Nelson v. State

COLLIER, C. J.

The second section of the fifteenth chapter of the Penal Code, enacts that “every slave who shall be guilty of murder, or commit an assault with an intent to kill any white person,” &c. “and be thereof convicted, shall suffer death.” [Clay’s Dig. 472.] It is insisted, that as the prisoner has been prosecuted for the offence denounced by this section, and has been sentenced to the punishment which it inflicts, the indictment should have charged, that the individual on whom the assault was committed, is a while person. In the State v. Flanigan, at June ’43, this court say, where a statute is introductive of anew offence, or an offence at common law is made a crime of higher nature; as where a misdemeanor is made a felony; or where a common law offence is made subject to an additional punishment, the indictment in either of these cases, should be drawn in reference to the statute creating, or changing the nature of the offence. But if the statute is only declaratory of what was previously an offence at common law, without adding to or altering the punishment, the indictment need not conclude against the form of the statute. So, where the words of a statute are descriptive of the nature of the offence, there, it is necessary to specify it in the particular words of the act. [The State v. Stedman, 7 Porter’s Rep. 495; The State v. Duncan, 9 Porter’s Rep. 260, and cases there cited. See also, United States v. Clark, 1 Gal. Rep. 497.]

Of whatever grade of offence an assault with intent to commit murder, may be at common law, it is quite certain that an assault with the intention to kill, without reference to the offence of which the accused would have been guilty, had his purpose been consummated, is a mere misdemeanor. The statute, therefore, which has been cited, in a legal point of view, greatly increases its enormity, and this furnishes a sufficient reason why the indictment should characterize, by a description of his color, the per*397son on whom the assault was committed. But it is insisted, that although the indictment may be insufficient, according to the rules of the common lawq yet the twenty-sixth section of the eighth chapter of the Penal Code, cures all defects, and legalizes the conviction. That section is as follows: “All indictments for offences inhibited in this code, which are offences at common law, shall be good if the offence be charged or described according to the common law; and the party charged on conviction, shall receive the punishment prescribed by this act, nor shall the words, “force and arms,” or “contrary to the form of the statute,” be regarded as necessary in any indictment whatever; but indictments wanting these words, shall be deemed as effectual to all intents and purposes, as indictments having the same words in them.”— [Clay’s Dig. 442.] This is confessedly a most beneficial enactment, when properly interpreted, and must prevent the guilty from escaping punishment, or procrastinating the period of its infliction bj’’ the interposition of objections which merely defeat the administration of justice.

If upon a common law indictment for a misdemeanor, it were competent to impose the punishment which the statute prescribes for a felony, such a principle could not be applied in the case be-fqre us. The fact that the individual assaulted is a white person, aggravates the offence, and in point of enormity, makes it equal with murder itself, while such an outrage upon a colored person is regarded as a mere misdemeanor. How can it be assumed then, that the offence punished by the statute, was intended to be charged! Not because the one of lesser grade, though of kindred character, is usually proceeded against, otherwise than by indictment. This would be to assume the offence sought to be punished, was one which the law made capital, though from the indictment itself, it appeared to be subject to, comparatively, but little punishment.

We have seen, that according to the principles of the common law, an indictment founded upon a statute which creates an offence, or adds to its punishment, must bring the case within the terms of the statute; and that no argumentative inferences will supply the want of direct averments. But for the section cited from the eighth chapter of the Penal Code, this rule would be generally applied in this State; and in the present case, as the healing provision of that section, is inapplicable under the cir*398cumstances, the indictment is incurably defective. This seems to us to be the necessary conclusion, from the impracticability of determining otherwise than from argumentative inferences, what punishment is the consequence of a conviction upon such an indictment.

The instruction of the circuit judge to the jury, was clearly erroneous. No principle is better settled in the administration of criminal justice, than that the indictment must be sufficient in itself, and cannot be aided by the verdict, or any thing extrinsic.

2. It is provided by the 10th section of the fifteenth chapter of the Penal Code, that the trial of all slaves for capital offences shall be by the circuit court of the proper county, and at least two thirds of the jury shall be slaveholders. [Clay’s Dig. 473.] This provision, it is insisted, makes it necessary to the regularity of the conviction in a case like the present, that the judgment entry should affirmatively show that the jurors were such as it prescribes. The judgment entry characterises the jury, by whom the prisoner was tried as “good and lawful men.” Now the laws of this State prescribe the qualification of jurors generally, by requiring them to be householders or freeholders, at least twenty-one years of age, &c., yet it has never been thought necessary that the record should affirm, that the jury who tried a cause, were such persons as the statute required. The conclusion of law is, that the jurors were competent, unless the record shows the reverse to be true. We are unable to perceive why a different principle should be applied in a case like the present. The circuit court, in declaring that the jury are “good and lawful men,” must be understood as saying that they were such as the law required to try the case submitted to them, even if it were allowable to raise, on error, the question of qualification, where the point was not reserved on the trial.

For the defectiveness of the indictment, the judgment of the circuit is reversed, and the prisoner is directed to be detained in custody to await further proceedings, or until he be legally discharged.