Territory v. MacHado

30 Haw. 487, 1928 Haw. LEXIS 23
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1928
Docket1820
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 Haw. 487 (Territory v. MacHado) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Territory v. MacHado, 30 Haw. 487, 1928 Haw. LEXIS 23 (haw 1928).

Opinion

*488 : OPINION OP THE COURT BY

BANKS, J.

Tlie defendant was indicted and convicted for having committed an assault and battery upon one Felipe Drapesa,! sometimes known as Felipe Molina, with a weapon obviously and imminently dangerous to life, to-wit, a revolver loaded Avith gunpowder and bullets. He Avas sentenced to pay a fine of $500 and costs of court and brings the case here on a bill of exceptions.

The evidence shows that a complaint had been sworn to by one Bill John before the district magistrate of Makawao^ on the Island of Maui, charging Felipe Molina, the person upon whom the assault and battery is alleged td have been committed, Avith having been present on the 12th day of May, 1927, at a place where a gambling game was being carried on and at which money was Avon or lost. Upon this complaint the district magistrate issued a warrant for the arrest of Felipe Molina and placed it in the hands of the defendant, Machado, who was a duly appointed and authorized police officer, for execution. On the day the warrant was issued and , placed in Machado’s hands he went to the laborers’ camp at Keahua, where Felipe lived, for the purpose of arresting him. The defendant testified in substance that when he informed Felipe what he was there for and undertook to arrest him Felipe made such effective resistance with an automobile jack and a knife that he (Machado) was obliged to abandon his purpose and returned home; that upon reaching home he telephofied a deputy sheriff, named Silva, to whom he explained that Felipe refused to come with him and had drawn a knife on him; that Silva told him to go back and get his man; that he then armed himself with a gun and a pair of handcuffs and returned to the camp, where he again found Felipe who was still in a belligerent mood and refused to submit to arrest; that Felipe was: armed with a knife and when he (Machado) *489 told him to put the kuife down and come with him Eelipe refused and that he then approached Felipe for the purpose of handcuffing him and when Felipe came at him with the knife raised in his hand he shot him in the leg; that Felipe continued to advance upon him, whereupon he fired a second shot which took effect in Felipe’s arm; that Felipe then cut him (Machado) on the arm, severing two or three blood vessels, whereupon he fired a third shot, which brought Felipe to the ground; that after Felipe fell to the ground he (Machado) kicked the knife with which Felipe had attacked him away from Felipe and in doing so, because of the proximity of the knife to Felipe’s face, he kicked Felipe in the face. Felipe testified in substance that when Machado first came to the camp he knew Machado Avas a police officer and he also knew that Machado placed him under arrest. He also testified that he refused to go Avith Machado. He also testified that Machado arrested him because he had not paid the five dollars bail money which he was required to put up on the gambling charge, and that he refused to go with Machado because he expected to pay the five dollars on the next pay day and that he so stated to Machado. He denied having or threatening to use any weapon on this occasion. Referring to Machado’s second visit, he testified in substance that when he saAV Machado he (Machado) had a revolver in his right hand and a pair of handcuffs in his left hand and that Machado said to him, “Will you go with me?” and that he replied, “No;” that at that time he (Felipe) had no Aveapon; that Machado said to him, “If you don’t follow me I will shoot you,” and that he (Felipe) said, “I don’t come even if you shoot me;” that he also said to Machado that he (Felipe) wanted to wait for the sheriff and at that time Machado shot him in the leg; that he (Felipe) then *490 went into ;a kitchen five or six feet away where he procured a knife in order to protect himself and returned to where Machado was; that Machado then shot him a second time, this shot taking effect in his left arm; that he then tried to reach Machado but could not and Machado fired the third shot, which took effect in the lower part of his abdomen and completely disabled him.

We have not attempted to make a detailed statement of the testimony of these two witnesses but have summarized, its salient features only for the purpose of determining the correctness of certain instructions that were given at the request of the Territory, and to the giving of which the defendant excepted. Other witnesses testified, some in behalf of the Territory and others in behalf of the defendant, but since it is not our province to pass on the weight of the evidence it is unnecessary to recapitulate their testimony. If the jury believed the defendant and the witnesses who corroborated him a verdict of acquittal on the ground of self-defense would have been entirely justified. A public officer, charged with the duty of making an arrest, even for a misdemeanor, and who while in the performance of his duty is attacked with a dangerous weapon by the person whom he is attempting to arrest and whose life or personal safety is thereby imperiled, has an equal right to defend himself that a private individual has, even to the extent of shedding blood or, if necessary, to the extent of taking life. Is not a public officer, however, who is charged with the duty of making an arrest, even for a misdemeanor, authorized by law to use whatever measure and character of force that is reasonably necessary to effect the arrest, even though he is not at the time himself in serious peril?

In some jurisdictions it has been held that in case of a misdemeanor the arresting officer is not justified in *491 going to tlie extent of shedding the blood of the person whom he is attempting to arrest unless in doing so he acts in self-defense. We think by statute the rule here is otherwise. Section 3973, E. L. 1925, is as follows: •“In all cases where the person arrested refuses to submit or attempts to escape, such degree of force may be used as is necessary to compel him to such submission.” There is no ambiguity in this statute. Its meaning is perfectly plain. It is applicable alike to arrests for felonies and misdemeanors. It does not make the right of the arresting officer to use whatever degree of force is necessary to compel the submission of the person arrested dependent upon the existence of peril to himself. The necessity for the use of such force in order to compel the submission of the person arrested is all that is required in order to justify the officer in using the force. It does not exclude the right to shed blood if that degree of force is necessary to compel submission.

The prosecution’s instruction No. 2 is not in conformity with this view of the law. The instruction is as follows: “You are instructed that under the law, except in self-defense, an officer has no right to proceed to the extremity of shedding blood in arresting or in preventing the escape of one whom he has arrested for a misdemeanor even though the offender can not be taken otherwise.

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Related

MacHado v. Bal
31 Haw. 559 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 Haw. 487, 1928 Haw. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/territory-v-machado-haw-1928.