State v. Pike

49 N.H. 399
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by95 cases

This text of 49 N.H. 399 (State v. Pike) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Pike, 49 N.H. 399 (N.H. 1870).

Opinion

Smith, J.

All murder committed by poison, starving, torture, or other deliberate and premeditated killing, or committed in perpetrating or attempting to perpetrate,.arson, rape, robbery or burg[403]*403lary, is murder of the first degree; and all murder not of the first degree is-of the second degree.” Gen. Stat. ch. 264, sec. 1.

“ If the jury shall find any person guilty of murder, they shall, by their verdict, find also whether it is of the first or second degree.” Gen. Stat. ch. 264, sec. 2.

“If any person shall plead guilty to an indictment for murder, the court having cognizance of the offence shall determine the degree.” Gen. Stat. ch. 264, sec. 3.

“ In indictments for causing the death of any person, it is not xxeccessary to set forth the manner in which or the means by which the death of the deceased was caused; but it is sufficient, in every indictment for murder to charge that the defendant did feloniouslywilfully, and of his malice aforethought, kill and murder the deceased, and in every indictment for manslaughter to charge that the defendant did feloniously kill and slay the deceased.” Gen. Stat. ch. 242, sec. 14.

I. The respondent takes the position that murder committed in perpetrating a robbery is not murder of the first degree unless committed with a deliberate and pi-emeditated design to kill.

This is untenable. The term ‘ ‘ murder” in sec. 1, ch'. 264, Gen. Stat., is intended to include all kinds of unlawful killing which were mur. der at common law, or in other words “ the several offences which are included under the general denomination of murder,” at common law. At common law the killing of a man while the slayer was engaged in perpetrating a robbery was murder.

The legislature did not intend that this species of killing should be muider of the first degree only when accompanied by a deliberate, premeditated, design to kill; for if such a design had been a necessary ingredient to constitute murder of the first degree, the latter part of section fii-st would xxot have beeix added.

If killing ixx the perpetration of a robbery, was murder of the first degree only whexx accompanied with such a design, it was already included under the words ‘ other deliberate and premeditated killing,” and nothing further xxeed have been said about it.

Section first as construed by respondexxt woxxld read substantially thus : ‘ ‘All murder conxmitted" by deliberate axxd premeditated killing, or committed by deliberate and premeditated killing iix perpetrating rebbery, is murder of the first degree.” We think the meaning of the scctioxx better expressed by the following reading: ‘ ‘ All kinds of unlawful killing which constitxxted murder at common law, if committed by poison, starving, torture, or other deliberate and premeditated killing, or if committed in perpetrating or attempting to perpetrate arson, rape, robbery or burglary, constitute under this statute, mux-der of the first degree ; and all other kixxds of uxxlawfxxl killing which constituted murder at common law, constitute under this statute, murder of the second degree.”

II. Did the indictment charge murder by deliberate and premeditated killing, or in perpetrating robbery? If xxot, the instructions to the jxxry were erroneous.

[404]*404The indictment is'in the form prescribed by statute (Gen. Stat. ck. 242, sec. 14). This is the common law'form, and probably the' only one Used in this state, either before, or since, the' statute dividing murder into two degrees'. We presume that several persons have been executed in this state,who were convicted of murder in the first degree under a similar indictment and upon similar instructions.

But, notwithstanding'these facts, a plausible argument may be. made in support of the position, that this indictment does not charge' murder by deliberate and premeditated killing, and that, therefore, proof of such killing will not justify a verdict of murder in the first degree under this indictment.

Prior t'o the statute of 23, Henry 8th, all felonious homicides-were of one sort. That statute made a distinction between homicides committed wilfully,. “ of malice prepen sed,”'and those not so' committed. The former are now designated by the term, “ murder,” the latter by ‘ manslaughter,” The practice has been in charging manslaughter to allege the act to liave beendone “’feloniously,” or “wilfully and feloniously;” in charging murder to allege it to have been done “ feloniously, wilfully; and of his'malice aforethought.” The words “ malice aforethought,” long ago acquired in law a settled, meaning somewhat different from their popular signiflTcatiou. In their legal sense, these words do not import an actual intention to kill the deceased'. “ Malice, although in its popular sense, it means'hatred, ill-will, or hostility to another, yet, in its legal sense, has a very different meaning,” perhaps well expressed by the words — ‘ ‘a wrong motive of any kind;” it signifies “ the wilful doing of an injurious act, without lawful excuse.” So “ malice aforethought” “is not so properly spite or' malevolence to the deceased in particular*, as any evil design in general; the dictate of a wicked depraved and malignant heart; un disposition afaire'un male chose; and it nray be either express or implied in' law,” 4 Blackstone Com, 198. It “ does not mean premeditated personal hatred or revenge against the person killed; but it means that kind of unlawful purpose, which, if persevered in, must produce mischief, such as if accompaiued With those circumstances that show the heart to be perversely wicked, is adjudged to be proof of malice prepense.” Lord Denman, C. J. in Regina v. Tyler, 8 Car. & Payne, 616.

Within a comparatively recent period statutes have been enacted in this and other jurisdictions, similar to the statute riOw in force-here, classifying certain' kinds of murder under the' head of “ murder of the first degree,” “ and all other kinds under murder of the second degree ;” there being a wide difference in the punishments provided by the statute for the' two degrees.

The words “ deliberate and premeditated killing” used ha the statute obviously mean something more than the expression “ malice aforethought” construed in its legal signification; they import an intent to take the life of the deceased.

Since the passage of this statute, can a respondent, indicted for murder “ with malice aforethought,” be convicted of murder in the first degree upon proof of “ deliberate and premeditated killing?”

[405]*405On tbo one hand it is urged that the stream cannot rise higher than its fountain, the verdict cannot go beyond the indictment; that, as in an action of debt the plaintiff shall not recover more than the demand laid in the declaration, nor have judgment even for that demand unless his declaration alleges such facts and circumstances as show him entitled to it, so in criminal cases the state cannot ask the jury to find the respondent guilty of an offence with which he has not been charged ; that every circumstance which affects the punishment as provided by law must be alleged in the indictment; that, when a statute prescribes a punishment for larceny of property of the value of twenty dollars, more severe than that prescribed for larceny of property under that value, (see Gen. Stat. ch. 260, sects.

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Bluebook (online)
49 N.H. 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pike-nh-1870.