State v. Perkins

91 A. 265, 88 Conn. 360, 1914 Conn. LEXIS 53
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 13, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 91 A. 265 (State v. Perkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Perkins, 91 A. 265, 88 Conn. 360, 1914 Conn. LEXIS 53 (Colo. 1914).

Opinion

Roraback, J.

The record discloses three reasons of appeal, two of which relate to the charge of the court upon the question of self-defense when a person is attacked in his own household. The third one complains of the action of the court in instructing the jury as to the rights of the father and mother as joint guardians of their minor children.

The accused is charged with the crime of manslaughter, in causing the death of Thomas V. Coatchaly, at Ledyard in New London county, by shooting him with a shotgun. Coatchaly was a Greek and came to this country about 1907. He married a daughter of the accused in April, 1912. He lived with his wife and mother-in-law upon the Perkins homestead until October, 1912. At this time he quarreled with his wife and left her. In the month of December he went to Texas, and his wife continued to live with her mother. Upon February 12th, 1913, Mrs. Coatchaly gave birth to a child, the offspring of the marriage with the deceased. In April, 1913, Coatchaly came to New London and proposed, through his attorney, that his wife come to New London and live with him. She did not accept this proposition. During the month of April he made two or three unsuccessful attempts to see his child.

The defendant offered evidence to prove, and claimed to have proven, the following: After the baby was born Coatchaly never asked his wife to live with him, but *362 posted her. In a letter to his wife he threatened to take the child away from her, and at one time told his wife that he would kill her and her mother if they did not do as he wanted. At another time she told him that she had told her mother he was coming, and that her mother did not wish him to go to the house. Coatchaly said: “I don’t care for the law. If I don’t see my baby I’ll kill every one of you.” Coatchaly was then mad, excited and nervous. On the afternoon of June 3d, 1913, Coatchaly came to the house of the accused and demanded admission, which was refused, and he immediately proceeded to break down the doors of the house, all the while threatening to kill the accused. After he had broken down the storm-porch door, the accused warned him that she had two revolvers, and that if he broke through the double house-doors and attempted to come in she would shoot him. Notwithstanding this warning Coatchaly continued his violent assault upon the double doors, and, as the right-hand door was giving way, he said to the accused, with an oath: "Now I’ve got you, and I’ll cut your guts out.” The accused, at the time of his breaking into her house, believed that the deceased intended to carry out his threats to kill her, and believed that her life was in imminent danger from Coatchaly, who was a strong, robust man, twenty-eight or twenty-nine years of age, weighing about one hundred and eighty pounds. After the accused had warned the deceased that she would shoot if he broke in, and after he had broken down the right half of the house-doors, and was attempting to enter, the accused attempted to fire a revolver at him, but it would not work. She then thought of the shotgun, which was kept near by, and fired at Coatchaly. The accused shot the deceased, as he was breaking into the house, to prevent his entering and taking her life. While living with the accused he had beaten her and *363 threatened to take her life. At the time when the deceased attempted to break into the house, the accused was alone in the house, except that she had in her charge two infants, one her son’s child, eleven months old, the other her daughter’s child, between three and four months old.

Many of the claims of the defendant as to the facts surrounding the shooting were controverted by the State. The State claimed that it might fairly be inferred from the evidence that when Coatchaly was breaking in the doors and attempting to make a violent entry into the house, the accused had no reason to believe that he intended to do or would do her or either of the children any harm or violence, or that he intended to do or would do anything but to gain access to his child.

The State claimed to have proven that Coatchaly’s only motive in breaking and entering was to obtain access to his child. It was conceded by the State that Coatchaly was a trespasser in so breaking and entering. Yet it is claimed that no necessity existed for killing him for the simple purpose of preventing him from breaking into the house to see his child. It was said, in substance, that, admitting all the conditions existed substantially as the defendant contended, she was guilty of manslaughter unless it appeared that she had reasonable grounds to' believe that Coatchaly intended to kill or seriously injure her, or that she was in imminent danger of death or of great bodily harm.

Although the evidence was conflicting, the jury had the right to believe the version of the defendant and her witnesses as to the important facts surrounding this unfortunate affair.

The evidence and claims of the parties were such as to require a charge upon the theory that Mrs. Perkins’ motive in shooting the deceased was to save her own *364 life or to protect herself from bodily harm. An assault on one’s house can be regarded as an assault on the person, within the meaning of the law with reference to self-defense, where the purpose of the assault is an injury to the person of the occupant or members of his family, to accomplish which the assailant attacks the house in order to reach the inmate. In this connection it is said, and settled, that in such case the inmate need not flee from his house in order to escape injury by the assailant, but he may meet him at the threshold, and prevent him from breaking in, by any means rendered necessary by the exigency; and, upon the same ground and reason, that one may defend himself from peril of life, or great bodily harm, by means fatal to the assailant, if rendered necessary by the exigency of the assault. State v. Patterson, 45 Vt. 308. This proposition was cited with approval by this court in the case of State v. Scheele, 57 Conn. 307, 328, 18 Atl. 256.

Upon this branch of the case the trial court, among other things, said to the jury: “A man may thus do what seems reasonably necessary under the circumstances in which an assault is made upon him to preserve himself from personal danger, with this limitation—that he must not take the life of a fellow-being who is assaulting him, when such fellow-being is doing no more than committing an ordinary assault and battery upon him, but only in case of extreme necessity as the only practicable method of saving his own life or protecting himself from great bodily harm; and even then he must not have brought upon himself the necessity which he set up in his defense by beginning or continuing the fight. A man who is attacked by another under circumstances which denote an intention to take his life or to do him great bodily harm, may lawfully kill the assailant, provided he uses such means as he reasonably can to avoid the necessity. It is only *365 when the circumstances are such as to authorize a reasonable belief that the assault is made by the first aggressor with a design to take life or inflict extreme bodily harm, that a man would be justified in attempting to kill the assailant or using violence upon him likely to kill him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 A. 265, 88 Conn. 360, 1914 Conn. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-perkins-conn-1914.