1 CRIMINAL practice:con-popular prei.er afflctevlts by state. — I. The defendants applied for a continuance on the ground of excitement and prejudice existing . against them in the county where the indictment ° “ , was pending, which would prevent them from having a ^1' A’ial. The application was based 011 affidavits of the defendants, stating at length the existence 0f the excitement and prejudice, and the facts upon which their belief was based. These affidavits were supported by the affidavits of -five citizens of the county, including defendants’ attorneys. Objections were filed to the continuance, but the same were overruled, and “thereupon, and on its own motion, and against the objections of the defendant’s counsel, the court allowed the attorneys for the state to file counter affidavits as to the condition of public sentiment, excitement and prejudice, if any, against the defendants.” There was filed by the state the affidavits of sixty residents of the county contradictory to those filed by the defendants. A motion to strike the counter affidavits from the files was overruled. When a motion for a continuance is filed, supported by an affidavit of the party, on the
It will be seen that the statute authorizes counter affidavits to be filed by the state. We think the same rule should
, 2 MURDEll by nono'fpotsnmptton of malice. II. The indictment, in substance, charged that the murder was perpetrated by the administration of chloroform, a poison. The evidence tended to show that the -L defendants were confined in the penitentiary, an<^ they administered chloroform to the deceased, one of the guards, and then made their escape. They were recaptured in a few days thereafter. The court gave the jury the following instructions:
“10. In case£ of homicide, malice may be legitimately inferred from the means used and the manner of its use; and if the killing is with a dangerous and deadly poison, unlawfully administered, and it is not shown to have been given with a good intention, the presumption will be that the killing was intentional and voluntary, and with malice aforethought.
“15. If you shall find that chloroform is a dangerous and deadly poison,.and that the defendants were confined in the state penitentiary * * * ; that to effect an escape from said penitentiary they administered to the said John Elder * * * chloroform in quantities sufficient to ordinarily produce death, and from the poisonous effects of which the said John Elder died, and you so find beyond a reasonable doubt, you should find the defendants guilty of the crime of murder in the first degree, but if you do not so find, acquit of this degree.”
Counsel for the defendants insist that the foregoing instructions are erroneous, because, as they claim, under the statute, there may be a homicide caused by the administration of poison, and yet the perpetrator not necessarily be guilty of murder. The argument is that “ the intention in giving the poison may not have been a good one; yet it does not follow that it was the intention to kill Elder; on the contrary, when we reach that point, we will demonstrate the fact, gathered from the evidence, that no such intention was contemplated.” It is further insisted that, in order to constitute murder, the poison must have been administered with the specific intention to kill, and if administered merely with the intent of escaping from the penitentiary, then the defendants are not guilty of murder. It is provided by statute 'as follows:
“Whoever kills any human being with malice aforethought, either express or implied, is guilty of murder.
“All murder which is perpetrated by means of poison, or lying in wait, or by any other kind of willful, deliberate and
“Whoever commits murder otherwise than is set forth in the preceding section, is guilty of murder in the second degree * * * .” Code, § § 8848, 3849, 3850.
It has been held under similar statutes that, where murder is committed in the perpetration of rape or robbery, it is not essential that there should be established that there was a specific intent to kill. It is sufficient if death ensues from violence inflicted when the defendant is engaged in the commission of the offenses named. State v. Pike, 49 N. H., 399; Buel v. The People, 78 N. Y., 492; Moynihan v. The State, 70 Ind., 126; and this has been substantially ruled in State v. Weese, 53 Iowa, 92. Counsel for the defendants do not, as we understand, controvert the rule established in the foregoing cases. They say it was not - the intent of the statute to create a new offense, but merely to grade the punishment of the crime of murder. That is to say — if murder is committed in a certain way, or rather while the perpetrator is engaged in the commission of a crime named in the statute, then the punishment is greater than if otherwise committed. Counsel also insist that the decisions above quoted are based on the thought, that a homicide committed while the perpetrator is engaged in the commission of the crimes named in the statute was murder at common law, and that a homicide caused by the administration of- poison was not murder at common law, unless it was administered with an intent to kill. Therefore, it is said, there must be an intent to kill before one who administers poison to another, which causes death, is guilty of murder.
There is a statute in Indiana similar to ours, which was construed in Bechtelheimer v. The State, 54 Ind., 128. In this case poison was administered, which caused death, and,
The statute provides, “Whoever kills any human being with malice aforethought, either express or implied, is guilty of murder. . If the killing “is perpetrated by means of poison, or any other willful, deliberate, and premeditated killing,” then it is murder in the first degree. It seems to us that the meaning of the statute is that the administration of the poison constitutes the required deliberation and premeditation, and evinces an intent to kill, provided it is “unlawfully” administered, and “without a good intention.” That is to say, that the administration of the poison unlawfully, with a bad motive or intent, under the statute constitutes murder, if death ensues, and that it is immaterial whether or not there is a specific intent to kill. It: is fundamental that every one is presumed to intend the necessary consequences of an act deliberately done by him.
We are unable to draw a distinction between a homicide which occurs during the perpetration of a robbery, and when the homicide is caused by the administration of poison. Both, under the statute, must be deemed murder. If it is unnecessary to prove malice, or an intent to kill, in one case, why .not in the other? A person engaged in robbery, when he strikes the fatal blow, may not intend to kill, but may, and probably does, strike the blow the more readily to effect his escape. Still he is guilty of murder. So, in the case before us, it may be conceded that the object in the administration of the poison w'as to enable the defendants to escape from the penitentiary, still they are guilty of murder, because the poison was unlawfully administered, and thereby deliberation and premeditation sufficiently appear, and an intent to
Affirmed.