State v. . Harman
This text of 78 N.C. 515 (State v. . Harman) 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.
Opinion
"We have restrained human nature in so far as we say, you shall not slay in redress of a past wrong, but if you slay the wrong doer in the very act, it will not be murder, but manslaughter. The redress for past offences must be sought through the process of the Courts.
In the case before us, the prisoner looked through a crack of his house, and saw the deceased, whom he had before sus *519 pected, with bis arms around his wife’s neck and saw enough to satisfy him, and ran around to the door and into his house, when the deceased came at him with a knife, and he killed him. The situation was not the very act, but it was severely proximate, and fine distinctions need not be made. This is clearly not murder, but manslaughter. State v. Samuel, 3 Jones 74; State v. John, 8 Ire. 330.
If upon the prisoner’s entering his house and,being assailed by the deceased with a knife, he entered into a fight with the deceased and stood not entirely on the defensive, and in the fight slew the deceased, it would be manslaughter at the most. But if the prisoner stood entirely on the defensive and would not have fought but for the attack, and the attack threatened death or great bodily harm, and he killed to save himself, then it was excusable homicide, although the prisoner did not turn and fl.ee out of his house. For, being in his own house, he was not obliged to flee, but had the right to repel force with force, and to increase his force, so as not only to resist, but to overcome the assault.
In not giving the prisoner the benefit of these principles, His Honor erred.
We have assumed the facts to be as stated above, not because they were the facts, but because the State offered in evidence the declarations of the prisoner, and he stated the facts to be as we have stated them. And the prisoner had the right to have the law declared upon the hypothesis that the facts were as he had stated them. What the facts really were, was a question for the júry.
There is error. This will be certified.
Per Curiam. Venire de novo.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
78 N.C. 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-harman-nc-1878.