Opinion bv
Porter, J.,The defendant was tried upon an indictment containing three counts. The first count charged that he did with a knife assault and unlawfully and feloniously cut, stab and wound one Stanley Garvin, with intent to murder; this count being drawn under the eighty-first section of the Act of March 31, 1860, P. L. 382. The second count was drawn under the ninety-eighth section of the same statute and charged the same act as the unlawful and malicious infliction of grievous bodily harm. The third count charged the defendant with an assault and battery upon said Garvin. The jury rendered a verdict finding the defendant not guilty upon the first count of the indictment, which charged felonious assault and battery, but guilty upon the second count, charging an assault and the unlawful and malicious infliction of grievous bodily harm. The defendant was sentenced under the conviction upon the second count of the indictment and from that judgment appeals.
The appellant requested the court below to charge that in order to warrant a conviction upon the first count of the indictment the jury must find “that if death had resulted from the wound inflicted that the defendant intended to commit the crime of murder of the first degree.” This point was refused by the court, and that refusal is the subject of the first *297specification of error. The court after explaining the distinction between murder of the first degree and murder of the second degree, instructed the jury that, in order to sustain a conviction under the first count of the indictment, they must find that the wound was maliciously inflicted with intent to commit murder, either of the first or second degree; upon which instructions the second and third specifications of error are founded. The contention of the appellant is that in order to sustain a conviction of felonious assault and battery, under sec. 81 of the act of March 31, 1860, the burden is upon the commonwealth to establish by evidence that the defendant intended to commit the crime of murder of the first degree, and that a conviction cannot be sustained where, if death had resulted, the offense would under the evidence have been murder of the second degree.
We are not convinced that the contention of the appellant is well founded. The legislature in defining the essential quality of this offense used the words “intention to commit murder.” Every unlawful killing with malice is murder. This crime had in Pennsylvania, been divided into two degrees by the Act of April 22, 1794, 3 Sm. L. 186 for the purpose of fixing for each grade the punishment that was thought to be appropriate, and this distinction between the degrees of murder was expressly recognized in the act of March 31, 1860, which reenacted the provisions of the earlier statute. The legislature in the very statute which defined the offense charged in the first count of this indictment dealt with the crime of murder. The offense was divided into two degrees, but each of the degrees still remained murder, the one as much as the other. Had it been the legislative purpose to confine the operation of the eighty-first section of the act of 1860 to some cases in which it was the intention, of one who inflicted a wound with a knife or pistol, to commit murder and exempt from the operation of that section other cases in which the intention to commit murder existed, it is certainly reasonable to assume that such legislative purpose would have been expressly declared. The legislature were dealing with a statute which recognized two degrees of murder, and when they came to *298deal with felonious assaults, in sec. 81 of that statute they used words, in defining the intention of the offender and making that intention the distinguishing characteristic of the offense, which distinctly covered both degrees of murder and murder at common law. In order to sustain the contention of the appellant something must be written into this statute which was not placed there by the legislature.
The distinguishing feature of murder of the first degree, save in those cases of killing in certain defined ways or in the perpetration of certain felonies, is the willful, deliberate and premeditated character of the act. Where a willful and deliberate intention is the subject of investigation; if the mind, from intoxication or any other cause, is deprived of its power to form a design with deliberation, the offense is stripped of the distinguishing features required by the statute to place it on the list of capital crimes. More is necessary than a blow with an instrument likely to -kill to constitute murder of the first degree; there must be intention, deliberation and premeditation found; and the instrument is evidence upon this point. If this do not appear, the use of an instrument likely to kill, and which causes death, leaves the grade of the crime murder of the second degree; unless the killing is upon provocation sufficient to reduce it to voluntary manslaughter: Kelly v. Commonwealth, 1 Grant, 484. The case referred to was decided in 1858, and was the established law of the commonwealth at the time the act of 1860 was adopted. If the contention of this appellant could be sustained,' there would be no case in which an offender who was under the influence of liquor, to such an extent as to render him incapable of forming a deliberate and premeditated design to kill, could be convicted of felonious assault and battery. The question does not seem to have been passed upon by either of the appellate courts, in the exact form in which it is presented by this defendant. The language of the charge of the court below, which was assigned for error and approved by the Supreme Court, in Commonwealth v. Matz, 161 Pa. 207, was certainly not in harmony with the contention of the defendant. The charge of the court in that case *299could not have been sustained if, in order to sustain a conviction of felonious assault and battery, it had been held necessary for the commonwealth to prove that, had death resulted, the offense would have been murder of the first degree.
We have deemed it proper to thus deal with the question raised by these specifications of error for the reason that it has been squarely presented and it is one in which the decisions of the trial courts do not seem to have been always in harmony. The first three specifications of error must be dismissed for the additional reason that the defendant was not convicted upon the first count of the indictment. The jury found that when he inflicted the wound it was not his intention to commit murder, of either the first or second degree. He was only found guilty, under the ninety-eighth section of the statute, of the “unlawful and malicious infliction upon Garvin of grievous bodily harm, and unlawful cutting, stabbing and wounding;” which offense there can be no question was properly defined in the charge of the court below.
The remaining assignments of error are entirely without merit. We have examined the charge of the court and are unable to detect any particulars in which it is inadequate. The testimony of the defendant and that of the witnesses whom he had called in support of his attempt to establish an alibi, was impartially referred to by the court, and the question of fact thus raised was properly submitted to the jury. Had the defendant desired more specific instructions upon that or any other point he should have presented a written request to that effect.
The judgment is affirmed and the defendant is directed to appear in the court below at such time as he may there be called to the end that he may be by that court committed for such part of the sentence as had not been complied with at the time this appeal was made a supersedeas.