People v. Sauerbier

139 N.W. 260, 173 Mich. 521, 1913 Mich. LEXIS 561
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 3, 1913
DocketDocket No. 6
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 139 N.W. 260 (People v. Sauerbier) 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. Sauerbier, 139 N.W. 260, 173 Mich. 521, 1913 Mich. LEXIS 561 (Mich. 1913).

Opinion

McAlvav, J.

Respondent was prosecuted in the circuit court for Berrien county upon an information in which he was charged with the crime of murder. The trial resulted in a verdict against him of manslaughter. The case is before this court on exceptions before sentence.

There is little dispute in the testimony in the case upon the circumstances surrounding this homicide. On November 21, 1911, deceased, Gilson Crumb, who lived at Colonia, a village located about 10 miles from Benton Harbor, went in the afternoon with another man to Benton Harbor, where they visited some saloons and drank some beer. Between 10 and 11 o’clock that night they went together to the street car station in Benton Harbor, for the purpose of taking the electric interurban car to Coloma. [523]*523That evening respondent and two companions came from St. Joseph to Benton Harbor by street car, about the hour of 7 o’clock, where they also visited saloons and drank some whisky and considerable beer. They arrived at the street car station after deceased and his companion, for the purpose of taking the car back to St. Joseph. When they, arrived at this station, deceased and two or three others were standing on the cement sidewalk in front of the station, near the storm door. Soon after arriving there respondent in some manner became engaged in conversation with deceased and his companion, during which each expressed a willingness to engage in a fight, and deceased called respondent a vile name. Respondent suggested that there was too much light to fight at that place, and they went down the street about. 10 or 15 rods, where it was quite dark. All the others remained on the sidewalk in front of the station. The witnesses could not see what these parties did while they were together, and the only statement of what occurred is that of respondent, who says deceased desired to fight him, and started to strike him, but that he held him and talked him out of the idea of fighting. They came back in a short time to the station and joined their companions. Soon after deceased used some vile language, claimed to be directed to respondent, stating, “If he will go out into the country, I will lick him.” Soon after this respondent went into the street car station, as he testifies, thinking from deceased’s remarks that he desired to go out into the country, and that he went into the station for the purpose of taking off his overcoat, and to go with him and fight him. When respondent went through the storm door, deceased stood at the side or near it. He at once took off his overcoat, and said to the station agent, “ I am either going to give him a licking or take a licking.” He then came out of the station, through the same door, and immediately struck deceased with his left fist a blow somewhere upon his head, which knocked him down upon his back, causing unconsciousness from which he never recovered. He was [524]*524first carried into the station, and later removed to a doctor’s office and afterwards to a hospital in Benton Harbor, where he died during the next day.

There is some dispute in the testimony as to what occurred just before the blow was struck. There is agreement that deceased was still standing on the sidewalk near the door, on the right-hand side. A witness who came with respondent testifies that as he came out of the door deceased called him a vile name and raised his hand as if to strike, and then respondent struck him. Respondent testifies to the same thing, and that he thought deceased was about to strike him. All the other witnesses testify that as respondent came out of the door deceased called him a vile name, but made no attempt to strike him, and that when respondent struck him deceased’s hands were either down at his side or in his pockets. All the eyewitnesses agree that the blow was a swinging blow, but none of them located with certainty the place where it struck him. On the sidewalk where deceased fell were three blood spots of considerable size, which came from the wound in the head of deceased. An examination of deceased immediately after he was knocked down, and later at the doctor’s office, in the hospital, and at the post mortem, disclosed a wound in the occipital portion of the skull on the right side, about an inch and a half from the middle line, just below the occipital prominence, about an inch long, tending slightly upward and inward toward the left. It was an incised wound, and the scalp was cut slanting upwards. It extended through the scalp and also through the periosteum into the bone. No other place was discovered on the face or the body showing evidence of a blow or injury, although it was examined for that purpose. Two fractures were found in the base of the skull, from which death resulted. The record shows testimony of at least one of the attending physicians that, in his opinion, the wound found upon the head of deceased could not have been made with the naked fist, nor by falling backwards upon an ordinary cement sidewalk.

[525]*525The errors relied upon by respondent and discussed in his brief will be considered. It is insisted that in the charge to the jury the court did not properly submit the question of self-defense, claimed by respondent. On the part of the people, it is claimed that there was no element of self-defense in the case, and, even if there was evidence warranting the submission of the question of self-defense to the jury, it was fully and fairly submitted by the trial court.

The testimony of respondent was that the blow he struck deceased at that time was justified, as he claims, on account of his fear of him, and that at the time deceased appeared to be about to strike him. He also testifies that he went into the station for the purpose of removing his overcoat to go out and fight deceased, saying to the station agent, “I am either going to give him a licking or take a licking,” and went out at once, and dealt the blow as soon as he got through the door. The entire defense is that the blow with the fist was struck in self-defense, based by respondent upon the fact that he was in fear of deceased and thought he was about to strike him. Respondent’s claim is that the fracture of the skull and consequent death of Crumb was the result of striking his head upon the cement walk when he was knocked down by respondent.

The charge of the court upon the matter of self-defense, which is claimed by the respondent was prejudicial and erroneous, is as follows:

“ The defendant claims that he was in fear, and struck the blow that caused the death of Gilson Crumb in self-defense. The law gives to every person the right to protect himself from an unlawful assault. * * * Where assault is made, or attempted to be made, or a person honestly believes that an assault is about to be made upon him, the right to resist exists, but the resistance must be in proportion to the danger which is apprehended. If, however, the person assailed honestly believes his life is in danger, or that he may receive serious bodily harm, he has a right to resist, even to tak[526]*526ing the life of the assailant. The person assailed is to be judged by the circumstances and conditions as they honestly appeared to him at the time.

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Related

People v. Parker
349 N.W.2d 514 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1984)
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227 N.W.2d 543 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1975)
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141 N.W. 869 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 N.W. 260, 173 Mich. 521, 1913 Mich. LEXIS 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sauerbier-mich-1913.