Woolweaver v. State
Woolweaver v. State
Opinion of the Court
Upon the trial of this cause the plaintiff in error excepted to a number of rulings made by the trial court, only one of which we think merits consideration here, namely: the exception taken to the refusal of the court to give to the jury that proposition of law requested by plaintiff in error, which relates to the proof necessary to constitute one an aider and abettor of a homicide occurring upon a sudden quarrel, where the proof is insufficient to establish a prior conspiracy.
Over many of the circumstances that occurred on the day of the homicide, and which led up to it, there seems to have been no substantial controversy. The record discloses that the plaintiff in error resided and kept a saloon at McArthur Junction, a small village located where the track of The Columbus, Hocking Valley and Toledo Railway Compan3'- and that of The Baltimore and Ohio SouthWestern Railroad Company cross each other; that Geo. T. Ewing was the station agent there; that mutual enmity existed between Ewing and the plaintiff in error; that the saloon of plaintiff in error was situated a hundred feet or more from the station buildings; that the plaintiff in error in the early part of the day of the homicide was intoxicated, and continued in that condition until after the homicide occurred, which happened near the middle of the afternoon ; that Ewing was absent from the station most of the day until about one o’clock when he returned; and that during his absence the plaintiff in error came up about the platform and station building, exhibiting special ill-will towards Ewing, and one or two other employes about the station, and ill-will generally towards the rest of them, applying to him and to them vile and abusive epithets, though exhibiting no ill feeling toward the deceased personally.
The plaintiff in error did not fire the fatal shot, and, therefore, if a party to the homicide, became such either because of a prior conspiracy, that made him a party to the act of his son, by reason of inciting or encouraging his son at the time of its commission, or by some overt act of his own, designed or done with a view to bring about that result.
The proposition requested, and which the court declined to give to the jury, reads as follows: “In the absence of a conspiracy, one who is present when • a homicide is com
This proposition the court modified by erasing the words “with a view,” and inserting in their place the word “tending,” so as to make it read “unless he does some overt act tending to produce that result,” and gave it to the jury as thus modified. If there was no prior conspiracy, and the act was committed upon a sudden quarrel, without the plaintiff in error having purposely incited or encouraged the perpetrator thereof, he ought not to be held to have a guilty connection therewith, unless he did some overt act “with a view,”—that is for the purpose—-to produce the result he is charged with aiding and abetting, for in such a state of fact no criminal intent would exist. But, under the rule of law embraced in this proposition, as modified and given to the jury, the plaintiff in error might have been convicted without proof of a guilty purpose, and when he had a casual connection only with the homicide; for it authorized a verdict of guilty if he did any overt act that tended in any degree to cause the death of the deceased, although the act was done by him without any purpose to cause that result, and in fact did not produce it; and although there was neither a previous guilty conspiracy, nor any incitement or encouragement, purposely given, by him, at the time, to the actual perpetrator of the homicide.
True, in the Goins case, supra, the plaintiff in error, at the moment of the killing, was engaged in an independent struggle with a person other than the one wht> was killed, but Goins was of the party with the one who gave the fatal stab, and his immediate antagonist was of the party of the one who received the death wound. In the case under consideration, there was evidence tending to show that the plaintiff in error and his two sons, composed one party, while the deceased and Mr. Ewing, and probably Mr. Ryons, composed the other party. • This difference in the circumstances in no wise affected the principles by which the criminal character of the acts of the parties should be tested. If there was a conspiracy, each conspirator was chargeable with
Where satisfactory proof of a conspiracy has not been produced, it often becomes a nice and difficult matter to determine the criminal liability of each of a party of friends or kindred for the violent and unlawful acts of his fellows, committed in the course of a conflict, arising upon a sudden quarrel, with one or more antagonists.; and in such case, upon the trial of one of them, it is of the first importance that the correct rule of liability should be laid down to the jury; and if the instructions should extend, too far, the liability of the one on .trial for the acts of his fellows, it would be, necessarily, prejudicial to his lights. Therefore, as the proposition, in the form requested by the plaintiff in error, prescribed the correct rule of liability in the absence of proof of a conspiracy, it should have been given to the jury, and any modification that extended the liability, as thus prescribed, must be regarded as erroneous.
Judgment reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.