State v. Becker

33 A. 178, 14 Del. 411, 9 Houston 411, 1885 Del. LEXIS 21
CourtDelaware Court of Oyer and Terminer
DecidedDecember 2, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 33 A. 178 (State v. Becker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Delaware Court of Oyer and Terminer primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Becker, 33 A. 178, 14 Del. 411, 9 Houston 411, 1885 Del. LEXIS 21 (Del. Super. Ct. 1885).

Opinion

ComegYS, C. J.,

charging the jury:

Gentlemen of the Jury: The indictment in this case charges the prisoner, Becker, with the crime of murder of the first degree. As there are in law other kinds of homicide, it is proper that I should inform you what they are; and also that though you should not be able from the testimony to convict the prisoner of murder [412]*412of the first, yet should the evidence be sufficient to convict him of murder of the second degree, you may find him guilty of such degree; and if it be not sufficient for that, then, if the killing was wrongful, being neither excusable, justifiable, nor accidental, you may find him guilty of manslaughter, simply. But it is also my ■duty to say to you, and I do it now in the outset, that it is not your province to decide, of your own mere pleasure, whether you will upon an indictment for murder of the first degree and proof of a felonious homicide, convict of one grade of that crime, or another : but it is your duty, upon such an indictment, to determine the grade of crime, by the law and the evidence only. .Therefore where it is said that’the jury, in trying an indictment for murder of the first degree, -may convict of murder of the second degree, or of manslaughter, nothing more is meant than that the jury, if they find the specific charge not supported, may award to the offence committed a verdict of murder of the second degree, or of manslaughter, respectively, as the evidence shall determine the grade. The jury’s right should not be exercised capriciously, but be warranted by the proof submitted to them. Of course if there be not evidence before the jury justifying any adverse verdict, they may and should acquit altogether. There is a very erroneous idea prevailing that jurors can do as they please in a capital case. They have the mere power, of course to do so, and so far the notion is correct; but they have no right to do so, for that would be to make the oath they take, to render a true verdict according to the evidence, a mere form— which it, by no means, is; but a very solemn obligation binding in law, a breach of which the conscience can never condone. However unpleasant the duty devolving upon a jury by the qualification administered to them by the Court’s order, it may not be avoided, or evaded: and where the honest rendition of it involves the loss of his life by one accused of a capital crime, those who give it have but said, after all by their verdict of guilty that the charge has been proven. The community where the law exists has provided the punishment for crimes: no jury fixes it.

[413]*413Murder is, in brief, the killing of one person by another, with malice aforethought, or preconceived. The term malice does not mean simply revengefulness, or hatred, but a depraved state of the heart—wickedness. This depravity may not be a characteristic of the slayer, who may in fact be in general a man of good and not bad heart; but if act or conduct of his, to the injury of another, is a wicked act, or act denoting depravity at the time, it is a malicious act in law. If a man should recklessly fire off a gun in a crowded place, and some one though a perfect stranger to hiip should be killed thereby, the act would be a wicked act in fact and in Jaw, and therefore malicious.

Where the person who slays another, does it deliberately, that is with a design to kill him, and without the existence of any circumstances which in law are a justification or excuse, he is guilty of murder of the first degree: he is said to have acted with express malice. Where one lies in wait for another and kills him; where there is a grudge on his part towards his victim; where he deliberately prepares poison for him which kills him ; or where in attacking him, he deliberately selects a deadly weapon; all these things are the evidence of malice, and are said to be express, though not a word may ever have been uttered by the prisoner against him whom he slew.

Every grade of homicide which does not descend to that of manslaughter, is murder. That which has characteristics such as some I have pointed out, is murder of the first degree. But there are many malicious homicides which are not murder of the first degree; such are murder of the second degree. This offence differs from the other in two respects —1st, it is now punished differently; and %d, there is no express malice, but malice is implied in law. One of the instances of this crime is where a man recklessly shoots into a crowd, or rides or drives furiously into it, so that some person is killed; another is, where a person is guilty of a deliberate cruel act likely to produce death but without actual design to take life, and death follow; another is where one is engaged in committ[414]*414ing or attempting to commit any felonious act whatever, and some one is killed by it. An example of the latter is where one shooting at poultry with intent to steal it, misses his aim, and kills a human being; here he is guilty of murder of the second degree, because the larceny of the poultry would be a felony.

Manslaughter is where, according to the general acceptance of the term, one kills another upon sudden provocation, in the heat of blood. This is not called a malicious homicide, because of the heat of blood which negatives the idea of premeditation, or general depravity of heart; but it is by law felonious, because neither justiable nor excusable. A familiar example of this offence is where two men suddenly fall out ánd fight, and one in a transport of passion kills the other. The law having regard to the infirmities of men’s tempers, adjudges the crime to be manslaughter only. So where provocation of a grevious kind is given by one man to another, calculated to arouse him, and which does then excite him to madness, dethroning for the moment his reason, so that he is incapable of controlling his passions, or governing himself; killing by the person offended, under such circumstances, is manslaughter. But it is not every provocation that will reduce homicide from murder to manslaughter. It must bear some reasonable proportion to the act of killing. It is a serious provocation, unquestionably, to be publicly abused by false and offensive epithets or charges, or be stigmatized as having been guilty of a degrading crime; but the law will not allow the abused to strike the other, for that, with his fist even, for no mere words whatever will justify an assault; nor will a threat, unless accompanied by evidence of a present purpose to carry it into execution. And however great, or enormous the provocation may be, if there be time for the passion to cool, and reason to resume her sway, the act of killing will be murder, and of the first degree, because done under the influence of a spirit of revenge, which is always express malice.

■ i A common example of justifiable homicide, is where the law [415]*415requires of a man that he take the life of another—as of a sheriff that he hang a condemned prisoner.

Excusable homicide is either in defence of one’s own person, or that of some member of his family, or in defence of his possession of real estate. Where it is in defence of one’s own self, it must appear that the slayer had no other means of protecting his •own life. The law is very tender of human life, and will not allow a person assailed to slay his adversary, until he shall have resorted to all other means at hand to protect himself.

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187 A. 721 (Delaware Court of Oyer and Terminer, 1936)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 A. 178, 14 Del. 411, 9 Houston 411, 1885 Del. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-becker-deloyerterm-1885.