Russell v. State

61 Fla. 50
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 61 Fla. 50 (Russell v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Russell v. State, 61 Fla. 50 (Fla. 1911).

Opinion

Hockek, J.

In January, 1910, in the circuit court of Duval county, Trixie Russell, the plaintiff in error, was indicted for the murder of one William Carter, on the 25th day of December, 1909. She was tried in February, 1910, convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to the penitentiary for the term of four years. She seeks here on writ of error to reverse this judgment.

The only errors assigned here are based on the rulings of the trial court refusing to give certain requested instructions to the jury, to each of which rulings an exception was properly noted. There are five of these instructions, but they all bear upon the right of self-defense by one who is assaulted in his own dwelling house. The first and third of these requested instructions are as follows :

“1. A person’s dwelling house is a castle of defense for himself and his family, and an assault upon it with intent to injure such person or any of them, may be met in the same way as an assault upon himself or any of them, and she may meet the assailant at the threshold and use the force necessary for her or their protection against the threatened invasion and harm.

3. The court instructs the jury that if, while one is lawfully on her own premises, another advances in a threatening manner and under such circumstances that the former believes and has reason to believe that she is in danger of losing her life or of suffering great bodily harm, she is not obliged to retreat but may stand her ground and meet any attack made upon her in such a way and with [52]*52such force as under all the circumstances she at the moment believes and has reason to believe is necessary to save her life or protect herself from great bodily harm.”

The general charge of the trial judge is eminently correct and fair to the defendant as far as it extends, though it does not cover fully the first paragraph of section 3203 General Statutes of 1906, defining justifiable homicide. That paragraph is as follows: “When resisting any attempt to murder such person, or to commit any felony upon him or her, or upon or in any dwelling house m which such person shall he.” There is no reference anywhere in the charge to the law regulating the right of self defense when made in one’s own dwelling house.

This court in the case of Wilson v. State, 30 Fla., 234, 11 South. Rep., 556, stated the law on this subject in the following terms: “a person’s dwelling house is a castle of defense for himself and his family, and an assault upon it with intent to injure him or any of them may be met in the same way as an assault upon himself or any of them, and he may meet the assailant at the threshold and use the force necessary for his or their protection against the threatened invasion and harm.” In 1 Bishop’s Crim. Law, section 858, it is said: “In the early times our forefathers were compelled to protect themselves in their habitations by converting them into holds of defense; and so the dwelling house was called a castle. To this condition of things the law has conformed, resulting in the familiar doctrine that while a man keeps the doors of his house closed, no other may break and enter it, except in particular circumstances to make an arrest or the like — cases not within the line of our present expositions. From this doctrine is derived another, namely, that the persons within the house may exercise all needful force to keep aggressors out, even to the taking of life. As observed by Campbell J., in Michigan, a man is not obliged to retreat if as[53]*53saulted in his dwelling, but may use such means as are absolutely necessary to repel the assailant from his house, or to prevent'his forcible entry, even to the taking of life.” Again in section 859, ibid, it is said: “One attacked in his home need not retreat, and he may use all necessary force to eject the intruder, whom he may kill in doing it, if this extreme measure appears unavoidable.” It seems to be clear, however,' that one assaulted in his dwelling house would not be justified in killing the aggressor, unless he had reasonable ground to believe, and did believe, that unless he killed the aggressor a felony would be committed upon him or her, or upon or in the slayer’s dwelling. The general law on this subject is given in the case of State v. Patterson, 45 Vt., 308, and in the note to that case in 12 American Reports pp. 200-212. See also 25 Cyc., p. 277, where the law relating to the defense of one’s habitation (the curtilage) is fully stated.

We will now examine the evidence to see whether the refused instructions were applicable thereto. Trixie Russel admits she was a prostitute. She lived at No. On Ward street, in the city of Jacksonville, in a house rented by her. She shot William Carter in the hall of her own house with a pistol about 2 o’clock in the morning of the 25th of December, 1909.

A Mr. Baxley testified for the State that he was on Ward street between Jefferson and Bridge Street .about half past one or two o’clock on the morning of the 25th of December, 1909; that when he arrived opposite Trixie Russell’s house, the door was open; that he saw three people standing in the hall, one woman and two men. He went up the steps to the door and saw the woman, shoot three times. He then went back to the sidewalk. The two men came o.ut of the house and the one that was shot sat down on the edge of the porch, and- said “I’m a dead man.” He identified Trixie Russell as the woman who did the [54]*54shooting. There was a door from the narrow hall into Trixie Russell’s room. She was standing just out of this door in the hall — between witness and Carter, the man who was shot. While witness and a friend were standing on the corner of Jefferson street two people went across on the opposite side of the street. Witness did not see Carter doing anything, as he was shot as witness got to the door. He did not see either of the parties move after he got to the door. Carter was standing about three feet from Trixie, his hands were down, and witness did not see him attempt to strike her. He saw no brick in Carter’s hands. It was fifteen or twenty seconds from the time witness got in view of the door, walked up in the door and Trixie shot just as he got to the door. The hall was about three and a half feet wide. One man was standing in the hall between witness and Carter.

The State’s next witness was Frank Davenport. He was at Trixie Russell’s house on the morning of the 25th of December, 1909, when Mr. Carter came there.(tie says that he was standing, in the door talking to Trix Russell when Carter and his friend came up on the porch, i and they went to the door next to the one where he and Trixie were and they made a lot of racket rapping on the door, and the woman in that room came to the door, and told him to go away — told him “if you don’t I’ll get something and blow your brains out,” and slammed the door in his face. He (presumably) Carter then walked up to where witness and Trixie were standing talking and walked right in — Trixie told him to go out, he did not go, and told her he had as much right there as anybody. So Trixie “walks on in her bed room and gets a gun and shoots him.” The house in which Trixie lived was a double house — two doors — about ten feet apart. When Carter came to the house witness was inside of the door, against the facing. She was leaning against the other door. facing. [55]*55Carter was not acting in a boisterous manner, just refused to go out. The door was open when Carter came up. on the porch. Carter got ten or fifteen feet inside the door, just past her bed room.

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Bluebook (online)
61 Fla. 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-v-state-fla-1911.