State v. List

1 Houston 133
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedNovember 5, 1863
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Houston 133 (State v. List) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. List, 1 Houston 133 (Del. Ct. App. 1863).

Opinion

At a Court of Oyer and Terminer held at this term, Lewis List was indicted and tried for the murder of John R. Baylis, a constable and police officer of the City of Wilmington, in that city on the 9th day of September preceding: and as usual the indictment was for murder of the first degree.

The prisoner had been drinking to excess for a day or two before that, and had been to some extent noisy and troublesome on the street in that condition, and had been *Page 134 roughly rebuked and handled for it the night before by the deceased in his capacity as a peace officer and a member of the city police, and early the next morning complaining of this treatment to a neighbor on his casually stepping into his house for a few moments, the prisoner borrowed a loaded six-barrel pistol from him, and stepping out with it in his hand on the street proceeded up it towards the next corner above, where Baylis was then standing leaning against a lamp post with a drawn pistol of a similar description also in his hand. The prisoner was brandishing his in his hand in a violent and excited manner, and threatening to kill any one who attempted to interfere with him as he thus proceeded up the street. They had each in the mean while cocked their pistols, and on the prisoner's reaching the distance of half the square from the corner where Baylis was still standing leaning against the lamp post, the latter called out to him in a defiant tone to "fire away!" when the prisoner instantly fired one shot from his pistol at him, but without any effect, and which the deceased immediately returned with one discharge from his at him, but likewise without any effect. The prisoner then fired a second time at the deceased, and the deceased immediately afterwards a second time at him, and with the like results in both instances. The prisoner then turned about and ran down the street past the front of his dwelling-house and up an alley into the kitchen of it, rapidly pursued by the deceased in a very angry and excited mood, swearing he would kill him, up to the door of it which the prisoner had endeavored to close against him immediately on entering it, but without being able to get it quite closed and fastened before the deceased had reached it, when a brief struggle immediately ensued between them, the one by main strength on the inside to hold it as nearly closed as then could be, and the other on the outside to force it open and effect an entrance into the kitchen. No demand however was made of the prisoner by the deceased for his surrender, or for his admission as an officer for the *Page 135 purpose of arresting him for the offense which he had just committed, on the contrary, he was excited, angry and violent, and with his pistol in his hand soon forced his way by superior strength into the kitchen, hurling the prisoner back from the door half across the room as it was then irresistiably forced open by him. Several pistol shots then immediately followed in the kitchen when Baylis fell to the floor and soon expired. One of them afterwards extracted from the wood-work of it was too large for the calibre of the prisoner's pistol, but was of the proper size for that of the deceased. The testimony showed that his death was caused by three small bullet wounds, one in the neck and two in the head, and that both of the last were mortal. The fact of the killing of John R. Baylis by the prisoner, Lewis List, in the City of Wilmington on the ninth day of September last, and that Baylis was at the time a constable and police officer of the city are proved and not denied. At common law the crime of murder consists of the killing of any person under the peace of the State, with malice prepense or aforethought, either express or implied by law; and in either case it consists at common law of but one degree. By a comparatively recent statute of our State, however, the crime has been divided into two degrees, as they are termed, that is to say, into the crime of murder of the first degree, and the crime of murder of the second degree; and in describing and defining them it provides that every person who shall commit the crime of murder with express malice aforethought, or in perpetrating, or attempting to perpetrate any crime punishable with death, shall be deemed guilty of murder of the first degree and of felony, and shall suffer death; and every person who shall commit the crime of murder otherwise than is set forth in the preceding provision, shall be deemed guilty of murder of the second degree and of felony, and shall be fined at the discretion of the Court, shall stand one hour in the pillory, shall be whipped with sixty lashes, and shall be imprisoned for life, if a white person, but if a negro or mulatto, shall be sold a servant to the highest bidder, for life. Express malice aforethought is therefore the general characteristic of the crime of murder of the first degree under the statute, and except where murder is committed in perpetrating or attempting to perpetrate, any crime punishable with death, it is the essential and indispensible ingredient of it. For a definition of the crime of murder with express malice aforethought the statute silently remits us to the common law where it has been long ruled and recognized to be when one person kills another with a sedate deliberate mind and formed design, such formed design being evidenced by external circumstances showing the inward *Page 138 intention, such as lying in wait, antecedent menaces, former grudges, and concerted schemes to do the party some bodily harm. And where this sedate deliberate mind and formed design to do the bodily harm is wanting, or the external evidences in the case fail to show such a sedate deliberate mind and formed design to the satisfaction of the jury, the killing cannot be deemed to have been committed with express malice aforethought, or to constitute the crime of murder of the first degree under the statute.

And the language of the statute which provides that every person who shall commit the crime of murder otherwise than with express malice aforethought, or as is set forth in the first provision of it, also remits us to the common law for the meaning and intention of it, and the import of which is that every person who shall commit the crime of murder otherwise, that is to say, not with express malice aforethought, but with malice aforethought implied by law, shall be deemed guilty of murder of the second degree under it, and shall be punished accordingly. But notwithstanding this kind or degree of malice aforethought under the statute is not express, but implied by law, it is susceptible of direct and positive and circumstantial proof as well as express malice, for the law never implies it without sufficient evidence apparent to the satisfaction of the jury in the case to warrant the inference of it. Malice aforethought is implied by law from any deliberate, cruel act committed by one person against another, however sudden, as if one person kills another suddenly without any, or without an adequate provocation in contemplation of law to reduce the killing to the crime of manslaughter, the law will imply that it was committed with malice aforethought; and wherever the act without such provocation is committed with deliberation, cruelty, or indifference to its consequences, but not with express malice, or in a way, or with means likely to produce death, the law will imply malice aforethought from the act itself, notwithstanding no particular enmity, *Page 139 resentment, or hatred against the person killed can be shown on the part of the person killing; and in all such cases the killing will constitute the crime of murder of the second degree under our statute.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Houston 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-list-delsuperct-1863.