Winner v. State

125 A. 397, 144 Md. 682, 1924 Md. LEXIS 32
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 31, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 125 A. 397 (Winner v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winner v. State, 125 A. 397, 144 Md. 682, 1924 Md. LEXIS 32 (Md. 1924).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The indictment in this case charges, in separate counts, that the appellant assaulted Robert Hawkins with intent to kill, to maim, to disfigure and to disable, and there is a final count charging assault and battery. The trial resulted in conviction on the last count. A sentence of imprisonment in the House of Correction for the period of twelve months was imposed. In the course of the trial thirteen exceptions were taken to rulings on the admissibility of evidence, and these present the only questions to be decided on appeal.

The assault was committed on the afternoon of Sunday, It arch. 25th, 1923. The appellant, standing with his wife and children on the porch in the rear of his. dwelling, in the *684 village of Klondyke, in Allegany County, fired a shot-gun at Hawkins, who was in an alley about fifty-five feet distant, the shot taking effect mainly in his right leg. It was testified by Hawkins, and other witnesses for the State, that he had gone to the alley, across a lot which it separated from the appellant’s premises, because of insulting and challenging remarks addressed to him by a man named Edward Hwinn, and that when he reached the -alley and was accosting G-winn there, the appellant, without being previously involved in the altercation, declared his intention to shoot Hawkins, and at once proceeded to carry the purpose into execution. According to testimony for the defense^ the gun was fired while Hawkins, without provocation from the appellant, was making a hostile demonstration and homicidal threats against him and his family, and was apparently about to draw a pistol from his hip pocket and to climb the wire fence between the -alley and the appellant’s lot. There was thus an irreconcilable conflict in the evidence as to whether the appellant or the prosecuting witness was the aggressor.

The most important exceptions refer to unsuccessful efforts of the defense to prove that during a period of an hour or two before Hawkins was shot he had been engaged in disorderly and dangerous conduct, including the threatening use of a pistol, toward other persons, which the appellant witnessed, and had made certain threats to bill which had not come to the appellant’s knowledge. In so far as the proffered evidence would have tended to prove prior acts of violence by Hawkins which the appellant had observed, it was designed to support his theory that he had reasonable ground for believing himself or his family to be in danger of serious bodily harm when Hawkins approached in the menacing manner which the witnesses for the defense described. The excluded testimony as to the threats which the appellant did not hear would have been to the effect that Hawkins, about -an hour and a half before he was shot, de *685 dared a purpose to kill every “union man” in the village. It was proved that the appellant was a union miner. The-proof of the threats was intended to reflect upon the question as to whether Hawking, or the appellant committed the first hostile -act on the occasion with which the case is specially concerned. In refusing to admit the testimony to which the principal exceptions relate, the trial court expressed the-view that evidence as to prior threats and acts of violence of the prosecuting witness toward others, on the afternoon of the shooting, was irrelevant, and that the material inquiry was whether he made any suteh hostile demonstrations against the appellant at the time and place of the assanlt alleged in the indictment.

In Jenkins v. State, 80 Md. 72, where the defendant was tried for an assanlt with intent to kill, the defense wag not allowed to prove that the prosecuting witness, to the defendant’s knowledge, had threatened another person with a gun during the preceding year. There was no evidence in that case of any overt hostile: act against the defendant by the-person assaulted. For that reason it was also held that evidence as to a prior threat by the prosecuting witness against the accused himself was not admissible. In this case there-is testimony tending to support the theory -of self-defense. The presence of such testimony entitled the appellant to- the-benefit of certain rules of evidence which would not otherwise be available. It was competent for him to prove his knowledge of facts, which would have a reasonable tendency to justify his asserted belief as to the existence of a deadly purpose in the overt acts of Hawkins, to which witnesses fertile defense testified. It was for the jury to- decide, upon the evidence in the- ease,, whether the appellant was in fact being approached by Hawkins with real or apparent hostile and dangerous intent, but the question as to the admissibility of the testimony we are now considering must be determined upon the theory that the evidence of such action, po-r *686 tending serious and possibly fatal injury, might be accepted as true.

The same considerations, of course, apply to the present-question as would be pertinent if the wound inflicted by the appellant had been mortal -and he were under indictment for a homicide. Stockham v. Malcolm, 111 Md. 622. In reference to similar questions in cases of that nature it is said in 13 Ruling Case Law, 920, that “on the issue whether or not the accused had reasonable ground to believe himself in imminent danger, he may show his knowledge of specific instances of violence on the part of the deceased.” When it is material to prove that the accused had information as to the dangerous disposition of the person by whom he is said to have been attacked, there is no valid reason why such knowledge may not be proved to have been acquired by actual- observation as well as by general repute. Previous acts of violence by his adversary, especially if committed recently, which the defendant had witnessed, might have an even stronger influence on his mind than would be produced by knowledge of the assailant’s reputation for violence. While the existence of such a reputation could not be shown by evidence of specific acts, yet belligerent and dangerous conduct of his opponent which the accused has observed should be provable upon the question as to the reasonableness of his apprehension of serious injury as a possible excuse for the measures of resistance which he adopted.

In 3 Bishop’s New Criminal Procedure (2nd Ed.), 1599, it- is said, upon the authority of many oases there cited: “Under a claim of self-defense, where the necessity for the defendant’s resorting to it should be judged of by the facts as. they appeared io him, whatever they truly were, he may give in evidence whatever he knew of the character, prior conduct, threats or other utterances of the person with whom he was contending, which, not as showing that the man was bad, but that in the special instance and circumstances he *687 was dangerous, might reasonably have place among the considerations guiding his actions.”

The ease of Sneed v. Territory, 16 Okla. 641, as reported in 8 Am. & Eng. Ann. Cases,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Marr
765 A.2d 645 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2001)
Rajnic v. State
664 A.2d 432 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1995)
Richmond v. State
623 A.2d 630 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1993)
Barger v. State
235 A.2d 751 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1967)
Bowyer v. State
235 A.2d 317 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1967)
Magness v. State
234 A.2d 481 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1967)
Guerriero v. State
132 A.2d 466 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1957)
People v. Cruz Rivera
65 P.R. 160 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1945)
Pueblo v. Cruz Rivera
65 P.R. Dec. 172 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1945)
Jones v. State
35 A.2d 916 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1944)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 A. 397, 144 Md. 682, 1924 Md. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winner-v-state-md-1924.