Delaney v. State

Scott, Disteict Judge;.

The defendant (plaintiff in error) was tried upon an information charging him with an assault and battery with intent to commit murder, found guilty and sentenced to the penitentiary for a term of years.

*61. Plaintiff in error contends that it was error for the court to give to the jury the following instructions which were requested by the State, viz:

“8. . If you find from the evidence that the defendant procured his gun while Stark was fleeing from the house, and went to the door and immediately shot at Stark with intent to kill him, then you should find the defendant guilty.

“9. If you find from the evidence that the defendant could have retired to a place of safety before Stark reached his gun, then it was his duty to have done so, and he was not justified in shooting Stark because he may have believed that Stark was going after his gun. To justify the use of a deadly weapon by the defendant when an assault has been made upon him, the circumstances must appear to be such that there is no other reasonable means of escape from death or great bodily harm.”

As to whether these instructions or either of them are erroneous in whole or in part, or if erroneous as applied to the facts in this case was prejudicial to him, requires a review of the evidence and may be considered together.

Defendant was a ranchman engaged in raising sheep, his ranch being situated near the mouth of La Barge Creek on Green River, Uinta County, Wyoming. On the morning of November 24th, 1904, he, together with his hired men, were building a corral close to the dwelling house on the ranch. This house was constructed substantially of logs, having but three rooms, and was used by the defendant and his employes. There was a small door yard with a gate just in front of the house. While they were so engaged, one Stark rode up on horseback with his rifle across the front of his saddle, passed the time of day with defendant, dismounted, hitched his horse to the wheel of the buckboard which stood about thirty yards from and in front of the house, and leaned his rifle against the buckboard on the opposite side .from the house. Some pleasantries passed between the parties, and Stark asked defendant if there was any mail for him, and the latter answered saying there was *7a letter for him in the house. Thereupon Stark went into the house. Stark had previously worked for defendant for short periods of time and had left some things there when he quit work the last time. His principal occupation was trapping and hunting wolves and coyotes for the bounty on them, and he carried his rifle with him for that purpose. There had been some disagreement between him and defendant, but not of a serious nature, and no evidence was introduced upon the trial to show that he was a quarrelsome or dangerous man, or had made any threats against the life of or to do the defendant any bodily harm. There was an unsettled account between him and defendant with reference to a wagon cover.

Stark, failing to find his letter, came to the door and inquired where the letter was, and defendant told him it was on the window, and, upon this information, procured and sat down to read it, and was reading when defendant entered the house and said he would get his check book and write him out a check for the three dollars he owed him for the wagon cover. Stark refused to take the check, owing, as he said, to the remote place they were in and the difficulty in cashing it, and said, “I don’t want your check,” whereupon defendant flew into a passion, saying if his check was not good, then he himself was no good, and ordered Stark to get his things and get off the place. Stark went into an adjoining room to pack up his things, and defendant went out to the men to see if he could get the cash, using to them vile and profane language with reference to Stark, saying he had told him to pack up his things and g_et out of there, and came back to the house, two of the men following him there. These two men were witnesses as to what occurred in the house from that time on, and their evidence practically agrees with that of Stark and the defendant. Stark came out of the side room with his things done up in a bundle, including a violin which the defendant ordered him to leave, and grabbed him and attempted to take it away from him, harsh and vile epithets being applied one to the other. *8Stark jerked the bundle away and, freeing himself, started out the door on a run to the blackboard, where his horse and rifle were. Defendant rushed into an adjoining room, procured his loaded rifle and came to the door looking for Stark, the latter at that time having dropped his bundle in his flight and being crouched behind the front wheel of the buckboard for shelter. Defendant immediately raised his rifle and, aiming at Stark, fired, the bullet passing through the spoke of the wheel, entering Stark’s right hip and passing through the fleshy part from right to left. Stark arose with his gun and, walking sideways and backward facing the house, his rifle not raised or aimed, but with the muzzle in the direction of the house, endeavored to get in the rear of a shed near by, and while doing so mistook witness Hamp, who had left the house to get out of the possible range of any shots that Stark might return, for the defendant, and fired at-him without inflicting any injury. The defendant, after the first shot, retired from his doorway to a less exposed place and fired the succeeding shots through a window while Stark was endeavoring to gain the shelter of the shed, one of the bullets striking- Stark at the inner part of the left eye, ranging downward and passing out of the right side of the neck.

