— The indictment contains a single count, charging, in the prescribed form, the defendant with an assault with intent to murder one Michael Ford. It is founded on the statute (Rev. Code, § 3670), which reads as follows: “Any person who commits an assault on another, with intent to murder, maim, rob, ravish, or commit the crime against nature, or who attempts to poison any human being, or to commit murder by any means not amounting to an assault, must, on conviction, be punished by imprisonment in the penitentiary, or hard labor for the county, for not less than two, or more than twenty years.” It is apparent the statute was intended for the punishment of several distinct offences, the elements of each being an act done, which of itself, though it may be an indictable offence, is aggravated by the intent attending it, and the higher offence *9contemplated. ' Each was an offence known to the common law, indictable and punishable as a misdemeanor. We do not mean, of course, that each was at common law recognized as a separate, distinct, technical offe'nce. An assault was a misdemeanor; if attended with a felonious intent, the intent was a matter of aggravation, justifying the imposition of severer punishment — not other or additional punishment— than that inflicted on misdemeanors, but severer in degree. Beasley v. State, 18 Ala. 534; Meredith v. State, in manuscript; 2 Whart. Cr. Law, § 1287 ; 2 Arch. Cr. Pl. 285, note. And so at common law, an attempt to poison, or by any means to commit murder, or to comnjit any felony, in itself is a misdemeanor. — 3 Whart. Cr. Law, § 2696. We repeat, the statute provides for the punishment of several distinct offences, known to the common law. It does not declare the constituents of either offence; it is silent as to the facts which mus,t concur, to constitute the felonious assault, or the felonious attempt. These must be ascertained from the common law, and if the statute had not prescribed the forms of indictments, or declared the averments it is necessary to make, the offence must have been described as at common law — the facts constituting the assault or attempt, must have been stated and connected with an averment of the felonious intent or design. — Beasley v. State, supra. Though indictments are abridged in form, and reduced to a statement rather of legal conclusions, than of the facts which support, or from which the conclusions may be drawn, the nature of offences is not changed, and the conclusion stated must be sustained by the same measure of evidence which would be necessary, if the facts on which it depends were stated. It is the assertion .of a mere truism to say, that if an indictment charges one of these offences, it can not be supported by evidence of another. As in the present case, the charge of an assault with intent to murder, is not supported by evidence •of an assault with intent to maim, or to commit either of the other designated felonies. Nor yet, would it be supported by evidence of an attempt to poison, or to commit murder, by means not amounting to an assault. The offence charged must be proved, and an essential element of the present offence is not only an assault with intent to murder, but the specific intent to murder Ford, the person named in the indictment. • If the intent was to murder another, or if there was not the specific intent to murder Ford, there can not be a conviction of the aggravated offence charged, though there may be of the minor offence of assault, or of assault *10and battery. — Barnes v. State, 49 Miss. 17; Jones v. State, 11 Sm. & Mar. 315; Ogletree a. State, 28 Ala. 693; Morgan v. State, 33 Ala. 413; State v. Abram, 10 Ala. 928.
The intent can not be implied as matter of law; it must be proved as matter of fact, and its existence the jury must determine from all the facts and circumstances in evidence. It is true, the aggravated offence with which the defendant is charged can not exist, unless if death had resulted, the completed offence would have been murder. Erom this, it does not necessarily follow, that every assault from which if death ensued, the offence would be murder, is an assault with intent to murder, within the purview of the statute, or that the specific intent, the essential characteristic of the offence, exists. Therefore, in Moore v. State (18 Ala. 533), an affirmative instruction, “that the same facts and circumstances which would make the offence murder, if death ensued, furnish sufficient evidence of the intention,” was declared erroneous. The court say : “ There are a number of cases, where a killing would amount to murder, and yet the party did not intend to kill. As if one from a house-top recklessly throw down a billet of wood upon the side-walk wheré persons are constantly passing, and it fall upon a person passing by and kill him, this would be, by the common law, murder; but if instead of killing him, it inflicts only a slight injury, that party could not be convicted of an assault with intent to murder.” Other illustrations may be drawn from our statutes; murder in tbe first degree may be committed in the attempt to perpetrate arson, rape, robbery, or burglary, and yet an assault committed in such attempt, is not an assault with intent to murder. If the intent is to ravish, or to rob, it is under the statute, a distinct offence from an assault with intent to murder, though punished with the same severity. And at common law, if ••death results in the prosecution of a felonious intent, from an act malum in se, the killing is murder. As if A shoot at the poultry of B, intending to shoot them, and by accident kills a human being, he is guilty of murder. — 1 Russ. Cr. 540. Yet, if death did not ensue, if there was a mere battery, or a wounding, it is not, under the statute, an assault Avith intent to murder. The statute is directed against an act done, with the particular intent specified. The intent in fact, is the intent to murder the person named in the indict-ment, and the doctrine of an intent in laAV different from the-intent in fact, has no just application; and if the real intent shown by the evidence is not that charged, there can not be *11a convietion for “the offence that intent aggravates, and in contemplation of the statute, merits punishment as a felony. Ogletree v. State, supra; Morgan v. State, supra. As is said by Mr. Bishop, the reason is obvious, the charge against the defendant is, that in consequence of a particular intent reaching beyond the act done, he has incurred a guilt beyond what is deducible merely from the act wrongfully performed; and therefore, to extract by legal fiction from this act such further intent, and then add it back to the act to increase its severity, is bad in law. — 1 Bish. Cr. Law, § 514.
