State v. . Curry

46 N.C. 280
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 46 N.C. 280 (State v. . Curry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. . Curry, 46 N.C. 280 (N.C. 1854).

Opinion

Pearson, J.

If two men fight upon a sudden quarrel, and one be killed, it is but manslaughter, although the death is caused by the use of a deadly weapon.

But if, in such case, the killing be committed in an unusual manner, showing evidently that it is the effect of deliberate wickedness — malice, not passion, it is murder, although there be a high provocation.

It is well settled that this is the genei’al rule and the exception. His Honor was of opinion that the case under consideration fell within the exception, and the prisoner was guilty of murder. There is error.

From the manner in which the case was put to the jury, the prisoner is entitled to the benefit of every inference that the jury were at liberty to draw in his favor; for, his Honor took the case from the jury, and instructed them that in the most favorable point of view, the prisoner was, according to the evidence, guilty of murder.

The facts, then, are to be taken to present this case : Two free negroes start for the purpose of carrying a boat up the river ; in a short time they get into a quarrel: one seizes a pole fifteen feet long, the other a slide, or a piece of plank, eight feet *284 long ; the deceased gives the first blow, by a stroke or push with the pole, (which has an iron spike at the end,) making a bruise or puncture on the cheek of the prisoner, and a bruise or cut over one of his eyes ;• .the pole is broken by being struck against the side or bottom of - the boat; the prisoner gives the deceased a blow with the slide on his head, by which he is knocked down upon the bottom of the boat; after he is down, the prisoner continues to strike with the slide many times; how many times he struck cannot be determined; the deceased died twenty-four hours afterwards. A witness says he continued to strike from the time the boats were one hundred and fifty yards apart, until they got near enough to see that he was striking at deceased in the bottom of the boat — one boat floating down the stream, and the other passing up to meet it. An examination of the body shows that “ the arms were bruised, and one of them broken. The scull was fractured, and there was blood over the brain. The head was bruised and bloody all over.”

Suppose the arm was broken by one blow, the scull by another which knocked the deceased down upon the bottom of the boat; this natural evidence, furnished by the state of the body, about which there can be no mistake, for it is not under the influence of the imagination, shows that there could not have been many other blows inflicted, and the evidence can only be reconciled by supposing that after the deceased was down in the bottom of the boat, not more than one out of ten of the blows made with a plank eight feet long, could take effect upon the body of the deceased. So, the force of most, if not all the blows, stricken after the deceased was down, must have been spent upon the sides or bottom of the boat.

We must here observe, that the fact that the prisoner continued to strike with the slide, after the deceased was lying in the bottom of the boat, and did not punch or job with the end, which was the only way in which the slide could then have been use d with deadly effect, tended strongly to show that he was acting under *285 the blind fury of passion, caused not merely by the provocation of a blow, but by the excitement of a fight.

Assuming these to be the facts, the question is, does the case fall within any exception, so as to be murder, and not manslaughter ? Take a general view of the subject. If two men upon a sudden quarrel, get into a fist fight, and one, without giving notice, draws a knife, and stabs the other to the heart, or blows his brains out with a pistol, it is manslaughter, because, out of regard to the frailty of our nature, the killing is supposed tó be the effect of passion, brought on by the high excitement of the fight. Does the case under consideration, where both parties seize upon weapons not prepared before hand, but of a most unwieldy kind, and continue to use the same weapons throughout the conflict, bear any comparison in regard to its enormity with the eases of manslaughter stated above ?

To go more into particulars: In order to make the proper application of a rule of law, it is necessary to reflect and see upon what principle the rule is founded, although there be a great provocation, if the presumption that the party acted under it is rebutted, and it be shown that he acted from malice, the killing is murder. State v. Johnson 1 Ired., 354; State v. Martin, 2 Ired. 101. If one puts his adversary to death in an unusual manner, the fact of his going out of the usual way, sho'ws that he acted deliberately, and not under the impulse of passion, which always moves strightforward. Such deliberation shows malice. This is the principle (and it is founded in our nature) upon which the exception is made. For instance, two men upon a sudden quarrel, engage in a bloody fight, and are separated; whereupon, one of them proposed to “drink as friends,” and contrived to put poison in the cup of his adversary: this is murder; for, although there is great provocation, and the thing is done instantly, while the blood flows and the wounds continue to smart, still, it was not done in the way that passion influences men to act, and shows deliberate wickedness of heart, which amounts to malice. 1 Hale, 453. So, if two persons fight, *286 and one of them overpowers the other, and then puts a rope around his neck, and strangles him, it is murder. “ The act is so wilful and deliberate, that nothing can justify it.” Rex. v. Shaw, 25 E. C. L. 443.

On the other hand, we will state two other cases which were held not to come within the exception — upon a sudden quarrel, the prisoner pushed the deceased down; he got up and struck the prisoner several blows in the face with his fist; the prisoner pushed him down again, and stamped him upon the belly and stomach two or three times, and as he was getting up, kicked him in the face, “ the blood came out of the mouth and nose of deceased, he fell backwards, and died the next day.” Held to be manslaughter. Ayes’ ease, 1st Russel 496.

Upon a sudden quarrel, two draw their swords and fight, the prisoner runs his sword through the body of the deceased, and after he fell, took him by the nape of the neck, dashed his head upon the ground, and said, “ d — n you, you are dead.” Jemeb, R., told the jury this was only manslaughter; but the jury were disposed to find it murder, because of the dashing of the head against the ground; but AllisoN, J., repeated to them that it was manslaughter only, and they found accordingly. WATTERS’ case, 12 State Tri. 113. The eases put above of one who, after engaging in a fist fight, without notice, stabs his adversary to the heart with a knife, or blows his brains out with a pistol, are as strong, if not stronger, than either of the two; and the principle is established, that where there is a strong provocation, and the violence is but the natural and usual effect of passion excited to the highest pitch, the killing is but manslaughter.

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Related

State v. . Kennedy
84 S.E. 515 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1915)
State v. Hough.
50 S.E. 709 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1905)
State v. . Gooch
94 N.C. 987 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1886)
Young v. . Jeffreys
20 N.C. 357 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1838)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 N.C. 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-curry-nc-1854.