State v. Faino

15 Del. 492
CourtDelaware Court of Oyer and Terminer
DecidedSeptember 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Del. 492 (State v. Faino) 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. Faino, 15 Del. 492 (Del. Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Cullen, J.

The question the jury are to decide is, whether he could form, under those circumstances, a design to kill. 'It is a mere matter of testimony. He has asked the witness, not as an expert, but as to a fact or what he knows. He is inquiring when he took a drink of liquor, what was the effect upon him ? Some men may take a drink of liquor and not be affected, and others cannot take it without they are affected. That has to be followed up by showing what the condition of this man was at the time this offence was committed. The mere fact of drunkenness, of course, has nothing to do with it, but this matter of destroying the man’s power of forming a design, is something else.

The objection was overruled and the question allowed.

Q,. Do you know the reputation for peace and good order of Carlo Buvo, sometimes called Charley White, in the community wherein he lived, at, and prior to the time of the alleged act, and what do you know of the habits of Charley White, or Carlo Buyo, in relation to his general character for violence ? ”

Both of the above questions were objected to, on the ground of irrelevancy.

Mr. Hilles stated that he would follow those questions up by proof that the defendant knew of the character of the deceased.

Lore, C. J.

Do you contend that the stab was given by the prisoner in self-defence ?

Mr. MUles.. “ I am not contending that it was a case of self-[497]*497defence, but my purpose is to show that the blow, which resulted in the death of Carlo Euvo, was not dealt with that degree of malice which makes it murder in the first degree.

Nicholson, Attorney General, and Giles, Deputy Attorney General, asked for the following instructions, among others:

Any unlawful and injurious act committed intentionally, without just cause or excuse denotes malice; Kelyng 127; 1 Hawks. Pl. Cr. 95; 1 Archb. Cr. Pr. & Pl. 746; 2 Bouv. Law Dict. tit. Malice; Martinez vs. State, 16 S. W. Rep. 767; State vs. Green, 1 Houst. Crim. Rep. 217, 223.

When the crime of murder is committed with a sedate, deliberate mind and formed design to take the life of or to do some great or serious bodily injury to the person killed, it is murder with express malice aforethought at common law and of the first degree under the statute; State vs. Jones, 1 Houst. Cr. Rep. 17; State vs. Buchanan, id. 79; State vs. Gardner, id. 146; State vs. Greene, id. 217; State vs. Woodward, id. 455; State vs. Brown, id. 539; 2 Roscoe’s Cr. Ev. 760.

Lobe, C. J.

We do not think it admissible, unless your plea is one of self-defence.

Paulino Faino was produced by the defendant and asked by Mr. Hilles, “ did any accident ever happen to your brother (the prisoner) in the old country, if so, what was it.

Objected to, unless the plea of insanity is set up.

Mr. Hilles. I don’t know that we need to inform the State just exactly what the testimony is to be. Certainly if there was any effect upon this man’s mind by reason of the accident which occurred to him, even if it did not amount to insanity, I take it the jury are entitled to know it.

We will admit the testimony subject to the charge of the court.

[498]*498No specific length of time is necessary to make an act a deliberate act in legal contemplation. If the design to take the life of, or to do some great or serious bodily injury to 'the person killed be but the conception and intention of a moment, it is deliberate in legal contemplation as if it had been the designs of hours.

Deliberate in its legal sense denotes purpose and design in contradistinction to accident and mischance. State vs. Costen, 1 Houst. Cr. Rep. 340, 347; State vs. Webster, Bemis. 458; State vs. Green, 1 Houst. Cr. Rep. 217, 225; State vs. Pratt, id. 249, 262; Seam vs. State, 4 So. Rep. 521.

Provocation to avail anything must be something which the slayer feels at the instant of its occurrence, and he must act under the sting of that provocation, and resent it at once without delay or time for thought or reflection. If, between the provocation and the act of violence causing the death, there intervenes sufficient time for passion to subside, or the blood to cool, or time under the circumstances for the exercise of reflection and the formation of a deliberate purpose in respect to the act which he is about to do provocation will not avail anything. State vs. Costen, 1 Houst. Cr. Rep. 340.

Nor can it alter or mitigate the grade or degree of the murder that the party was at the time in part excited or inflamed with intoxicating liquor, as well as anger and passion, or was intoxicated, if he had sufficient knowlege, thought, and reflection left to be able to exercise and to show such deliberation and choice and to form such design. State vs. Gardner, 1 Houst. C. Rep. 146-149.

Manslaughter in contemplation of law, can only occur in an assault and battery when both are combatants in it, or have been, and one of them in the heat of blood or transport of passion produced by it, deals the other a fatal blow or suddenly seizes without deliberation or premeditation and before he has had time to cool, a deadly weapon or dangerous instrument and inflicts a mortal wound upon him, but not when the other is but the passive and [499]*499unresisting recipient and victim of the blows of the other party ; State vs. Hamilton, 1 Houst. Cr. Rep. 101, 104.

No mere words, however insulting or provoking they may be, and however much they may exasperate a defendant or excite his anger and passion and heat his blood, will constitute a sufficient provocation for an assault; State vs. Draper, 1 Houst. Crim. Rep. 531.

The plea of self-defence cannot enter into the deliberation of the jury in this case in making up its verdict. The prisoner has excluded such a defence by his admission that the crime is at least manslaughter. Self-defence is an entire and complete defence or it is no defence at all.

The defence of drunkenness, such as is alleged in this case, can under no circumstances reduce the crime below the grade of murder in the second degree.

William S. Hilles and William Miehael Byrne, for the defendant, requested that the following instructions, among others, be given to the jury:

The homicide as charged in the indictment being proved, the law presumes that it was committed with malice unless the contrary appears upon the proof produced at the trial, but it goes no further than to imply malice, and therefore the legal presumption goes no further in such a case than that it is murder in the second degree under our statute; State vs. O’Niel et al., Houst. Crim. Rep. 58.

If the jury believe that the killing was done on provocation, but that sufficient time had elapsed for the blood to cool, for passion to subside and reason to interpose, it would be murder of the second degree. State vs. Frazer, Houst. Cr. Rep. 176, 199.

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Related

Martinez v. State
16 S.W. 767 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1891)

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Bluebook (online)
15 Del. 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-faino-deloyerterm-1894.