An application of these general principles, will show that several of the instructions given by the City Court were erroneous, and soirfe of them misleading, or invasive of the province of the jury. The sixth, asserts the familiar principle of the 'law of evidence, that a man must be presumed to intend the natural and probable consequences of his acts, and from it draws the conclusion, “that if a man shoots another with a 'deadly weapon, the law presumes that by such shooting, he intended to take the life of the person shot.” 'Whether this ■ instruction would, or would not be correct, if death had ensued from the shooting, and the defendant was on trial for the homicide, it is not now important-to consider. In a case of this character, the instruction is essentially erroneous, for if it has any force, it converts the material element of the offence, the intent to murder a particular person, into a presumption of law, drawn from the nature of the weapon, and the act done with it; while the intent is a fact which must be found by the jury, and the character of the weapon, and the act clone, are only facts from which it may or may'not be inferred. The weapon used, and the act done, may in the light of other facts and circumstances, import an intent to maim, or merely to wound, distinct offences from that imputed to the defendant; and maiming or wounding, is a probable, natural consequence of’ the act done, with such weapon. In Morgan v. State (33 Ala. 413), the court at the request of the defendant charged the jury, “that they must be convinced beyond all reasonable doubt, that the prisoner intended to shoot Scrimpshire,” (the prosecutor), “before they can convict the prisoner of an assault with intent to murder,” but added, referring to the particular facts of the case, “that the presenting of a pistol, loaded and cocked, within carrying distance, by one man at another, with his finger on the trigger, in an angry manner, is, of itself, an assault with intent to murder.” This court said: “ The explanatory charge given by the *12court in this case can not be supported. It ignores one of the material facts which constitute the offence for which the prisoner was on trial. The defendant was not guilty as charged, unless he committed the ass.ault, and this act was done with a special intent to kill and murder the person assaulted.” It was said the facts were proper for the consideration of the jury, and (quoting from Ogletree v. State, supra), that it .was competent for them, in their deliberations, “ to act upon the presumptions which are recognized by law, so far as they are applicable, and their own judgment and experience, as applied to all the circumstances in evidence. It does not, however, result as a conclusive presumption at law, from the facts supposed in the charge, that the accused had the intent to take the life of Scrimp-shire: the ' surrounding circumstances should have been considered by the jur3r; and unless the jury were convinced that the prisoner entertained the particular intent to take the life of his adversary, then the prisoner could not be convicted of the higher crime. The particular intent reaches beyond the act done, abd is a fact to be found preliminary -to conviction, as necessary to the other fact itself, viz: that the assault was committed. In other words, while the law permits and commands juries to indulge all reasonable inferences from the facts in proof, it does, propriq vigore, infer the one fact from another.” In Seitz v. State (23 Ala. 42), a similar question was considered. On an indictment for an assault with intent to murder, the jury returned a special verdict, finding the defendant “guilty of striking with a loaded whip, calculated to produce death, without any excuse or provocation,” on which judgment of conviction was pronounced, which was reversed, because it was not a legal conclusion from the facts stated, that the defendant had the particular intent to murder the. person assailed. “An assault simply with intent to frighten,” say the court, “maim or wound, without producing death, or for the purpose of inflicting punishment or disgrace, is equally consistent with the finding of the jury, as that it was an assault with intent to murder.” The true principle is, that the particular intent, the intent to murder the person assailed, is matter of fact, about which the law raises no presumptions, and indulges no inferences. — State v. Stewart, 29 Mo. 419. The jury must find the fact; and in ascertaining its existence, they may and will draw inferences from the character of the assault, the want, or the use of a deadly weapon, and the presence, or *13absence of excusing or palliating circumstances. — Meredith v. State, in manuscript. What are the presumptions or inferences in view of all the facts, they must be left free to determine; and the court misleads them, and invades their province, if a part only of the facts is singled out, and they are instructed from them, the felonious intent must be inferred.