Stark, still going awa)' or trying to get away, was about to be fired at again by defendant, who was dissuaded from doing so by witness Hamp, who informed him that he had already killed him. He fell and was cared for by^ the men about the place and taken to a ranch about four miles distant, defendant not assisting, but expressing the deepest feeling of malice and hatred when asked what should be done with Stark. A physician and surgeon was summoned, who reached Stark forty-eight hours after the shooting occurred, and who had him under surgical and medical treatment for four months. There is some conflict as to the number of shots fired by defendant, but that question is immaterial. There were certainty a sufficient number. The physician who attended Stark testified that there were eight *9bullet holes, counting the various points of entrance and exit,-any one of which was likely to produce death. Aside from this, there is no conflict in the evidence as to these facts. Defendant sought to justify the shooting on the ground of self-defense, and testified that when he fired the first and second shots Stark had his rifle pointed at him. In this connection we quote from the testimony of his own witness, Danvers, upon direct examination:

Q. The first thing that attracted your attention in connection with this difficulty was loud voices.

A. Yes, men apparently quarreling.

Q. And then you saw Stark coming from the house. Did you see what he carried, if anything?

A. A bundle with a blanket around it, tied up with a rope.

Q. Was he in your full view then from the time he left the front door of the house until the first shot was fired?

A. From the time he left the front gate he was. I couldn’t hardly see the door.

Q. What did he do? Describe his movements.

A.- He was running and he threw his bundle right upon or near the buckboard tongue, and I noticed him grab a-hold of the buckboard tongue and swing behind it.

Q. Around the front of the buckboard?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. What did he do next?

A. He stood there for a fraction of a second, looked back toward the house, crouched behind the buckboard and reached over and grabbed his rifle and drew it toward him. It was right by the buckboard and he drew it close to him.

Q. And at this time there had been no shot fired?

A. No, the shot was fired next.

Q. What was the next thing you heard?

A. I heard a shot.

With this evidence before the jury, they were instructed fully upon the law of self-defense. By instruction 8 the tentative fact was left to the jury to determine whether or *10not Stark was endeavoring to get off the place with his belongings as he was ordered to do and to escape grievous bodily injury at the hands of the defendant. If he was thus fleeing and endeavoring to escape such injury at the time he was shot, then there was no justification for shooting. His attitude at the time the shots were fired was one of fact and properly left to the jury under this instruction.

It will be seen from the evidence that Stark was in the Rouse by leave and license, and when the dispute arose he proceeded to carry out the order given him by the defendant, an order which the latter had a right to give and enforce in a proper manner, if resisted, whether founded in reason or as the result of caprice. That he packed up his belongings and was proceeding to leave the place in a quiet and orderly manner when he was assaulted by the defendant, not for the purpose of ejecting him from the house, which was unnecessary, but to take from his possession the violin which the defendant demanded that he leave at the house. This assault was fierce, intense and relentless, and only ended when Stark near the shed was staggering and about to fall from the effect of his wounds, and defendant was dissuaded from firing at him again upon being informed that he had already killed him.

The court instructed the jury as to the right of one to defend himself in his house against one who assaults him therein, but the undisputed evidence is that Delaney was not assaulted; he was the aggressor. He committed an assault and battery upon Stark and the latter, jerking himself loose, fled from the house. This case is clearly distinguishable from Palmer v. State, 9 Wyo., 40. In that case “it was uncontradicted * * * that the deceased, after assaulting the defendant and threatening his life, pursued him, invaded his house and assaulted him there with the avowed purpose of killing him.” This court further says: “The person so assaulted has the right to defend himself and to pursue his adversai-y until he has freed himself from danger.” It will be observed that the right to pursue ac*11crues to the party assaulted under similar circumstances. It is as much the duty under the law for one not to commit an assault in his own house as it is anywhere else. It is not his duty to retreat if assaulted therein, but he may stand his ground and defend against such an assault. If, however, he commits an assault upon one lawfully therein, or upon one who is peaceably leaving the house in obedience to his directions, it is difficult to see how in law he stands in any different light than as though he had committed the assault in the open or upon the public highway. It will be observed that Stark was unarmed when he entered the house and that the trouble therein did not involve any violence, or attempted or intended violence, to the dwelling or property or -family of the defendant. The trouble was wholly personal. The rules of law governing one’s conduct when assaulted in his house are for his protection and to secure the safety and peace of himself, his house and home from violators of the law, and not to shield him as a violator. If he, as did the defendant, commit an assault under such circumstances, in a place of his own choosing, then it is a misstatement of the law to say that because it is in his house he shall not suspend such unlawful act and avoid unnecessary infliction of grievous bodily harm upon the one so assaulted. We think this view of the law is clearly supported in State v. Martin, 30 Wis., 216; State v. Partlow, 90 Mo., 608; State v. McIntosh, 40 S. C., 349.

