Tyner v. United States

1909 OK CR 108, 103 P. 1057, 2 Okla. Crim. 689, 1909 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 189
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 21, 1909
DocketNo. 819, Ind. T.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1909 OK CR 108 (Tyner v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tyner v. United States, 1909 OK CR 108, 103 P. 1057, 2 Okla. Crim. 689, 1909 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 189 (Okla. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

OWEN, Judge,

(after stating the facts as above). The plaintiff in error, hereinafter referred to as the. defendant, assigns 21 errors committed by the trial court. Counsel in their brief filed in this case consolidate these assignments, and argue them under seven general assignments.

First, it is contended that the court erred in refusing to give instruction No. 1, requested by the defendant, as follows:

“The court instructs you that, before you will be warranted in finding the defendant guilty, the government must prove to your minds beyond a reasonable doubt sufficient facts to constitute the crime of murder had death ensued from the assault alleged to have been committed by the defendant on Harvey King.”

This prosecution was under section 2142, Rev. St. U. S., in force in the Indian ’ Territory at the time this case was tried (section 4352, Ind. T. Ann. St. 1899), which is as follows:

“Every white person who shall make an assault upon an Indian, or other person, and every Indian who shall make an assault upon a white person within the Indian country, with a gun, rifle, sword, pistol, knife, or any other deadly weapon, with intent to kill or maim the person so assaulted, shall be punishable by imprisonment, at hard labor, for not more than five years, nor less than one year.”

There is no contention on the part of the defendant that any other section of the statute governed in the trial of this case.

■Counsel rely on the case of Lacefield v. State, 34 Ark. 275, 36 Am. Rep. 8, and Felker v. State, 54 Ark. 489, 16 S. W. 663. These cases are not in point. The court in these cases properly held -that, in order to warrant a conviction under the indictments charging assault with intent to murder, there must have been sufficient evidence to prove all the elements necessary to constitute the crime of murder if death had ensued.

*691 The statute under which the indictments in those cases were returned is as follows:

“Whoever shall, feloniously, wilfully and with malice aforethought, assault any person with intent to murder or kill * * * shall, on conviction thereof, be imprisoned in the penitentiary not less than three nor more than twenty-one years.”

The difference between these two statutes is a very Raterial one. The statute under which the prosecution in this case was had uses the words, “every person who shall make an assault with intent to leill the person so assaulted.” The statute in Arkansas uses the words, “whoever feloniously, wilfully, and with malice aforethought assault any person with intent to murder or kill.” Under the statute in question here it was only necessary that the defendant would have been guilty of some degree of homicide, either murder or manslaughter, had death ensued, and it was not necessary to prove all of the elements of murder.

The second reason urged is that the court erred in refusing to give the third instruction, as requested by the defendant, which was as follows:

“You are instructed that unless you believe from the evidence that the defendant, Frayser Tyner, shot at Harvey King with the wilful and malicious intent to kill or maim the said Harvey .King, proof that the defendant fired shots in a malevolent and reckless manner would not be sufficient to warrant you in finding the defendant guilty of assault with intent to kill or maim Harvey King, even though it be shown by the evidence that one of the shots struck the body of Harvey King and inflicted a serious wound on him; the essence of the crime as alleged in the indictment being the felonious, malicious, and wilful intent. And, if you should find from the evidence that the said defendant did not assault the said Harvey King, as alleged in the indictment, you should acquit the defendant.”

The court properly refused to give this instruction. Tt is to the effect that the jury must not only find from the facts all of the elements necessary to constitute murder, but must in addition thereto find that the defendant had the specific intent to murder Harvey King. Neither proposition is sound.

*692 The rule is well settled that, to constitute manslaughter, it is not necessary that the perpetrator should have intended and willed the death of the person killed. One who wilfully uses a deadly weapon upon another will be deemed to intend the necessary and probable consequences of his act.

The text-writers divide manslaughter into two degrees — voluntary and involuntary.

Voluntary manslaughter is the unlawful killing of another without malice in the heat of passion.

Involuntary manslaughter is where one doing an unlawful act, not felonious or tending to great bodily harm, or doing a lawful act without proper caution or requisite skill, undesignedlv kills another. According to the common-law writers, it is where death results unintentionally, SO' far as the defendant is concerned, from an unlawful act on his part not amounting to felony or from a lawful act negligently performed. At common law it included all those homicides which were below the grade of murder, and were neither justifiable nor excusable, and which were the accidental result of some unlawful act less than felony, not aimed or directed against the person slain. A definition which seems to have been universally adopted is: “An unintentional killing in the commission of an unlawful act.” Wharton on Homicide (3d Ed.) p. 6; Wharton, Cr. Law, p. 305; Anderson’s Law Dict.; Siberry v. State, 149 Ind. 684, 39 N. E. 936; Commonwealth v. Mink, 123 Mass. 422, 25 Am. Rep. 109; Jewell v. Territory, 4 Okla. 53, 43 Pac. 1075; McManus v. State, 36 Ala. 285.

The undisputed proof in this case was that some person passing along the public highway fired a pistol or gun three or four times, and that one of the shots struck Harvey King, a boy about 11 years of age,, who was walking across his father’s yard on his way to the barn. The defendant about the time that the shooting took place passed along the road by the place where the boy was shot. TJhe ’defendant stated to several witnesses that he fired three shots, but denied that he had fired in the direction of *693 the boy. The jury evidently believed that he was the man who fired the shots. If one fires a gun recklessly or heedlessly, he will not be excused; and his offense will be at least manslaughter, though the weapon was pointed in range of the deceased by accident, with no intention or design of killing the deceased. If the act is attended with probable mortally dangerous consequences to •the deceased or persons generally, and death should ensue, the crime is murder or manslaughter, depending upon the.degree of deliberation. The law always presumes .that a party intended the probable and natural effect of his deliberate act.

The above rule was announced in the case of State v. Vance, 17 Iowa, 138, and the same is held to be the rule in the case of York v. Commonwealth, 82 Ky. 360. To the same effect,is the case of Adams v. State, 65 Ind. 565, and State v.

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Bluebook (online)
1909 OK CR 108, 103 P. 1057, 2 Okla. Crim. 689, 1909 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyner-v-united-states-oklacrimapp-1909.