The particular facts of the case, in one phase, in which the evidence presents it, are so interwoven with the remaining instructions, that a determination of the primary question they involvéis necessary to a correct understanding of them. This question is the right of a land-owner to plant spring-guns on his premises, by which trespassers may be wounded, and what is his liability, if thereby a trespasser receives grievous bodily harm. Whether he was civilly, liable at common law, was agitated in Deane v. Clayton (7 Taunt. 518), but not decided, the judges being equally divided in opinion. In Ilott v. Wilkes (3 Barn. and Ald. 304), the court of King’s Bench unanimously decided that “a trespasser having knowledge that there are spring-guns in a wood, although he may be ignorant of the particular spots where they are placed, can not maintain an action for an injury received in consequence of his accidentally treading on the latent wire communicating with the gun, and thereby letting it off.” Statutes followed soon after this decision, rendering persons setting or placing spring-guns, and other like agencies, calculated to destroy human life, or to inflict grievous-bodily harm on trespassers, or others coming in contact with them, a misdemeanor. — 1 Russ. Cr. 783. It is not our province to deny that the decision in Ilott v. Wilhes is a correct exposition of the comman law of England as it then existed. The common law of England, is not in all respects the common law of this country.— Vanness v. Packard, 2 Pet. 144. This court has frequently said, that in this State, only its general principles, Avhich are adapted to our situation, and not inconsistent with our policy, legislation and institutions, are of force and prevail. — State v. Cawood, 2 Stew. 360; N. & C. P. P. Co. v. Peacock, 25 Ala. 229; Barlow v. Lambert, 28 Ala. 704. We concur in the conclusions reached by the Supreme Court of Connecticut in Johnson v. Patterson (14 Conn. 1), State v. Moore (31 Conn. 479), after a careful examination, that the principle announced in Ilott v. Wilkes is not in harmony with our condition or our institutions, and that it had its origin in a state of society not existing here, and the necessity for protection to a species of property, not here-recognized, or if recognized, of less importance and value *14-than the legislation of Great Britain, and the common law there prevailing attached to it.
It is a settled principle of our law, that every one has the right to defend his person, and property, against unlawful •violence, and may employ as much force as is necessary to prevent its invasion. Property would be of little value, if • the owner was bound to stand with folded arms and suffer it taken by him who is bold and unscrupulous enough to seize it. But when it is said a man may rightfully use as much force as is necessary for the protection of his person and property, it must be recollected the principle is subject to this most important qualification, that he shall not, except in extreme cases inflict great bodily harm, or endanger 'human life. — State v. Morgan, 3 Ired. 186. The preservation of human life, and of limb and member from grievous harm, is of more importance to society than the protection of property. Compensation may be made for injuries to, or the destruction of property; but for the deprivation of life there is no recompense; and for grievous bodily harm, at most, but a poor equivalent. It is an inflexible principle of the criminal law of this State, and we believe of-all the States, as it is of the common law, that for the prevention of a bare trespass upon property, not the dwelling-house, human life can not be taken, nor grievous bodily harm inflicted. If in the defence of property, not the dwelling-house, life is taken with a deadly weapon, it is murder, though the killing may be actually necessary to prevent the trespass. The character of the weapon fixes the degree of the offence. But if the ' killing is not with a deadly weapon- — -if it is with an instrument suited rather for the purpose of alarm, or of chastisement, and there is not an intent to kill, it is manslaughter. Carroll v. State, 23 Ala. 28; Harrison v. State, 24 Ala. 21; State v. Morgan, 3 Ired. 186; Commonwealth v. Drew, 4 Mass. 391; McDaniel v. State, 8 Sm. & Marst. 401; State v. Vance, 17 Iowa, 138; Whart. Hom. §§ 414-17. However true this may be, of violence the owner directly in person inflicts, for a trespass, or in defence, or prevention of a trespass, committed in his presence, the argument now made by - the counsel for the appellant is that of the court in Ilott v. Wilkes, that for the prevention of secret trespasses, committed in the absence of the owner, he may employ means of defence and protection to which he could not resort if present, offering personal resistance. The instructions requested, place the proposition in its most imposing form — of protection against repeated acts of aggression, committed in the *15night-time by unknown trespassers. For the prevention of . such trespasses, he may, it is said, employ any agency or instrumentality adequate to the end, even though it involves, of necessity, grievous bodily harm, or death' to the trespasser. The proposition itself subordinates human life, and -the preservation of the body in its organized state, to the protection of property. It subjects the man to loss of limb or member, or to the deprivation of life, for a mere trespass, capable of compensation in money. How else can the owner protect himself, it is asked. The answer may well be, he is not entitled to protection, at the expense of the life, or limb, .or member of the trespasser. All that the latter forfeits