The defendant was prosecuted by information, filed in the Superior Court of San Joaquin County, for the crime of murder, and was found guilty of the crime of manslaughter.
It appears from the record in the case, that the crime with which the defendant was charged, was committed in the month of August, 1879; and before the new Constitution went into effect, an indictment was presented against the defendant by the Grand Jury of San Joaquin County, which indictment was dismissed by the Court, on motion of the District Attorney; and afterwards, to wit, on the 9th day of August, 1880, an information was filed in the case by the District Attorney. A motion was made to set aside the information, on the ground that the defendant had previously been indicted for the same offense, which motion was denied by the Court. It was also claimed, on the trial, that the dismissal of the indictment operated as an acquittal, and the plea of former acquittal was interposed on behalf of the defendant.
It is perfectly clear that the dismissal of the indictment was no bar to another indictment for the same offense, and it is equally clear that the defendant never was in jeopardy under the indictment. But a more serious question is made as to the information, which we will now proceed to examine.
It is claimed that the defendant could not be prosecuted by information because the homicide was committed in August, 1879, at a time when the Constitution then in force provided that “ no person shall be held to. answer for a capital or otherwise infamous crime * * * unless on presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury. ” (Constitution of 1863, Art. i.,
In pursuance of the above constitutional provision, the Legislature passed an act which went into effect on the 9th day of April, 1880, providing that “ all public offenses triable in the Superior Courts must be prosecuted by indictment or information, except as provided in the next section” (Penal Code, § 888), and this case does not come within any of the exceptions enumerated in Section 889. The claim on behalf of the defendant is, that neither the Constitution nor the act of the Legislature is applicable to the present case, because, as has already been remarked, the homicide was committed in the year 1879.
We will first consider the question of power, and then the fact of intention. Mr. Cooley in his work on Constitutional Limitations, page 331, says: " But so far as mere modes of procedure are concerned, a party has no more right in a criminal than in a civil action to insist that his case shall be disposed of under the law in force when the act to be investigated is charged to have taken place. Remedies must always be under the control of the Legislature, and it would create endless confusion in legal proceedings, if every case was to be conducted only in accordance with the rules of practice, and heard only by the Courts in existence when its facts arose. The Legislature may abolish Courts and create new ones, and it may prescribe altogether different modes of procedure, though it cannot lawfully, we think, in so doing, dispense with any of these substantial protections with which the existing law surrounds the person accused of crime. Statutes giving the Government additional challenges, and others which authorized the amendment of indictments, have been sustained and applied to past transactions, as doubtless would be any similar statute, calculated simply to improve the remedy, and in its operation working no injustice to the defendant, and depriving him of no substantial right.”
It is not an uncommon practice - to change the number of Grand Jurors required to investigate criminal charges, but we have never heard of the right of the Legislature to make such changes questioned, neither has it ever been claimed that the charge must be investigated by the precise number of Grand Jurors of which that body was composed, at the time the act was committed.
In the ease of Springfield v. Hampden Commissioners of Highways, 6 Pick. 508, the Supreme Court of Massachusetts say: “But there is no such thing as a vested right to a particular remedy. The legislature may always alter the form of administering right and justice, and may transfer jurisdiction from one tribunal to another.”
Mr. Bishop, in his work on “Statutory Crimes,” lays down the same doctrine. He says: “There is no such thing as a vested right in any particular remedy.” (§ 178.)
On principle and authority, we think, there can be no objection to the new remedy prescribed by the Constitution and the act of the Legislature. It was as competent to introduce the prosecution by information and to make the same applicable to past offenses, as it was to establish a new forma in which prosecutions for past offenses should take place.
And on the question of intention we are equally clear. The Constitution declares that “all offenses heretofore required to be prosecuted by indictment shall be prosecuted by information after examination and commitment by a magis
The next question in the case arises out of the refusal of the Court to admit certain evidence offered in behalf of the defense. The evidence offered, and rejected by the Court, consisted of certain threats alleged to have been made by the deceased, which were communicated to the defendant. It will be conceded that threats made by the deceased, when communicated to the defendant, are sometimes competent evidence in his behalf, and in some cases they are admissible, although never communicated. (People v. Arnold, 15 Cal. 476.)
