Shorter v. . the People

2 N.Y. 193
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 5, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 2 N.Y. 193 (Shorter v. . the People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shorter v. . the People, 2 N.Y. 193 (N.Y. 1849).

Opinion

*197 Bronson, J.

When one who is without fault himself, is attacked by another in such a manner or under • such circumstances as to furnish reasonable ground for apprehending a design to take away his life, or do him some great bodily harm, and there is reasonable ground for believing the danger imminent that such design will be accomplished, I think he may safely act upon appearances, and kill the assailant, if that be necessary to avoid the apprehended danger; and the killing will be justifiable, although it may afterwards turn out that the appearances were false, and there was in fact neither design to do him serious injury, nor danger that it would be done. He must decide at his peril upon the force of the circumstances in which he is placed, for that is a matter which will be subject to judicial review. But he will not act at the peril of making that guilt, if appearances prove false, which would be innocence had they proved true. I cannot better illustrate my meaning than by taking the case put by Judge, afterwards Chief Justice Parker, of Massachusetts, on the trial of Thomas O. Selfridge. A. in the peaceable pursuit of his affairs sees B. walking rapidly towards him with an outstretched arm and a pistol in his hand, and using violent menaces against his life as he advances. Having approached near enough in the same attitude, A. who has a club in his hand, strikes B. over the head, before, or at the instant the pistol is discharged; and of the wound B. dies. It turns out that the pistol was loaded with powder only, and that the real design of B. was only to terrify A.” Upon this case the Judge inquires, “will any reasonable man say that A. is more criminal than he would have been if there had been a bullet in the pistol? Those who hold such doctrine must require, that a man so attacked must, before he strikes the assailant, stop and ascertain how the pistol was loaded—a doctrine which would entirely take away the right of self-defence. And when it is considered that the jury who try the cause, and not the party killing, are to judge of the reasonable grounds of his apprehension, no danger can be supposed to flow from this principle.” The Judge had before instructed, the jury, that “when from the nature of the attack, there is reasonable ground to believe that there is a design to destroy his life, or commit any *198 felony upon his person, the killing of the assailant will be excusable homicide, although it should afterwards appear that no felony -was intended.” (Selfridge's Trial, p. 160; 1 Russ. on Crime, 699, ed. of 24; p. 185, note, ed. of ’36.) To this doctrine I fully subscribe. A different rule would lay too heavy a burden upon poor humanity.

I have stated the case of Selfridge the more fully, because it is not only an authority in point, but it is one which the revisers professed to follow in framing our statute touching this.question.

I shall not stop to consider the common law distinctions between justifiable and excusable homicide, because our statute has placed killing in self-defence under the head of justifiable homicide. (2 R. S. 660, § 3.)

The Massachusetts case lays down no new doctrine. The same principle was acted on in Levett’s case, recited by Jones, J. in Cook's case, (Cro. Car. 538,) to the following effect. Levett was in bed with his wife, and asleep, in the night, when the servant ran to them, in fear, and told them that thieves were breaking open the house. He arose suddenly, and taking a drawn rapier in his hand, went down and was searching the-entry for the thieves, when his wife espying some one whom she knew not in the buttery, cried out to her husband, in great fear, “ here they be that would undo us.” Levett thereupon hastily entered the buttery in the dark, not knowing who was there, and thrusting with his rapier before him, killed Frances Freeman, who was lawfully in the house, and wholly without fault. On these facts, found by special verdict, the court held that it was not even a case of manslaughter, and the .defendant was wholly acquitted. Now here, the defendant acted upon information and appearances which were wholly false : and yet as he had reasonable grounds for believing them true, he was held guiltless. Foster, (Crown Law, p. 299,) says of this case, “ possibly it might have been better ruled manslaughter at common law, due circumspection not having been used.” I do not understand him as questioning the principle of the decision, but as only expressing a doubt whether the principle was properly applied. He calls it nothing more than a case of manslaughter, tvnen, if a man may not act upon appearances, it was a plain *199 case of murder. So far as I have observed, no other writer upon criminal law has questioned, in any degree, the decision in Levett’s case; and most of them have fully approved it. East, in his Pleas of the Crown, (vol. 1, p. 274, 375,) has done so. Hale, (1 P. C. 42, 474,) mentions it among cases where ignorance of the fact will excuse from all blame. Hawkins, (1 P. C. 84, Curwood’s ed.) saj's the killing had not the appearance of a fault. Russell (on Crimes, vol. 1, p. 550, ed. of 1836,) approves the decision, which he introduces with the remark, that “ important considerations will arise in cases of this kind, [he was speaking of homicide in defence of one’s person, habitation, or property,] as to the grounds which the party killing had for supposing that the person slain had a felonious design against him ; more especially where it afterwards appears that no such design existed.” Roscoe, (Crim. Ev. p. 639,) says, “ it is not essential that an actual felony should be about to be committed in order to justify the killing. If the circumstances are such as that, after all reasonable caution, the party suspects that the felony is about to be immediately committed, he will be justified.” And he then gives Levett’s case as an ex ample.

The case of Sir William Hawkesworth, who, through his own fault, was shot by the keeper of his park, who took him for a stranger who had come to destroy the deer, went upon the same principle. (1 Hale’s P. C. 40; 1 East, P. C. 275; 1 Russ. on Cr. 549.) Other cases are put in the books where the killing will be justified by appearances, though they afterwards prove false. A general, to try the vigilance or courage of his sentinel, comes upon the sentinel in the night in the posture of an enemy, and is killed. There the ignorance of the sentinel that it was his general, and not an enemy, will justify the killing. (1 Hale’s P. C. 42; 1 East’s P. C. 275; 1 Russ. 540.) The case mentioned by Lord Hale, which was before him at Peterborough, where a servant killed his master, supposing he was shooting at deer in the corn in obedience to his master’s orders, belongs to the same class. (1 Hale’s P. C. 40, 476; 1 Russ. 540.) In Rampton’s case, (Kelyng Rep.

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Bluebook (online)
2 N.Y. 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shorter-v-the-people-ny-1849.