State v. Robinson

78 So. 933, 143 La. 543, 1918 La. LEXIS 1672
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 29, 1918
DocketNo. 22979
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 78 So. 933 (State v. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Robinson, 78 So. 933, 143 La. 543, 1918 La. LEXIS 1672 (La. 1918).

Opinion

PROVOSTY, J.

The accused was convicted of murder, without capital punishment, and has appealed.

[1, 2] His first complaint is of the definition of murder contained in the judge’s charge to the jury, which is the one found in the common law books. He contends that this definition is not sufficient under our law because it does not contain the word “willful” or “willfully.” His learned counsel argue that, this word, being essential, or sacramental, in the description of the crime in the indictment, is logically so in the judge’s charge to the jury. If this crime cannot possibly, they argue, he described adequately by the grand jury to the court in the indictment without the use of this word, how can it possibly be described adequately by the judge to the jury in his charge without the use of this same word.

The answer is that the crime can be ade[547]*547quately described by the grand jury to the court in the indictment without the use of this word. This word was not sacramental in the indictment at common law, and the crime of murder under our law is exactly and precisely the same as at common law. As to this word not having been essential or sacramental in the indictment at common law, see State v. Harris, 27 La. Ann. 572, Bishop, New Crim. Pro. vol. 2, p. 234, par. 546, where the author says:

“This word willfully, alike in reason and on such authorities as we have, is not important.”

See 1 Ohitty, Grim. L. par. 242, where, in stating the terms which are “absolutely necessary” in an indictment for murder, the author mentions “feloniously” and “of his malice aforethought,” but makes no mention of willfully. See Bouvier Law Diet., where these same words are said to be indispensable in an indictment for murder, citing long lists of authorities; and where no mention at all is made of the word “willful” or “willfully,” as if having no technical, or special, legal meaning, and therefore not entitled to a place in a law dictionary. We might multiply proofs, but these ought to suffice.

As to murder being the same under our law as at common law, see State v. Mullen, 14 La. Ann. 570. That decision has been acquiesced in by bench and bar for now more than 60 years, and in fact we do not understand counsel as questioning its soundness even in this case. The court there said:

“The second section of the act of 1855, p. 130 [now § 785, Rev. Stat.] which declares that there shall be no crime known under the name of murder in the second degree, and authorizes the jury to find the prisoner guilty of manslaughter, does not confine the crime of murder to cases where the homicide is perpetrated by means of poison, or by lying in wait, or by any other kind of willful, deliberate, and premeditated killing, or which shall be commicted in the perpetration or attempt to perpetrate any arson, rape, robbery, or burglary, as was provided by the act of July 3, 1805, but leaves the definition of the offense as defined and known under the common law of England. The first section of the act of 1855 is almost a literal ' re-enactment of the third section of the act of 23d of January, 1805. It provides, that whoever shall commit the crime of willful murder, on conviction thereof, shall suffer death. * * *
“By the act of 1805, still in force, it is provided that all crimes, offenses and misdemeanors shall be taken, intended, and construed, according to and in conformity with the common law of England. To ascertain, then, what constitutes the crime of willful murder, we must have recourse to the writers of the common law. The district judge did not, therefore, err in refusing to charge the jury, that the word ‘willful’ was used in the statute in the sense of ‘premeditated,’ and that the Legislature intended to modify the crime as known at common law.”

[3] Murder being the same under our law as at common law, there could be no reason why an indictment which would have adequately charged the crime at common law should not be sufficient under our law. A form of indictment that has stood the acid test at common law should stand it under our law; the crime being exactly the same under the two systems. This court has never held differently. What it has held is that the short form of indictment for murder which is provided for in section 1048, Rev. Stat., must be strictly adhered to, if used. Not that it must be used, but that if used it must be strictly adhered to; that the word “willfully” contained in it cannot be left out. But the reason assigned for this is not that this word was essential at common law either in the definition of the crime or in the indictment; but that it is essential in this statutory form of indictment because the statute has made it so. State v. Williams, 37 La. Ann. 777. As was said in State v. Green, 36 La. Ann. 99:

“This court cannot accept as sufficient less than what the law prescribes should be sufficient.”

The “law” which the court here refers to is the said section 1048, Rev. Stat., providing the said short form of indictment. This section reads:

“See. 1048. In every indictment for murder it shall not be necessary to set forth the manner in which or the means by which the death [549]*549of the deceased was caused, it shall be sufficient in every indictment for murder to charge that the defendant did feloniously, willfully and of his malice aforethought kill and murder the deceased; and it shall be sufficient in every indictment for manslaughter to charge that the defendant did feloniously kill and slay the deceased.”

The language of this statute, “It shall he sufficient,” etc., cannot he construed into a prohibition to use the common-law form of indictment. The terms are permissive, not inhihitive. And it will he observed that, while there was reason to allow a short and simpler form to he used for convenience, and to do away with the technicalities of the common-law form of indictment, which were so many pitfalls in the path of the prosecution, there was no reason why the common-law form should be absolutely prohibited.

[4] But let us grant that said statute amounts to a prohibition, that only this short statutory form can be used, and that every word and letter of it is sacramental, what then? Would it follow that the same sacramentality attaches to the words to be used in the definition? If, so, why?

It is said that what must be alleged must be proved. True, but what is meant by this is that the facts alleged must be proved; not the words by means of which the facts are alleged. The words are not alleged; they are merely used for alleging the facts. And if they were alleged, they could not be proved. 1-Iow could words be proved? Only as the result of a confusion of thought, therefore, can it be said that the word willful, or willfully has to be alleged and proved.

The argument that since the crime of murder cannot possibly be adequately described by the grand jury to the court in the indictment without the use of the word willful, it necessarily cannot be adequately described or defined to the jury by the judge without the use of this same word, is in like manner based upon a confusion of thought. The office, service, or function of the indictment is not the same as that of the judge’s charge. The two play an entirely different part in the trial of the case. The function of the indictment is to convey to the court information as to certain facts, those constituting the crime.

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Bluebook (online)
78 So. 933, 143 La. 543, 1918 La. LEXIS 1672, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-robinson-la-1918.