The evidence was offered for the purpose of establishing a case of justifiable homicide, and its admissibility depends upon the facts and circumstances of the killing. If A. threaten the life of B., this fact will not of itself justify B. in killing A. There must be some act on the part of the person making the threat, from which it appears that there is real or apparent danger of the execution of the threat. Speaking upon this subject, Mr. Wharton, in his work on Criminal Evidence, says: “Can evidence to the effect that the deceased, prior to a homicide, threatened the defendant’s life, be received? And if so, is it a prerequisite to the proof of such threats that they should be shown to have been communicated to the defendant? Certainly, if such evidence is
In the case of Hughey v. The State, 47 Ala. 103, the Court says: “No threats unaccompanied with acts which threaten the life or limb of the slayer, will justify or excuse a felonious homicide. The threats insisted on in this case were not of this character. The Court properly excluded them, as they could have been offered for no other purpose.”
In the case of Evans v. The State, 44 Miss. 770, the Court uses this language: “There is no principle of criminal law better settled—none more necessary to the peace of society and the safety of human life—than that threats, however deliberately made, do not justify an assault and battery, much less the taking the life of the party making them. That is excused when done in the necessary defense of one’s own life, or to escape great bodily harm. To shoot down another on sight, and who, at the time, is making no hostile demonstration dangerous to life and limb, and especially if not prepared and armed so to do, is, in law, murder. It is murder, because the law tolerates no justification and accepts no excuse for the destruction of human life, on the plea of self-defense, except that the death of .the adversary was
The case of the State v. Hays, 23 Missouri, 287, is instructive on this subject. There certain threats made by the deceased, were offered and excluded by the Court, and the ruling of the Court below was sustained by the Supreme Court. The Judge delivering the opinion of the Court says: “Had Brown, the deceased, attacked Hays, or made efforts to take the advantage of him in personal difficulty, in such a manner as to cause Hays to believe there was reasonable ground to suppose that Brown meant to do him some great bodily harm, and Hays had, to prevent this, killed Brown, then the proof of previous threats by Brown would have been proper and highly important testimony, if recently made and known to him. But such is not this case. * * Previous threats are
The case of the State v. Hall is also in point. In that case the Court below instructed the jury as follows: “No threats or menaces, made by the deceased against the defendant D. M. Hall, can avail Hall, unless he at the time of the killing was actually assailed, or had sufficient evidence to convince any reasonable person that he was in danger of incurring bodily injury, or of losing his life at the hands of the deceased. Whatever threats may have been made by the deceased, they cannot be of avail to the defendant, unless at the time of the killing something was done which would induce a reasonable man to suppose that he was in danger of great bodily harm, or of losing his life. All antecedent threats are dependent upon the facts, at the time of the killing ; and in order to justify the homicide it must appear that at the time of the killing there was some action which would induce a reasonable man to believe that he was in danger of great bodily harm or of losing his life.” (9 Nevada, 59.) And the Supreme Court of Nevada held that the instruction was a proper one. This instruction clearly took from the jury all right to consider the mere threats of the deceased, unaccompanied by any hostile demonstration at the time of the homicide.
The People v. Scoggins, 37 Cal. 683-4, is substantially to the same effect. “A person whose life has been threatened by another, whom he knows, or has reason to_ believe, has armed himself for the avowed purpose of taking his life, or inflicting a great personal injury upon him, may reasonably infer, when a hostile meeting occurs, that his adversary intends to carry his threats into execution. The previous
The above cases harmonize with that general and well-settled principle of criminal law expressed by Judge Washington in the case of United States v. Wiltberger, 3 Wash. C. C. 515, in the following language:- “A man may oppose force to force in defense of his person, his family, or property against one who manifestly endeavors by surprise or violence to commit a felony, as murder, robbery, or the like. But to justify killing the aggressor, his apparent intent must be to commit a felony. That apparent intent is to be collected from the attending circumstances, the manner of the assault, the nature of the weapon used, and the like, and it must appear that the danger was imminent and the species of resistance used necessary to avert it.” See, also, The State v. Field, 14 Maine, 247.
It is contended on behalf of the defendant, that the lives of his mother and sister were in imminent danger from the hands of the deceased at the time the fatal shot was fired.
What we have already said, disposes of the exception to the action of the Court in its charge to the jury; and we find no error in the proceedings affecting any substantial right of the defendant. The defendant was convicted simply of manslaughter, with a recommendation to mercy, and the circumstances of the case were not such as to justify a more lenient result.
Judgment and order affirmed.
Mtbiok, J., Ross, J., and McKee, J., concurred.