In the ninth instruction the word “retired” is used and defendant claims .that this is equivalent to the word “retreated,” and that he was thereby prejudiced. We think as applied to the law of self-defense there is a difference in meaning of the two words: the latter always implies an act under pressure or force, a driving back, while the former may and usually does rest solely in volition. The use of the word “escape” in the second part of the instruction was not proper, but, in view of the evidence in this case that the defendant did after firing the first shot retire to a less exposed place, we do not think this instruction misleading or *12prejudicial, especially when considered in connection with, and that its meaning was restricted to a voluntary withdrawal from the assault by, the instruction which was given at the request of the defendant that where one'is assaulted in his own house under such circumstances as to induce the belief that he is in danger of losing his life or suffering great bodily harm he is not obliged to retreat, but may pursue his adversary until he has freed himself from danger, an instruction which in connection with the other instructions as a whole embodied the law of the case. If there was any evidence that Stark while in the house assaulted Delaney, we would not hesitate to hold it prejudicial error to have given the instruction complained of. Having been the aggressor, the defendant placed himself in the attitude of one who assaults another on 'the highway and upon whom the law imposes the duty of withdrawing in good faith from and not for the purpose of renewing the assault before he can justify shooting- his adversary on the ground of self-defense.

2. The defendant assigns as error the refusal of the court upon his request to give the following instruction :

“Under this information you may find the defendant guilty of an assault and battery upon the prosecuting witness, C. D. Stark, with intent to kill and murder;
“Or you may find the defendant guilty of unlawfully inflicting- upon the said C. L,. Stark grievous bodily harm;
“Or you may find the defendant guilty of assault and battery;
“Or you may find the defendant guilty of unlawfully attempting to commit a violent injury upon the said C. Li-starle ;
“Or you may find the defendant not guilty.
“If you find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant perpetrated an assault and battery upon the said C. U. Stark with intent to kill and murder him, the said C. L,. Stark, your verdict may be in the following form:
“ 'We, the jury, find the defendant guilty of assault and *13battery with intent to kill C. L,. Stark as charged in the information/ and signed by your foreman.
“If you find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant unlawfully and maliciously inflicted grievous bodily harm upon the said C. L. Stark, or unlawfully or maliciously wounded the said C. T. Stark, then your verdict may be in the following form:
“ ‘We, the jury, find the defendant guilty of aggravated assault and battery as charged in the information/ and signed by your foreman.
“If you find from the evidence beyond a reaosnable doubt that the defendant in a rude, insolent or angry manner unlawfully injured the said C. T. Stark, your verdict may be in the following form:
“ ‘We, the jury, find the defendant guilty of assault and battery as charged in the information,’ and signed by your foreman.
“If you find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant, having the present ability to do so, unlawfully attempted to commit a violent injury upon the person of said C. T- Stark, then your verdict may be in the following form:
“ ‘We, the jury, find the defendant guilty of attempting to commit a violent injury upon the person of C. T. Stark,’ and signed by your foreman.”

This instruction as a whole upon its face is misleading, erroneous and does not state the law. The law is not, on the trial of one charged with the crime of an assault and battery perpetrated with a felonious intent, that upon admission or proof of the assault and battery the jury may not consider the motive or intent with which it is perpetrated. This instruction, which was the only one asked or requested on this branch of the case, does not inform the jury that if they find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the assault and 'battery as defined was committed by the defendant, and if they have or entertain a reasonable doubt as to whether it was committed with the intent to *14kill, then they should acquit the defendant of the higher and find him guilty of the lesser offense. In effect, the instruction eliminates that question and takes it from the jury. If the defendant desired the court to instruct the jury as to the lower offenses included in the charge, it was his duty to prepare and present a proper instruction thereon.

It was suggested in argument that it was the duty of the court to so instruct without being requested, but we need not decide that question, for no exception was taken to the failure of the court to so instruct, nor was it made a ground for a new tidal nor assigned as error. (State v. Brantley, 9 Wyo., 102.)

No prejudicial error appearing in the record, the judgment will be affirmed. Affirmed.

Potter, C. J., and Parmelee, District Judge, concur. Justices Beard and Van Orsdel being disqualified, District Judges Scott and Parmelee were called in to sit in their stead.