The defendant, fifteen years of age, and his brother, William R. Payton, were jointly indicted for killing Claudie E. Mathews, an infant, on the twelfth of April, 1885. After a severance, James S. Payton was tried and found guilty of murder in the first degree.
The evidence shows that these two boys lived with their parents ; L. T. Mathews resided in the same neighborhood, on a farm to which it seems the father of the
2. The next objection is, that the indictment is inconsistent, in that it charges that one mortal wound produced the death of the child, and that the wound was given by both defendants with different guns. The indictment, after alleging an assault, proceeds to state that the defendants, with rifle guns, loaded with powder and leaden balls, “him, the said Claudie E. Mathews, feloniously,” etc., “by means of the powder and balls aforesaid, did shoot, penetrate and wound, and thereby then and there give to him, said Claudie E. Mathews, one mortal wound of the width,” etc. There can be no doubt but the defendants were properly included in the same indictment, and both properly charged as principals. Wharton on Horn. [2 Ed.] sec. 338; secs. 1649; 1811, R. S., 1879. It was said in State v. Dalton, 27 Mo. 14, if two persons are charged as principals, one as the immediate perpetrator of the injury, and the other as aiding and abetting, it is immaterial which of them is charged as having inflicted the wound, inasmuch as the law imputes the injury given by one as the act of the-other. So that an indictment that A gave the blow and B was present and abetting, is sustained by evidence that B gave the blow and A was present and abetting. Now, while the indictment might have been in the form above indicated, it does not follow that the present one is bad. It was held in State v. Blan, 69 Mo. 318, that an indictment for murder in the first degree was not faulty in failing to state separately the individual acts of each
3. The next objection is, that the verdict is against the evidence, and in view of this contention, and of the fact that the court refused to instruct upon murder in the second degree, we have before stated the evidence somewhat in detail. It is true that neither Mrs. Mathews nor her sister saw the persons who fired the shots, but it must be remembered that Mrs. Mathews says she stopped the team; that when she looked around and saw the baby killed, she did not notice' anything else. Under these circumstances, it was natural and to the credit of both of the women that they were completely absorbed in their attention to the dying child. The evidence of Mr. Mathews is positive as to the identity of the defendant. Under the evidence, it was a deliberate murder, on the part of the defendant, or he had no hand in it at all; it is the province of the jurors to determine the questions of fact. The instructions proceed upon the theory that the defendant was guilty of murder in the first degree, if he alone, or in company with another, wilfully, deliberately, premeditatedly, and of his malice' aforethought, shot and killed the child, or was present aiding and
But it is said by another instruction, the court took •away from the jury the question of fact, of deliberation and premeditation, which instruction is as follows: “The court instructs the jury, if they believe from the ■evidence in this case that defendant, James S. Payton, in company with some other person, was lying in wait for L. T. Mathews, with the intent of killing the said L. T. Mathews; and in the attempt to kill said Mathews, while so lying in wait, this defendant, •or any other person so lying in wait in company with him, fired a shot that killed Claudie E. Mathews, then the law presumes that the said killing was done wilfully, deliberately, ■ feloniously, and with malice aforethought.” The statute provides that ‘ every murder which shall be committed by means of poison, or by lying in wait, or by any other kind of wilful, deliberate, and premeditated killing, * * * shall he deemed murder in the first degree.” Sec. 1232, R. S. 1879. If there be then a murder at common law, and that murder be committed either .by means of poison, or by lying in wait, then under the statute it is classed as murder in the first degree. State v. Wagner, 78 Mo. 644. Blackstone says if one shoots at A and miss him, but kills B, this is murder; because of the previous felonious intent, which the law transfers from one to the other. 4 Blk. Com. 200. If the defendant, then, shot at'L. T. Mathews, with the intent of killing Mm, but missed him and killed Claudie E. Mathews, it is murder at common law. If murder at common law, and also ■committed by lying in wait, then, by the statutory classification, it is murder in the first degree. Now, the instruction requires the jurors to find all of these elements of murder in the first degree by lying in wait. It can make no difference that the instruction concludes by saying that the law presumes the killing was done deliber
4. The court told the jury that “reasonable doubt, as used in the instructions, means a real and substantial doubt, based upon the testimony or want of testimony in the case,.and not a mere possibility of the defendant’s innocence.” The use of the word real was much criticised in State v. Owens, 79 Mo. 632, in defining reasonable doubt, though the judgment was not reversed on that ground. In State v. Jones, 86 Mo. 627, the instruction was the same as in State v. Owens, supra, and yet we did not regard the use of the word real as error for which the judgment should be reversed. It is to be regretted that definitions well understood should be departed from, but we cannot say there is reversible error in this instruction.
8. A further ground for a new trial is, that the jurors were permitted to separate. The evidence as to this is, that in the morning of a day during the trial, and before the cause had been submitted to the jury, and while the jurors were locked up in a room at a hotel; in charge of an officer, they called the officer and said they wanted to answer a call of nature. Two of the jurors then said they did not want to go. The officer went out with ten, leaving the other two locked up in the room, taking the key with him. On.the return of the ten, the two were still locked up in the room. There is no pretense that these jurors were, or were in a situation to be, approached by any one. Under like circumstances, it
We And no error in the record, and the judgment must, therefore, be afñrmed.