by the wrong, is the penalty the law pronounces. At common law, he would be compelled to compensation, for particular trespasses, and of the nature, in one respect, the defendant intended to guard against — the severance from the freehold of its products — not only is he compelled to compensation, but under our statutes, indictable for a misdemeanor. It may well be asked, in return, if the owner has the right to visit on the trespasser a higher penalty than the law would visit? Has he a right to punish a mere trespass as the law will punish the most aggravated felonies, which not only shock the moral sense, evince an abandoned, malignant, depraved spirit, but offend the whole social organization ? There -are but few offences the law suffers to be punished with death. AVkether this extreme penalty shall be visited the law submits to the discretion and to the mercy of the jury — they may consign the offender to imprisonment for life in the penitentiary. There is no offence which is punished by the laceration of the body, or by loss of limb or member. Shall the owner, for the prevention of a trespass, inflict absolutely the penalty of death, a jury could not inflict, nor a court sanction? Inflict it without the opportunity the jury has, when they may lawfully inflict it, of lessening it in their mercy and discretion to imprisonment? Shall he, in protec- • tioir of his property, lacerate the body, a punishment so revolting that it has long been excluded from our criminal . code ? If the owner is vexed by secret trespasses, and their repetition, his own vigilance must, within the limits of the law, find means of protection. Stronger enclosures, and a more constant watch must be resorted to, and a stricter enforcement of the remedies the law provides will furnish adequate protection. If these fail, it is within legislative .competency, to adopt remedies to the exigencies and neces- , sities of the owner.
*16It is said the spring-gun, or like engine, is harmless, if of his own wrong the trespasser does not come in contact with it. Admit it, and the controlling, underlying consideration is not met. If it was conceded thereby he lost his right to recover compensation for the injury sustained, the State does not lose the right, nor is its duty lessened, to demand retribution for its broken laws, and the unlawful death, or wounding of one of its citizens. With certainty the measure of protection to property is deqlaied, and the force which may be employed in its defence is defined. The secrecy of the trespass, nor the frequency of its repetition, does not enlarge the one or the other. ■ Life must not be taken, nor grievous bodily harm inflicted. The trespasser is always in fault — it is his own wrong, which justifies force, to the extent it may be lawfully used, or to the extent it may be provoked and exerted. The secrecy and'frequency of the trespass would not justify the owner in concealing himself, and with a deadly weapon, taking the life, or grievously wounding the trespasser, as he crept stealthily to do tbe wrong intended. What difference is there in his concealing his person, and weapon, and inflicting unlawful violence, and contriving and setting a mute, concealed agency or instrumentality which will inflict the same, or it may be greater violence ? In each case, the intention is the same, and it is to exceed the degree of force the law allows to be exerted. In the one case, if the trespasser came not with an unlawful intent — if his trespass was merely technical — if it was a child,, a madman, or an idiot, carelessly, thoughtlessly, entering and wandering on the premises, the owner would withhold all violence. Or, he could exercise a discretion, and graduate his violence to the character of the trespass. The mechanical agency, is sensitive only to the touch — it is without mercy, or discretion, its violence falls on whatever comes in contact with it. Whatever may not be done directly can not be done by circuity and indirection. If an owner, by means of" spring-guns or other mischievous engines planted on his premises, capable of causing death or of inflicting great bodily harm -on ordinary trespassers, does cause death, he is guilty of criminal homicide. — Whart. Cr. Law, §§ 418, 553.
The degree of the homicide depends on the facts already stated. If the engine is of the character of a deadly weapon, the killing is murder. It could not be employed without the intent to injure, and without indifference whether the injury would be death, or great bodily harm. But if not. *17deadly in its character, if it is intended only for alarm, and for inflicting slight chastisement, or mere detention of the trespasser until he shall be freed from it, there may be no offence, or at most but manslaughter. The character of the instrument, and its probable capacity for injury, may repel all presumption to do more than merely alarm, or without inflicting any corporal harm, merely to detain the trespasser, and stay him in his efforts to wrong, and, if death should ensue, it would be beyond the intention of the owner, and an unforeseen, and not a natural or probable consequence of an act in itself not unlawful. For it is lawful to frighten away the trespasser, or by detaining him and staying the wrong he contemplates, to involve him in disgrace; to detect him, and to deter him from future trespasses. If the instrument is adapted only to the purposes of punishment, and it should inflict a punishment from which death ensued, the offence is manslaughter, as it would have been if the owner in person had inflicted the violence. The instructions requested by the appellant were inconsistent with these views, and were properly refused.
