State v. Messervey
This text of 89 S.E. 662 (State v. Messervey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinions
The opinion of the Court, reciting the f oregoing statement of facts, was delivered by
The statute invoked is as follows':
“When any person shall be struck, wounded, poisoned, or otherwise injured in one county, and dies thereof in another, any inquisition or indictment thereon found by jurors of either county shall be as good and effectual in law as if the stroke, wound, poisoning or other injury had been committed and done in the county where the party shall die. And the person guilty of such striking, wounding, poisoning or other injury and every accessory thereto, either before or after the fact, shall be tried in the county where such indictment shall be found,- and if convicted, punished in the same mode, manner and form as if the deceased had suffered such striking, wounding, poisoning or other injury and death in the county where such indictment shall be found.” Cr. Code 1902, sec. 119.
*258 a. It will be observed that the statute says : “Any inquisition or indictment found thereon by jurors of either county, shall be good and effectual in law.”
. The record shows that Mr. Altman died in Charleston and the Charleston jury found the indictment. The Court must, therefore, declare the indictment good.
c. Again,, appellant says: “The change of county lines does not change the jurisdiction of the Court.”
That question is academic, here. The question is not as to the jurisdiction of the Court in Colleton, but as to the jurisdiction of the Court in Charleston, and the deceased died in Charleston.
Mr. Fishburne’s son was crying at the casket of his father. The appellant, according to the witness, said: “It is not a .damn bit of use crying over these old men; they did not have much time to live.”
It was for the jury to say whether the appellant was speaking of Mr. Altman as well as Mr. Fishburne (he had killed both of these old men), and was competent on the question of malice.
*259
“The Court: I cannot charge you that. He has to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that a crime has been committed in the sense that that proof must show that the party was violating the law at the time; of course, he would have to show that violation beyond a reasonable doubt in order to justify the arrest. I charge you that as modified.”
His Honor went far enough. This proposition cannot be sustained.
5. The appellant’s fifth and seventh grounds of complaint are based upon the idea that Mr. Eishburne was not an officer, but merely a private citizen making an arrest without a warrant. It is a matter of law in this case that Mr. Eishburne was an officer. His title to his office was attacked collaterally (?) and on a question of law, and that has been decided by this Court in State v. Messervey, supra.
This leaves out that essential requisite that the defendant must be without fault in bringing on the difficulty.
All the exceptions are overruled, and the judgment is affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
89 S.E. 662, 105 S.C. 254, 1916 S.C. LEXIS 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-messervey-sc-1916.