State v. Williams

18 A. 949, 14 Del. 508, 9 Houston 508, 1890 Del. LEXIS 10
CourtDelaware Court of Oyer and Terminer
DecidedJanuary 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 18 A. 949 (State v. Williams) 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. Williams, 18 A. 949, 14 Del. 508, 9 Houston 508, 1890 Del. LEXIS 10 (Del. Super. Ct. 1890).

Opinion

At the trial of the case

Comegys, C. J.,

charged the jury as follows:

Gentleman of the Jury: This case has been well presented and argued by the counsel for the prisoner, as well as by the Attorney General, and now remains to be treated by the Court. When our instruction as to the law applying to it, with some remarks with respect [to the evidence, shall be given and made to you, it will be delivered to you for your decision—which from the patient attention you have paid to it in every step of its three days’ progress,, will, we doubt, not, be as just as we are sure it will be impartial and unprejudiced. And we also feel sure that not one of you will allow himself for an instant to entertain the least thought that the prisoner is not entitled to the same fairness oí trial at your hands, "and the same consideration in all respects, that any man of your own color would be, if he, instead of this colored man, George H. Williams,, were on trial for the murder charged in the indictment. After a [510]*510thirteen years’ service in our criminal courts, I think I can say, •without any hesitation or qualification, that I can recall no case where I thought at the time of the trial, or now think, that any injustice by a jury had been done to a negro charged with crime. Our people boast, and justifiably, that the penalties denounced by the criminal laws, are inflicted upon all equally who are guilty of their violation, when arraigned therefor at the bar of the Court.

On the 13th of June last, between eight and nine o’clock at night, a boy was shot to death at or about the corner of Sixth and Monroe streets of this city, and another boy was wounded in the shoulder by another shot fired by the person who was the assailant in the other case—both shots being. fired before the assassin’s arm was lowered. No arrest was immediately made for the person who used the pistol so effectively, fled. At a late hour in the night the prisoner at the bar was arrested by the police authorities; and upon due and proper preliminary inquiry being made, in the manner •detailed to you by the witnesses examined for the purpose of proving it, he was in due form committed to the custody of the sheriff •upon the charge of having committed the homicide, and to await the result of a prosecution for that offence. At the September Term of the Court of General Sessions of the Peace and Jail Delivery for this county, he was duly indicted by the grand jury of the offence laid in the indictment—which is murder of the first degree. The prisoner, being too poor to employ counsel, the Court by authority of the law, assigned counsel to instruct him how to plead to the indictment, and to defend him upon his trial. How well he has been defended by such counsel and his assistant, all who have attended this trial can bear witness. His plea to the indictment was that he was not guilty of the crime imputed to him, and for trial he appealed to a jury: and you are his triers, you having been selected by him for the purpose, out of a list, or panel, of fifty-four citizens, summoned in due form. ,

The first question for the jury to decide in this—is the prisoner at the bar, the man who, on that fatal night, killed [511]*511Wright with the pistol, at or about Sixth and Monroe streets. If you find that he is, then it will be for you to inquire and decide whether in so doing he was guilty6 of murder of the first degree, as indicted; or if not, of murder of the second degree, or of manslaughter. If of any of them, you can convict him under this indictment of such offence as you may find him guilty. But if the evidence satisfies you that though he killed the deceased with his pistol, yet in so doing he was acting in lawful self-defence, then you should render a verdict of not guilty. The first inquiry is a question of fact entirely, dependent upon the evidence on both sides laid before you: the others are questions of law and fact both in passing upon which we shall give you the law for your guidance (which is evidence as to it) and leave you to apply it to the testimony of the witnesses.

In support of the affimative of the first question—whether the prisoner fired the deadly shot, you have the testimony of two witnesses. Thos. F. Maloney, the. boy who was shot in the shoulder by the shot fired immediately after that which struck Wright in the forehead and killed him, who gave in detail in his examination in chief and in cross examination, all the details of his presence with Wright in Monroe street before and at the time of the shooting ; the shooting itself, and the declaration that he looked the person in the face, and that he was positive the prisoner was the man who shot. He stated that he had seen him on the street before; and that just before he fired, he saw the pistol in his right hand and had a drum in his left. He also said while his examination was in progress, that he and Wright were in the street near the curb stone, looking at the crowd in front of them on the sidewalk, that he saw no stones thrown, and he and Wright did not throw any. He was at the hall when the prisoner and others were brought up before the Chief of Police (Major Swiggett) for identification, and he testified that he identified him there.

In further support of the identity of the prisoner with the assassin, the Attorney General produced Francis Vincent, a witness [512]*512for the State, who swears that he was at Sixth and Monroe streets between 8 and 9 o’clock of the night of the 13th of June last (the-date of the homicide) having come to that point down the south side of Sixth that when there he saw men running past Sixth up-Monroe streets; that he passed through a part of the crowd; that he stopped on the south-east corner only for an instant; that he-looked down Monroe and saw a crowd between Fifth and Sixth running up the street, and some of them ran up Sixth street; that most of them came back and clustered around a small colored boy on Monroe street near the new house being built; then he started across to-the crowd around the boy, and then he saw a colored man come-around the south-west corner of Sixth and Monroe out of Sixth street, who, when he got around, pointed a weapon at the crowd and fired two shots, after which he ran off; that when he fired he was facing towards the East with his back to the new house; and that it seemed to him, the revolver was not a foot from the first boy’s head, the other boy being immediately behind him. (Maloney in his evidence, stated their position to be as described by witness.) The witness said that the man who did the firing, looked sharp at him; that he could’nt tell whether the prisoner is the man who fired the shot, but he had the liking and the build of the man; he looked like him; he had something in his left hand, but could’nt tell what it was. Upon further question in his direct examination^ he said he noticed that the man who shot had on a band uniform, and he expressed himself that, to the best of his judgment he was the man who shot. He further testified in such examination, that he was present at the Hall at the time the prisoner was brought and placed before Malqney, and that at that time he himself recognized him as the man who fired the shot. His cross examination elicited nothing to the contrary of what he stated in chief. .

Charles Reardon, a policeman, arrested the prisoner as he stated in his examination, and he had a kettle dram with him. In his cross-examination he said the prisoner had no firearms on his person; that another man was brought in and he had a revolver-[513]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 A. 949, 14 Del. 508, 9 Houston 508, 1890 Del. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-williams-deloyerterm-1890.