The instructions given by the City Court are some of them based on the theory, that if death had ensued from the wounding of the prosecutor, by the spring-gun, it would have been murder, it is a legal sequence, that the defendant is guilty of an assault with intent to murder. Others proceed on the theory that he is guilty of an assault with intent to murder, if the spring-gun was set with the specific intent to kill the prosecutor, whom he suspected as the trespasser, and against whom he bore malice, although there was also a general intent to kill whoever was the trespasser, coming in contact with it. We regard each class of instructions as erroneous.
An error pervading the first, is that a general felonious intent is made the equivalent of the specific felonious intent, which we have said is the indispensable element of the offence, with which the prisoner stands charged. A general felonious intention, by implication of law, will convert the killing of a human being into murder, though his death or injury was not within the intention of the slayer. So, also, if there is the felonious intention to kill one, and the fatal blow falls on another, causing death, it is murder. The act is referred to the felonious intent existing in the mind of the actor; and by implication of law supplies the place of malice to the person slain. — Whart. Horn. § 183; 4 Black, 261; Bratton v. State, 10 Humph. 103. The doctrine of an intent *18implied by law, different from the intent in fact, can have no application to the offences the statute punishes. It is excluded by the terms of the statute, which include only direct assaults on the person of the party it is averred there was the intent to murder. If in fact there was not the intent to murder him, whether there was a general felonious intent, or an intent to do harm to some other individual, is not important— there can be no conviction of the aggravated offence. — Morgan v. State, 13 Sm. & Mar. 242; Jones v. State, 11 ib. 315; Norman v. State, 24 Miss. 54.
An assault is defined as an intentional attempt, by violence, to do a corporal injury to another. In Johnson v. State (35 Ala. 363), it is defined as “ an attempt or offer, to do another personal violence, without actually accomplishing it. A menace is not an assault, neither is a conditional offer of violence. There must be a present intention to strike.” In Lawson v. State (30 Ala. 14), it is said: “To constitute an assault, there must be the commencement of an act, which if not prevented, would produce a battery;” the drawing of a pistol, without cocking or presenting it, is not an assault. In State v. Davis (1 Ired. 125), it is said by Gaston, J.: “ It is difficult in practice to draw the precise line which separates violence menaced, from violence begun to be executed, for until the execution of it is begun, there can be no assault. We think, however, 'that where an unequivocal purpose of violence is accompanied by an act, which is not stopped or diverted, will be followed by personal injury, the execution of the purpose is then begun, and the battery is attempted.” Constructive assaults are not within the statute. The ulterior offence; the principal felony intended, and the intent to accomplish which, is the aggravating quality of the offence, consists in actual violence and wrong done to the person. The assault must, therefore, consist of an act begun, which if not stopped or diverted, will result, or may result in the ulterior offence, and the act when begun must be directed against the person who is to be injured. — Evans v. State, 1 Humph. 394; State v. Freels, 3 Humph. 228. It must also be an acr which, when begun, the person against whom it is directed has the right to resist by force. — 2 Arch. Cr. Pl. 224, 2 note.
The setting a spring-gun on his premises, by the owner, is culpable only because of the intent with which it is done. Unless the public safety is thereby endangered, it is not indictable. — State v. Moore, 31 Conn. 479. If dangerous to the public, it is indictable as a nuisance. ' Resistance by *19force to the setting of it, by any individual (if not dangerous to the public), the law would' not sanction, though he may apprehend injury to him is intended, if he trespass on the premises. The injury exists only in menace — it is conditional, and his own act must intervene, and put in motion the force from which injury will proceed. While because of the unlawful intention with which the gun is set, the owner is made criminally liable for the consequences he contemplates, it is not his violence except by implication of law which produces the injury. It is not, consequently, an assault which connected with an intent to murder, is punishable under the statute. If the gun is set with the intent to kill a particular person, who is injured by it, whether it is not an attempt to murder committed by means not amounting to an assault, indictable under another clause of the statute, is a question this record does not present.
The result is that the judgment of the City Court is reversed, and the cause remanded. The prisoner will remain in custody until discharged by due course of law.