Sullivan v. State

85 Miss. 149
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 85 Miss. 149 (Sullivan v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sullivan v. State, 85 Miss. 149 (Mich. 1904).

Opinion

Truly, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

W. C. Sullivan and A. J. Sullivan were jointly indicted for murder. Appellant was tried separately, convicted, and appeals.

The fifth instruction for the state is as follows: “The court instructs the .jury that it is not necessary that a previous conspiracy between Bill and J ack Sullivan should have been formed in order that both of the parties, Bill and Jack Sullivan, might be guilty of the crime charged against them in the indictment. For if either one of them sought and provoked a -difficulty with Wilson' Sullivan, armed with a deadly weapon, intending to use it in such difficulty if it should become necessary to overcome Wilson, and the other of the accused — that is, Bill or Jack — was present for the purpose of encouraging and aiding or abetting such party in executing such intention, they are equally guilty-under the law; and if such difficulty was provoked, and a knife, a deadly weapon, was used by J ack Sullivan in. such difficulty, and Wilson Sullivan killed, not in necessary self-defense, then Jack Sullivan and any one so present-encouraging or aiding or abetting him are guilty as charged.” This instruction was not applicable to the facts of the case, and the proposition of law which it was intended to announce was' incorrectly stated. The testimony, considered as a whole, so far as disclosed by a most meager record, shows: Appellant and deceased, Wilson Sullivan, were brothers. On the night of the fatal difficulty a social gathering was held at the residence of the déceased, to which appellant, his family, and other neighbors were invited. While there, several of the guests engaged in convivial drinking, the appellant, at least, to excess. There was no evidence of any bad feeling existing between appellant and deceased that night. The last words uttered by appellant before leaving the house were in returning thanks to the family of his host for their hospitality. He then rode' off in'the direction of his home, and had proceeded some distance¿ probably three hundred yards, down the road, when he came [153]*153to where the deceased and one or more men were standing. Here a difficulty arose between appellant and deceased, the actual details of which are very vaguely stated in the record. It is beyond dispute, however, that at the time the fight between appellant and deceased began, and for some minutes thereafter, A. J. Sullivan, the son of the appellant, was not present at the scene of the difficulty, not having left the yard gate of the premises of the deceased, and that he did not go to the place of the difficulty until he had been notified of what was transpiring and who were engaged in the fight, when, remarking that he would take his “keen cutter” and go down and settle it, he rode rapidly down the road to where his father- and the deceased were engaged in a fisticuff, took part therein on behalf of his father, and stabbed and mortally wounded Wilson Sullivan, the deceased. It does not appear with any degree of certainty that either appellant or deceased was armed with any weapon, or that either intended or endeavored to inflict any serious injury upon his adversary. The testimony of the only witness actually present at the commencement of the difficulty, and who left immediately after it started and before A. J. Sullivan arrived upon the scene, was to the effect that the difficulty was provoked by Wilson Sullivan, the deceased, and that he knocked or shoved appellant down at the very commencement of the fight. Nor is there any direct evidence upon which to base a conclusion that appellant expected his son, A. J. Sullivan, to take part in the difficulty, nor that A. J. Sullivan knew or had any reason to suspect that his father would meet with Wilson Sullivan on the road, or that he intended, if he did meet him, to engage in a difficulty with him. Under this state of facts it was error'for the court to submit to the jury an instruction which authorized them to find that A. J. Sullivan had provoked a difficulty with Wilson ■ Sullivan or that appellant was armed yjith a deadly weapon which he intended to use in such difficulty if it- should become necessary to overcome him, for the reason that there is no evidence that A. J. Sullivan provoked a dif[154]*154ficulty with. Wilson Sullivan or that appellant was armed with or intended to use a deadly weapon in such difficulty. If there existed no previous understanding between Bill and Jack Sullivan, no common design to commit any unlawful act, this presupposes independent action on the part of each; therefore, even if one of the parties did provoke a difficulty with Wilson in the manner and for the purpose indicated by the instruction, “the other of the accused” could not have been present “for the purpose” of encouraging and aiding or abetting such party in executing “such intention.” In the absence of a common purpose, one party could not know the intention of the other, and could not be present for the purpose of assisting in the execution _ of a plan to which he was not a party and of which he was in ignorance. This instruction is therefore not only not applicable to the facts of the case, but is contradictory in its terms.

The proposition of law controlling, and which it was sought by the instruction under review to present to the jury, and Which the state invokes as applicable to this case, is stated in Lusk v. State, 64 Miss., 850 (2 South., 257), as follows: “Where parties combine to commit crime, the law imputes the guilt of each to all thus engaged, and pronounces all guilty of any crime committed by any in the execution of the common purpose, as one of its natural and probable consequences, even though none of the parties intended at the outset to do the particular thing constituting the crime.” So, again, it is stated: “If two or more combine to do an unlawful thing, and the act of one, proceeding according to the common plan, terminates in a criminal result, though not the particular result intended, all are liable.” Peden v. State, 61 Miss., 270. But this principle is founded upon the idea that a common intent to do some unlawful act must exist in the minds of the guilty actors prior to the commission of the crime; it need not be that the design is to commit the particular crime which is subsequently couj.mitted, but there must be a preconcerted plan to do1 some unlawful act. A common purpose being shown, all are guilty [155]*155and are held liable for tbe acts of any one of bis confederates committed in pursuance of such purpose, even though not included in the original plan. If W. C. Sullivan and his son, A. J. Sullivan, had combined to commit any unlawful act on Wilson Sullivan, and in endeavoring to carry such design into execution Wilson Sullivan met his death, then both Bill and Jack Sullivan were guilty of murder. And this would be true even though at the outset neither had intended to take his life, under the reason of the rule stated above.

So, again, if W. O. Sullivan, of his malice aforethought, intending to compass the death of Wilson, provoked a difficulty in the progress of which he incited his son Jack to slay Wilson, then W. O. Sullivan would be guilty of murder, though Jack, in the absence of a previous agreement, would be guilty of manslaughter only.

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Related

Eakens v. State
289 So. 2d 687 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1974)
Prine v. State
7 So. 2d 555 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1942)
Brown v. State
115 So. 433 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1928)
State v. Reedy
127 S.E. 24 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
85 Miss. 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-state-miss-1904.