State v. Talley

33 A. 181, 14 Del. 417, 9 Houston 417, 1886 Del. LEXIS 14
CourtDelaware Court of Oyer and Terminer
DecidedFebruary 13, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 33 A. 181 (State v. Talley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Delaware Court of Oyer and Terminer primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Talley, 33 A. 181, 14 Del. 417, 9 Houston 417, 1886 Del. LEXIS 14 (Del. Super. Ct. 1886).

Opinion

Comegys, C. J.,

charging the jury:

Where there is a deliberate intention to do, unlawfully, any bodily harm to another, this is malice in fact, express malice.

“ The evidence of such malice must arise from external circumstances discovering the inward intention—such as lying in wait,, antecedent threats, former grudges, deliberate contrivances, and the like, which are various, according to variety of circumstances.”

Where such malice prompts the act of violence which results in the death of another, the slayer is said to have acted with express malice aforethought, and to be guilty of murder of the first degree.

Every homicide, or killing by one man of another, which is done with a deadly weapon, or one likely to do great bodily harm, is in law presumed to be a malicious homicide, and is murder of the first or second degree; unless done under the influence of sudden and immediate passion, or heat of blood, or in the lawful defence by the slayer of himself, his family, or his habitation. There are homicides justified by law, as the hanging of a prisoner by a sheriff in the course of his duty, Ac., but it is not necessary to speak further of such.

Wherever homicide with a deadly weapon cannot be excused on the ground of self-defence, or justified by the defence of family or habitation, or shown to have been committed in heat of blood arising in a sudden and unexpected affray, or from such provocation. [421]*421as an ordináry person is incapable of enduring, it is a malicious homicide, and murder of one or the other of the degrees thereof.

I have already stated to you what the law calls malice. It is a state of condition of the mind and heart most commonly shown by acts of revenge or of cruelty. This condition is innate wickedness. A man who has it, is said to be bad-hearted, dangerous, revengeful. A good-hearted man is one without this state of the heart. You say of such a one as the latter, he doesn’t bear malice. There’s the distinction between the two—the one is malicious, in the sense of being revengeful or cruel, the other is not. This kind of malice is that which prompts him who has it, to lie in wait for one who is the subject of his vindictiveness, to assail him with a deadly weapon; to prepare and lay poison for one, or give it to him in his food, &c. It is express malice aforethought—a preconceived, predetermined purpose to kill another, or to do him some enormous bodily harm. Where the circumstances of the death disclose such - purpose, then the conclusion cannot be resisted, that the crime is murder of the first degree.

Murder of the second degree is where there is no actual intention to kill the party slain, and yet the act that did it was a deliberate, cruel one, or performed while the accused was committing or attempting to commit a felony in law. In these cases, the homicide is a malicous one—for it shows that depravity of the heart which is maliciousness; but in the absence of evidence of preconceived design to take the life destroyed, it is not by law murder of the first degree, but is murder of the second degree.

I have given you, along with the definition of murder, sufficient I think to enable you to distinguish between the different degrees of that crime and also to understand that malice is wickedness—the kind of wickedness that can compass, or intend, the death of another, and adopt the means to bring it about, which is express malice; or do some cruel, or felonious act, from which death ensues, which is implied malice.

I will now speak of manslaughter, and the law of self-defence.

[422]*422Manslaughter is the unlawful killing of another without any malice whatever. The common description of the offence, or rather example of it, is where two men fight upon a sudden affray, and one kills the other with a deadly weapon, in the heat of blood, occasioned by the encounter. In such case, the law, taking account of the infirmity of human nature, treats the offence as of less grade than either of the degrees of murder; but it in no sense excuses the offender. He is still amenable to severe punishment by fine and imprisonment. But, if there be anything in the conduct of the slayer which shows that the killing was not from the passion excited by the conflict, but that such conflict was made the occasion or was sought for the purpose of enabling him to be revenged upon his opponent on account of some prior difficulty, then the offence would not be manslaughter but murder, and that of the first degree.

If there be= a long standing quarrel or grudge between two men, and they accidentally meet, and have a fresh quarrel with which the old one has no connection, and one slay the other in the heat of the strife, it is but manslaughter; but if the old grudge had anything to do with the quarrel, the homicide would be murder, and of the first degree, because the old grudge was malice, which found expression in the slaughter. The stroke, or shot, connected itself with the grudge, and was malicious. It was part at least of the passion of rancor that caused the death, and that is enough. Again, where by arrangement two men meet to fight each other, and one is killed, the other is guilty of murder of the first degree, because the fight was premeditated j and as both had gone to it prepared to use deadly weapons, it makes no difference who struck the first blow. Duels are of this class.

All homicides are by law presumed to be malicious where done with a deadly weapon; therefore, in case of a homicide, where the prisoner is shown to have used such a weapon in producing the death of the victim, his guilt of the crime of murder is complete, unless he can show, and the duty to do it is at once cast upon him, that the killing was in the heat of blood in a mutual combat be[423]*423tween' his adversary and himself; or that he was obliged to slay him to protect himself from being slain, or receiving great bodily harm; or to render the same kind of protection to some member of his family or defend his habitation against violent and1 felonious invasion by the deceased. This he must do, although no evidence has been given of any express malice, such as hatred, grudge or revenge..

Where, however, there is such evidence of a previous quarrel between the parties, producing standing ill feeling, a condition of hostility, if there be proof of facts, or circumstances, to show that such ill feeling, or hostility, was an element of the contest, or was influential in promoting the slaying, the offence would be murder. The question in such case would seem to be, would the prisoner have killed his enemy if there had been no previous hostility between them ? If the answer should be no, then it was not heat of blood produced by the fight that caused the death, but the old" grudge. The fight was made the. occasion of gratifying previous ill-will or hatred.

The law of defence is shown by a common example, or illustration, thus: If one be suddenly attacked by another with a deadly weapon, or other instrument likely to cause death, or some great bodily harm, or he is so situated that he has no other means of escaping the fury of his adversary than by taking his life, he may take such life; in other words he may save his own life, or limb, at the expense of the life of his assailant. This is the law of necessity; the supreme right which all men have of self protection, and which overrides all the law against taking life.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 A. 181, 14 Del. 417, 9 Houston 417, 1886 Del. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-talley-deloyerterm-1886.