State v. Young

126 S.E. 445, 131 S.C. 94, 1924 S.C. LEXIS 244
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 4, 1924
Docket11616
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 126 S.E. 445 (State v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Young, 126 S.E. 445, 131 S.C. 94, 1924 S.C. LEXIS 244 (S.C. 1924).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Fraser.

There are no agreed facts in this case, except that the prosecuting witness, Mrs. Katherine Young, was married to the son of one of the defendants, Mrs. Alice Young, and the nephew of the other defendant, Miss Stroud, and that Mrs. Katherine Young was seriously injured. It is very *96 manifest that there was no love lost between Mrs. Katherine Young, on the one side, and the defendants on the other side. Mrs. Katherine Young testified that she asked for the use of the ironing board to smooth out some washing she had done. She was told, with discourtesy, that Miss Stroud had to iron some napkins, and she could not get it until it suited Miss Stroud’s convenience to iron the napkins; that she left the room and went upstairs to her room, and did other things until she was called to the ’phone; that she went to the ’phone, where she sat facing the wall; that just as soon as she hung up the receiver she was struck violently on the head by her mother-in-law with a piece of iron pipe; that Miss Stroud assisted Mrs. Alice Young, the defendant, in a most violent assault with a piece of iron pipe and a hatchet; that she was cut in the head and bruised about the body. The details of the encounter need not be stated further. It is enough to say that when a neighbor came in, followed by the husband of Mrs. Katherine Young, who had been summoned and who brought a doctor with him, they found Mrs. Katherine Young lying on the floor with cuts on her head and bruises on her body, and suffering with cold, and that she was carried to the hospital, where it was found necessary to treat her for some weeks.,

. When the friends arrived, the defendants stated and continued to affirm that they did not strike the young lady a single blow, but the injuries were caused by a fall down the steps, when the young Mrs. Young undertook to bring the ironing board down the steps; that the injuries were caused by the accidental fall down the steps. The jury believed the prosecuting witness, and did not believe the defendants, and convicted the defendants. The defendants were charged with assault and battery with intent to kill, but it nowhere appears in the case that they were convicted of assault and battery with intent to kill, but, waiving the rule, we will consider the case as if the defendants were convicted of the highest offense as charged.

*97 I. The first exception complains of error and is as follows :

Mrs. Hern, a witness for the State, was asked:

“Q. Did you hear either of these defendants make any statement with reference to Mrs. Katherine Young before this difficulty — before this injury is alleged to have occurred? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. What was that statement?
“Mr. Knight: We object to that. It is in the nature of a threat.
“The Court: If it is in the nature of a threat, it is competent. It will have to be in the nature of a threat if it is competent. It will have to be something tending to show ill will. Go ahead.
“Q. What was that statement? A. Mrs. Elmore (Katherine) Young was going to the mountains, and Mrs. Alice Young said she hoped that the car would collide and jump 75 feet and kill her.” „

It will be seen that the objection was on the ground that the statement would contain a threat, and was, therefore, incompetent. The allegation of error in the first exception is “the error being that said testimony, not being in the nature of a threat, was irrelevant.”

The objection to the testimony and the point raised by the exception are exactly opposite. The objection was as to what the testimony would be. There was no objection to the testimony as it was. This exception cannot be sustained.

II. The second and third exceptions will be considered together. They are:

“(2) It is respectfully submitted that the presiding Judge erred in charging the jury as follows: 'If the State has shown you beyond a reasonable doubt, first, that this injury was inflicted upon the prosecuting witness by these defendants at all, and that' it was done in malice, then the defendants are guilty of an assault and battery, with . intent to *98 kill, as charged in the indictment,’ the error being that said instruction does not contain a sound proposition of law, in that it makes malice the sole determining element in the offense, and completely eliminates the very essential element of intent; the further error being that same is a charge on the facts in violation of Article 5, Paragraph 26, of the Constitution of the State of South Carolina of 1895.
“(3) It is respectfully submitted that the presiding Judge erred in charging the jury as follows: Tf the person assaulted here, or who it is alleged was assaulted here, had died, and these two defendants were on trial here for murder, would they be guilty of murder? If so, in this case they would be guilty of assault and battery, with intent to kill’; the error being that said instruction does not contain a sound proposition of law, in that it entirely deprives the defendants of the benefit of abandoning the intent or attempt of their own accord before same is fully executed.”

These exceptions cannot be sustained.

In the case of State v. Milam, 88 S. C., pp. 129 and 130; 70 S. E., 447, 449, we find:

“Appellant complains because the jury were told that he was charged with assault and battery with intent to kill, when, in fact, he was charged with assault and battery with intent to kill and murder; the impression being thereby made upon the jury that he was charged with an offense less serious than that contained in the indictment upon which he was convicted.
There can be no doubt that assault and battery with intent to kill and murder is a more serious offense than assault and battery with intent to kill, because in the former, if death ensues, the perpetrator is guilty of murder, while in the latter he may be guilty of manslaughter only, since it may be done in sudden head and passion upon sufficient legal provocation. But there is no difference between an assault and battery with intent to kill and murder, and an *99 assault and battery with intent to kill committed with malice. In the latter the word ‘malice’ supplies the place of the word ‘murder’ in the former; malice being necessary to make the act murder, if death ensues. After stating the charge against defendant, the Court proceeded to define the offense charged and to differentiate it from aggravated assault and battery in the following language: ‘An assault and battery with intent to kill is the unlawful infliction of a physical injury with a deadly weapon or with a weapon calculated to produce serious bodily harm or death, with malice, that is, with wickedness of heart, without just cause or excuse.

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Related

State v. Thibodeau
317 A.2d 172 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1974)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 S.E. 445, 131 S.C. 94, 1924 S.C. LEXIS 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-young-sc-1924.