State v. Green

7 La. Ann. 518
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 15, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 7 La. Ann. 518 (State v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Green, 7 La. Ann. 518 (La. 1852).

Opinion

By the court: (Slidell, J., absent.)

Preston, J.

This case having been tried ex parte, we have kept it under advisement longer than usual, being unaided by argument or authority, on behalf of the State. From the best examination we have been able to give the case, we have come to the conclusion, that the appeal ought not to prevail.

[519]*519The indictment charges that the prisoner, with two other persons, made an assault upon one Michael Hughes, and with a dangerous weapon, called a colt, inflicted many blows upon him, with intent to commit the crime of murder. The statute prescribes, that whoever shall assault another, with intent to commit murder, shall, on conviction thereof, be imprisoned at hard labor, not exceeding two years.

A leading ground assigned in arrest of judgment is, “that the indictment is uncertain in this, that it charges an assault or offence committed jointly by three individuals, and with one single weapon, without setting forth which of the individuals used the weapon, or committed the assault with the weapon, with the intent to murder.”

In indictments for this offence, the intent forms the gist of the offence, and must be specifically proved. State v. Bill, 3 Harrington, 571. In the prosecution of two or more for the offence, it is immaterial which makes the assault, or gives the blow. If it is inflicted with the intent charged, all concurring in that intent, the crime is committed by all. Had all been convicted under the present indictment, because of the guilty intent of all, although the blow was given by but one, the judgment could not have been arrested. Much less can it be arrested, as but one of the accused was found guilty.' The jury must have been satisfied that the prisoner they convicted, made the assault and gave the blow with the guilty intent to commit the crime of murder, as they acquitted the others.

It is further to be observed, that the 24th section of the act of 1805, under which the indictment was found, does not require the use of any weapon, but only an assault with a murderous intent. If three set upon one with a murderous intent, and an assault be given in pursuance thereof, it is the act of all, and may well be described as the act of all, the intention of all concurring in the great ingredient of the crime.

Moreover, it is settled by authority, that in an assault with intent to commit an offence, the same particularity of averment is not necessary, as is required in indictments for the commission of the offence itself. And it has been expressly held, that in an indictment for an assault with intent to murder, it is not necessary to state the instrument or means made use of by the assailant, to effectuate the murderous intent, though this would be necessary in a prosecution for murder. State v. Dent, 3 Gill and John, Rep. 8. Still we would recommend that in all cases, as in the present, the means used should be accurately stated; but as the intent constitutes the crime, if manifested by an assault, it is immaterial, where it is committed by three persons, which uses the weapon or means manifesting that intent, and therefore it is not necessary to state by which of the three it was used.

A jury having been occupied a whole day on the trial of this case, and kept confined all night in deliberating upon their verdict, were brought into court the next day, and declared their inability to agree. The judge thereupon, without being requested by the jury or counsel, made an elaborate address to the jury, supposed by the counsel of the prisoner to be very hostile to their client, and announced his inflexible determination, that they should be kept together until the prisoner was found guilty, or acquitted. The substance of his address was published in several of the daily gazettes, and is incorporated in a bill of exceptions, and presented as grounds for remanding the case for a new trial, with directions to the judge, to abstain from such remarks to the jury, and not to force a verdict, by keeping the jury together until it is rendered.

[520]*520Much complaint has been made, that the judge made these remarks, not at the appropriate time for charging the jury, upon the close of the arguments for and against the prosecution, but after they had been engaged a whole night in deliberation, and also without the request of the jury or counsel. But the same thing was done in the case of The Commonwealth of Massachusetts against Snelling, 15 Pick Rep. 321. And it was held by the Supreme Coui't of the State, that where, on the trial of an indictment, the juiy returned into court without having agreed, and the judge instructed them a second time on the evidence, as to matters about which they had made no inquiries, and had stated no difficulties or doubts as to the law, this was not a sufficient ground for granting a new trial.

We have carefully examinedjthe reports of the remarks of the judge to the jury, which are made parts of the bill of exceptions. His warm appeals to the jury on the notoriously vicious state of our society, in relation to dangerous assaults and personal violence, were intended to justify the severe course he adopted, of keeping the jury together, until a verdict of conviction or an acquittal was rendered. It afforded powerful reasons for a self-sacrificing and rigorous performance of duty by the jury, as well as by the court. Such remarks are constantly made by judges sitting upon criminal trials, sometimes mildly, sometimes with strong feelings. Although we would recommend mildness in this respect, on all occasions, we cannot say that the judge, in expressing himself strongly on this matter of public interest, though not at issue in the case, committed an error fatal to the verdict and judgment against the prisoner.

We have not been able to approve of the expressed determination of the court to keep the jury empannelled until a verdict was rendered, or the severe rigor sometimes exercised towards disagreeing juries, in this respect. The frequency of their disagreement is undoubtedly a great evil, and perhaps would justify a constitutional or legislative provision for the verdict of a majority. But if juries are honestly unable to agree, they should not be forced, by physical means or suffering, to surrender their judgment in the most serious matters of life. But the course pursued in this respect on criminal trials, has always been regarded as a matter within the discretion of the court, and not as giving rise to an error, affecting the results of the trial.

The emphatic expressions of the district judge, concerning the necessity of the finding of a verdict for or against the prisoner, must not be isolated from the charge, of which they are a part, nor separated from the connection in which were used, to wit: a further and more deliberate consideration of the case; for which purpose, the judge thought himself not bound to heed the claims of the jury to be discharged, but to direct them still to be kept in confinement. The bill of exceptions purports to give the charge substantially.

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Bluebook (online)
7 La. Ann. 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-green-la-1852.