State v. Brooks

84 A. 225, 26 Del. 203, 3 Boyce 203, 1912 Del. LEXIS 20
CourtDelaware Court of Oyer and Terminer
DecidedFebruary 28, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 84 A. 225 (State v. Brooks) 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. Brooks, 84 A. 225, 26 Del. 203, 3 Boyce 203, 1912 Del. LEXIS 20 (Del. Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

Pennewill, C. J.,

charging the jury:

Gentlemen of the jury:—Enoch Brooks, the prisoner, is charged in this indictment with the murder of George Cooper. It is charged by the state that the prisoner on the night of November 4, 1911, at a place near Blackiston Cross Roads, in this county, called the Old House, or Tile Yard, without any justification, cause or excuse, shot George Cooper three times, and that as the result of one of those shots he, the said Cooper, died a few days afterwards in a hospital in Philadelphia where he had been taken for treatment.

The prisoner does not deny that he shot the deceased, or .that he inflicted the fatal wound; but he claims that he fired the fatal shot in defense of his life, or to escape great bodily harm, from an imminent assault which he believed the deceased was about to commit upon him with a revolver, and from which the prisoner claims he could not escape.

[2-4] Inasmuch as the prisoner is charged with murder of the first degree, it is necessary for the court to define and explain [209]*209to you, as clearly as we can, the two degrees of murder as well as manslaughter.

But we will say, first, that malice is an essential ingredient of the crime of murder of both degrees. Without malice there can be no murder either of the first or of the second degree. Malice is a condition of the mind or heart, and as here used the term is not restricted to spite or malevolence toward the particular person slain, but also includes that general malignity and reckless disregard of human life which proceed from a heart void of a just sense of social duty and fatally bent on mischief. Whenever the fatal act is done deliberately, or without adequate cause, the law presumes that it was done with malice, and the burden is on the prisoner to show from the evidence, or by inference from the circumstances of the case, that the act was not done with malice.

[5, 6] Malice is implied by law from every unlawful and cruel act committed by one person against another, for the law considers that he who does an unlawful and cruel act voluntarily does it maliciously. When the killing is shown to have been done with a deadly weapon, that is, with a weapon likely to produce death, it is presumed to have been done maliciously.

[7-11] Murder of the first degree is where the killing was done with express malice aforethought. Express malice aforethought exists when one person kills another with a sedate, deliberate mind and formed design, which formed design or purpose may be shown in many ways; as, for instance, by lying in wait for the deceased, or by antecedent menaces or threats that disclose a purpose on the part of the prisoner to commit the act charged, or by a former grudge, ill will, spite, hatred, or malevolence towards the deceased, or any other circumstances which disclose the purpose or intention of the accused toward his victim at the time when the crime was committed. The deliberate selection and use of a deadly weapon is a circumstance which, in the absence of satisfactory evidence to the contrary, indicates the existence in the mind of the person committing the act of a deliberate formed design to kill. All homicides with a deadly weapon are presumed to be malicious until the contrary appears by the evidence, and the burden of proof to the contrary lies on [210]*210the accused. Where the killing by a deadly weapon is admitted or proved, malice aforethought is presumed, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, and the burden of showing the contrary is on the accused, as the natural and probable consequences of the act are presumed by the law to have been intended by the person in using a deadly weapon. If the jury are satisfied from the evidence that the prisoner, when he killed the deceased, deliberately intended so to do, the length of time that said intention existed is immaterial, and the killing under such circumstances would be murder, unless it was committed in lawful self-defense. No specific length of time is necessary to make an act a deliberate act in contemplation of law.

[12] Murder of the second degree is where the killing was done with implied malice; that is, where the malice was not express, as in murder of the first degree, but is an inference, or conclusion of law, from the facts proved. It is where there is no deliberate mind and formed design to take life, but where the killing, nevertheless, was done without justification or excuse, and without provocation, or without sufficient provocation to reduce the offense to manslaughter. For example, where the killing was done without design and premeditation, but under the influence of a wicked and depraved heart, or with a cruel and reckless disregard of human life, the law implies malice and makes the offense murder of the second degree.

Where the homicide is proved the law presumes that it was done with malice, but it goes no further than to imply malice, and therefore the legal presumption goes no further from such fact than that it was murder of the second degree.

So you observe that malice is an essential ingredient of murder both of the first and second degree. In the one it must be express, and in the other it is implied. But the distinction between the two degrees which you will probably best appreciate and remember is this: In murder of the first degree there must be a sedate, deliberate mind and formed design to kill, although such design may have existed but for a moment; while in murder of the second degree there need not be such deliberation and design.

[13] Manslaughter is where one person unlawfully kills an[211]*211other without malice. For example, it is committed when one in a sudden quarrel, in the heat of blood or in a transport of passion, without malice, inflicts a mortal wound, without time for reflection or for the passions to cool. In order to reduce the offense to manslaughter the provocation must be very great; so great as to produce such a transport of passion as to render the person, for the time being, deaf to the voice of reason. While murder proceeds from a wicked and depraved heart', and is characterized by malice, manslaughter results not from malice, but from unpremeditated and unreflecting passion.

But, if the mortal blow is not struck, or the wound be not given, during the conflict, nor until the party has afterwards had time to cool and for reflection, it will not be manslaughter, but murder of either the first or second degree, according to the premeditation and deliberation with which the act may afterwards be done," and the time which he may afterwards have to cool, and reason to recover, from the transport of passion occasioned by it.

[14] We have been asked to charge you in respect to the law of self-defense, and we will do so in conformity with what we believe to be the meaning and intent of the decisions of the court upon that subject. The burden of establishing self-defense to the satisfaction of the jury rests upon the accused.

[15-17] No looks or gestures, however insulting, no words, however opprobrious or offensive, can amount to a provocation sufficient to excuse or justify an assault. And in repelling or resisting an assault no more force may be used than is necessary for the purpose, and if the person assailed use in his defense greater force than is necessary, for that purpose, he becomes the aggressor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 A. 225, 26 Del. 203, 3 Boyce 203, 1912 Del. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-brooks-deloyerterm-1912.