Wacaser v. People

25 N.E. 564, 134 Ill. 438, 1890 Ill. LEXIS 984
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 25 N.E. 564 (Wacaser v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wacaser v. People, 25 N.E. 564, 134 Ill. 438, 1890 Ill. LEXIS 984 (Ill. 1890).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the Court:

At the November Term, 1888, of the Circuit Court of Moultrie County, the plaintiff in error, Frank W. Wacaser and one Owen M. Babb were indicted for the murder of John B. Cline in said county on May 17,1888. A trial was had at the April term, 1889, of said court, which resulted in a verdict of not guilty as to Babb and a disagreement of the jury as to the plaintiff in error. Afterwards in June, 1889, the cause was removed by change of venue to the Circuit Court of Champaign County, where a second trial was had in November, 1889, and, by the verdict of the jury, the defendant was found guilty of manslaughter, and his punishment fixed at twenty-five years in the penitentiary. Judgment was rendered upon the verdict after the overruling of motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment.

In the neighborhood where the farms of these parties were located the public road runs north and south; Wacaser lived on the east side of the road; north of him and on the west side of the road lived Bryan, a brother-in-law of Cline, while still further to the north lived Cline, the deceased. North of his house, and in the north east corner of his farm, Bryan had a pasture, containing ten acres, enclosed by a board fence on the north and by a board and wire fence on the west. Wacaser had rented, and planted in corn, some land belonging to his father and lying north of Bryan, and he also owned some land to the west of Bryan. The land of Bryan lying west of his pasture had been recently ploughed.

Westward from the public road, and along the fence on the north side of Bryan’s pasture, runs a “turning row” which is wholly upon the land belonging to Wacaser, or rented by him from his father. Prior to the homicide there had been some dispute between Bryan or Cline and Wacaser as to the boundary line between the Wacaser land and the Bryan land; plaintiff in error' had expressed his unwillingness that Cline should go upon his land; he seems to have claimed that Bryan’s north fence was upon his land, and there is something in the evidence to the effect that he had once had Bryan indicted.

Early on the morning of May 17, 1888, plaintiff in error sent three men to work in his field lying west of Bryan’s pasture. Shortly afterw.ards he himself started in a wagon with his hired man named Babb, and a boy about fifteen years old, named Cunningham, to go to the same field for the purpose of planting potatoes. He travelled northward on the public road until he reached the north east corner of Bryan’s pasture, then turned from the public road into the turning row and drove westward along the turning row, until he had reached a point about seventy five or one hundred yards west of the northwest corner of Bryan’s enclosure. Here he looked back and saw the deceased driving a team, behind which he was walking, from the public road into the turning row. He hallooed to Cline and motioned to him to go southward on the public road, but Cline turned into the turning row and drove westward. Plaintiff in error then gave the reins to Cunningham, jumped out of the wagon remarking, “there comes a man I don’t want to cross my land,” and went eastward towards the deceased. The latter in the meantime turned his team southward upon Bryan’s land and along the west fence of Bryan’s pasture, and, throwing the lines over the second or third post of the fence, returned to meet Wacaser. A fracas then occurred between the two men near the northwest corner of the pasture in the turning row, or a few feet south of it, and near the west fence of the enclosure.

During the fracas the plaintiff in error stabbed Cline with a knife or dirk. The deceased went through the fence into the pasture, and, while going southeast towards Bryan’s house, fell upon the ground and died before reaching the house.

We forbear entering into a detailed discussion of the evidence, as the case must be reversed and sent back for another trial for the reasons hereinafter stated. It was sought, upon the trial below, to justify the homicide upon the ground of self-defense. It is claimed upon the part of the defendant, that the fatal blow was given under circumstances sufficient to create in his mind a well-grounded belief that he was in danger of losing his life, or suffering great bodily harm. It was for the jury to say whether or not the theory of self-defense was established, but it was important, under the circumstances of the case as disclosed by the record, that they should be accurately instructed.

The defendant asked the trial court to give twenty instructions, all of which were refused. The trial judge then of his own motion gave and read to the jury an instruction written and prepared by himself. No instructions seem to have been asked by the prosecution, but whether such was the fact or not, no other instruction than that prepared by the court was given. The instruction so given is very long, consisting of thirty six paragraphs.

In Hill et al. v. Parsons et al. 110 Ill. 107, all the instructions requested by both sides, seven on behalf of the plaintiffs and eight on behalf of the defendants, were refused, and three . instructions carefully prepared by the’court were read to the, jury. In that case it was said: “Whether any of defendants’' instructions contained correct propositions of law or not, is not a material inquiry here, as the instructions given by the court fairly instructed the jury on all legal questions involved in the case. No injury was done by the refusal of the instructions prepared by them. ” It may be laid down as a sound rule that, where the trial court throws aside all the instructions asked by one or both of the parties, and prepares written instructions of its own, the latter must fairly instruct the jury on all the legal questions involved in the case, and it must 1 appear that no injury has been done to the defeated party by ■ the refusal of the instructions asked by him. As to more than ■ a dozen of the instructions which the defendant in this case requested the court to give, it is not claimed that they were erroneous, but it is insisted that their substance >vas embodied in the instruction prepared by the court. This is, for the most part, true. But we think that the twenty sixth paragraph of the given instruction was calculated to mislead the jury. Its first clause is as follows: “If a man kills another and the killing be proven, or admitted, and then sets up self-defense as a defense to the indictment, the jury ought always (to) be satisfied from the evidence, that the killing was done under an honest belief on the part of the defendant, that it was necessary to save himself from death, or great bodily harm, ” etc.

Instructions, which require the proof to be such as to produce “satisfaction” in the minds of the jury, have been several times condemned by this court. In Herrick v. Gary, 83 Ill. 85, which was a civil case, the instruction was: “the plaintiff must show, by the evidence in the case, to the satisfaction of the jury,” etc. We there said of this language: “it places the standard of the degree of proof required higher than the law demands in controversies of this character. It is enough that the jury shall believe, from the evidence, that the essential facts are true. The jury may so believe, although the same may not be shown by the evidence to the satisfaction of the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.E. 564, 134 Ill. 438, 1890 Ill. LEXIS 984, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wacaser-v-people-ill-1890.