Presser v. State

77 Ind. 274
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1881
DocketNo. 9852
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 77 Ind. 274 (Presser v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Presser v. State, 77 Ind. 274 (Ind. 1881).

Opinion

Elliott, C. J.

The grand jury of the Hamilton Circuit Court returned an indictment against the appellant for assault and battery with intent to kill one John T. Booth. Upon the application of appellant, the venue was changed to Hancock county, where the case was tried, and the appellant convicted of an assault and battery.

. The questions here presented arise upon the motion denying a new trial.

• The evidence is somewhat conflicting. That for the prosecution shows this state of facts: On the morning of the last presidential election Booth was passing from his home to his store; hearing, as he arrived at the polling place, some dispute about voting a drunken man, he stopped and stood near McKenzie, one of the disputants; angry words had passed between the appellant and McKenzie, and the appellant, applying to Booth one of the vilest and most stinging epithets that a man can use, said, “You are standing at his back, are you?” Booth resented the insult, and both he and appellant were about to fight, but the persons around the polls crowded in and prevented them from fighting. Smarting under the insult, Booth made some angry remarks, and these were repeated to the appellant. Some hours after the quarrel at the polling place, appellant sent Booth a mes[276]*276sage asking him to come and see him at a place not far from the polls, that he wanted to amicably settle the difficulty. Booth went to the place designated; Presser there said> something about taking back what he had said in so far as it cast any imputation upon the mother .of his adversary, but that he would not take back anything which referred to-him personally, accompanying his statement with angry and insulting words. Booth raised his arm to strike, but both his hands were caught and held by a friend of Presser’s, and while in this situation Presser thrust a knife into his-side seriously wounding him. The evidence for the defencecontradicts in many material particulars that of the State. There is no very great difference in the accounts of the quarrel at the polls, but there is as to the encounter in which-Booth received his wound. The witnesses for the defencetestify that Booth was the aggressor and brought on the-quarrel, and that he was surrounded by friends ready to assist him. It is, however, generally agreed that he came to the place of the encounter at the solicitation of Presser. Some of the witnesses for the defence swear that the accused did. not- use a knife ; others leave a different impression. There is also a different statement as to the situation of the parties-when Presser struck, or, as he himself swears, attempted to< strike Booth. It is also sworn by these witnesses that: threats were made by Booth, and that these were communicated to the appellant prior to the rencounter, and that Presser sought the meeting with Booth for the purpose of amicably adjusting their quarrel.

Instructions numbered twenty and twenty-one, asked by the appellant, read as follows :

“20. The defendant insists that he acted in self-defenceon the occasion mentioned in the indictment. The right of self-defence extends to all cases where, from the acts of the-assailant, the defendant, being without fault himself, be[277]*277lieves, and has reason to believe, that he is in danger of great bodily harm.
“21. If you find from the evidence, that, while the defendant was peaceably attending the last presidential election, he was violently assaulted by Booth and others, he had •the right, without retreating, to repel force by force; and if, in the exercise of his right of self-defence, his principal assailant was injured, he was justifiable.”

The court refused to give the instructions as asked, but did give them with some modifications. The only change .made in the language of the twentieth instruction was the striking out of the words, “The defendant insists that he acted in self-defence on the occasion mentioned in the indictment.” In this there was no substantial error. The principle of law declared in the instruction was as complete and clear without these words as with them. The meaning of the instruction was not limited by their omission. The omission certainly did not impair its force.

The modification of the twenty-first instruction consisted in writing after the word “was,” and before the word “violently,” the words, “without fault on his part.” We think the court did right in putting into the instruction the words here criticised by appellant. Without these words, the meaning of the instruction is, that the defendant was entitled to an acquittal upon the ground of self-defence, irrespective of the question of who was in fault in bringing on the combat. This is not the law. The man who unlawfully •and wrongfully brings on a contest has no right to make use of a deadly weapon until he has made an effort, in good faith, to withdraw.

.In Kingen v. The State, 45 Ind. 518, Mr. Bishop’s statement of the rule is quoted and approved. That statement is as follows: “This right of self-defence is commonly ¡stated in the American cases thus: If the person assaulted, being himself without fault, reasonably apprehends [278]*278death or great bodily harm to himself, unless he kills the-assailant, the killing is justifiable.” 1 Bishop Crim. Law, 865. This statement of the rule is that which the cases and. the text-writers, with great unanimity, adopt and approve. Whart. Crim. Law, sec. 1,019; The State v. Hays, 23 Mo. 287, and notes; Horrigan & Thompson Cases on Self-Defence, 492; Wall v. The State, 51 Ind. 453; Runyan v. The State, 57 Ind. 80.

The twenty-seventh instruction given by the court is as follows : “If the defendant, at the time and place charged, voluntarily and unlawfully entered into a mutual combat, with John T. Booth, armed with a dangerous and deadly weapon, and Booth assaulted him with his fist, and, upon the first assault offered him by said Booth, he.struck Booth with such weapon, without withdrawing or attempting to> withdraw from the contest, the striking would not be justifiable.” It is objected that this instruction is not applicable to the evidence. We think it was. There was evidence from, which it might have been fairly inferred that the appellant sought the encounter; that he had expected and prepared for it, and that he did, if not in words certainly in actions,-, consent to the combat. How much or how little evidence there was tending to prove this, is not here the question; but, if it were, the record would supply an answer unfavorable to the appellant. The instruction was quite as favorable to the appellant as he had a right to ask. - We think it expressed the law with reasonable accuracy. 1 Bishop Crim. Law, secs. 870, 871. The cases of Steinmetz v. Kelly, 72. Ind. 442, and Miller v. The State, 74 Ind. 1, do not support appellant’s attack upon this instruction. In these cases: there was no mutual combat. In the last of the cases, the court quoted from a former case the following: “The-weight of modern authority, in our judgment, establishes the doctrine, that, when a person, being without fault and. in a place where he has a right to be, is violently assaulted, he may, without retreating, repel force by force, and if, in. [279]

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Bluebook (online)
77 Ind. 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/presser-v-state-ind-1881.