondents John Wiley and James .Murray, and, on a separate- trial in the Jackson [28]*28circuit court, Avas convicted of the crime of manslaughter.

After the jury Avere impaneled, counsel for the defendant requested the prosecuting attorney to proceed with the trial of defendants Wiley and Murray, he having in his opening stated to the jury that Murray and Wiley Avere not accused of actual participation in or complicity Avith the acts of McCullough, Avhich it was claimed produced the death of the deceased. This was refused, and the prosecuting attorney asked leave to amend the information, which was granted. The information filed charged that the three respondents- — -

“On April 27, 1889, at the city of Jackson, in said Jackson county, then and there, with force and arms, feloniously did kill and slay one William Cunningham, contrary to the statute in such case,” etc.
By the amendment there Avas indorsed after the words “Avith force and arms” the following, — •
“In and upon one William Cunningham there being, did make an assault, and him, the said William Cunningham, did then and there beat, bruise, wound, and ill treat, and then and there, Avith force and arms aforesaid.”

The remaining portion of the information was unchanged. It is urged that this amendment presented a new offense, for which the respondent had not had or waived examination.

Manslaughter, at the common law, very generally consisted of acts of violence of such a nature that indictments for murder and manslaughter were interchangeable by the omission or retention of the allegation of malice, and of the technical name of the offense. In a vast majority of the cases a very simple allegation would be enough for the protection of the prisoner. But there may be manslaughter, as well as murder, committed, Avhere there is no assault, no battery, and no wound inflicted, and the information, in a case of this kind, must [29]*29be varied to meet the less usual facts. Where the offense of manslaughter was involuntary homicide, and involved no assault, hut arose out of some negligence or fault from which death was a consequential result, and sometimes not a speedy one, the ordinary forms were not sufficient, and the information had to be framed upon the peculiar facts, and could convey no adequate information without this. 2 Bish. Crim. Proc. § 538; People v. Olmstead, 30 Mich. 438.

The original information, as filed in this case, charges a felonious killing, and under it the people would have had the right to introduce evidence showing that death resulted from an assault or wound inflicted, and it is a good information for manslaughter at the common law. The mere fact that the words before quoted were inserted did not in any manner change the offense. It only made it more specific. Under the theory of the prosecution, as to the manner in which the death was caused, the original information was sufficient. It was claimed on the trial that the deceased came to his death by a blow from a stone thrown by the respondent; and whether it was thrown recklessly, with no intent to produce death or great bodily harm, or with intent to hit the deceased, did not change the offense, as death caused by either mode might be charged as manslaughter,- — one by recklessness and negligent acts, and the other by more direct violence. Death immediately ensued, and the theory of the prosecution is that it was caused by the respondent in throwing the stone, which struck the deceased and killed him. It was not error to allow the amendment.

The record does not purport to set out all of the evidence. It appears, however, that the people introduced evidence tending to show that on the night of April 27, 1889, John Farrell, John Devine, Mathew Eagen, and the respondents, Wiley, Murray, and McCullough, left [30]*30the store of Mr. Lawrence Farrell, on Bast Main street, in the city of Jackson, about 11 o’clock at night, and went westerly until arriving at Perrine street, crossing Bast Main street at right angles. Murray and Wiley had been drinking to some extent, and were somewhat under the influence of liquor. McCullough had only drank two glasses of beer during the evening, and was apparently sober and all right. It does not appear by this record that either of the other parties had drank anything. As they proceeded along the street, they walked two and two, McCullough and Eagen in advance, Farrell and Devine next, and Murray and Wiley last. Just before arriving at the corner of East Main and Perrine streets, they met the deceased, a colored boy, who was going eastward on the walk on East Main street, when some one of the six parties — it is not shown who — said, There’s a coon,” and after he had got along to Murray and Wiley they stopped him. He moved out into the gutter, and attempted to go by them. They moved along in front of him, going across Perrine street towards the east. When Murray, Wiley, and the deceased were some 35 or JO feet from the corner where defendant McCullough and the other parties had stopped, McCullough picked up a stone from the ground, and threw it, or tossed it, as some of the witnesses say, over in the direction of Murray, Wiley, and the colored boy. This stone struck the ground in the middle of Main street; and some distance from the parties. McCullough picked up another stone, and threw or tossed that. Just after this stone was thrown, deceased was seen to fall. At this time Murray and Wiley were near him, and some of the parties, Murray, Wiley, or deceased, had their hands up, but none of the t witnesses testify to having seen Murray or Wiley strike the deceased.

The record returned here does not state how the deceased [31]*31came to his death, except as above. There is nothing in the record showing whether any marks or bruises were found on the deceased, or whether any post mortem examination was had. IJpon this branch of the case we are left entirely in the dark. It appears, however, that, as soon as deceased fell, Murray and Wiley walked rapidly away, or ran away, from the scene. Some of the neighbors there heard the noise, whether of Murray and Wiley or the deceased is not stated; but it does appear that Murray and Wiley were jumping around deceased, apparently attempting to frighten him, and were making some noise, but just what was said or done by them is not made apparent. When the neighbors arrived on the scene, Murray and Wiley had gone away, and the defendant McCullough and the other parties had gone on their way home.

On the trial, the prosecution called the witnesses Farrell, Eagen, and Devine, who were all present at the time of the affray. They also called Mr. and Mrs. Boby and other parties, who resided on the street, who testified to having heard the noise, and to seeing the parties disperse. The respondent McCullough was arrested Sunday by a police officer, and, after some conversation, was released, and rearrested on the Monday or Tuesday following, taken to the police station, and locked up. The» chief of police, Mr. Eugene D. Winney, and Capt. Boyle, of the police force, visited McCullough at the station. They were called as witnesses by the prosecution, and asked to state what was said by McCullough at the station after his arrest.

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Bluebook (online)
45 N.W. 515, 81 Mich. 25, 1890 Mich. LEXIS 703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mccullough-mich-1890.