White v. Conly
White v. Conly
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Mrs. Conly, the defendant in error, recovered of White damages for killing her husband. The facts are, Conly and White, at a trial before a magistrate between them, had a quarrel. It began by angry words addressed by Conly to White, which were replied to, in an angry manner, and both parties advanced and fought, and during the fight, White’s son, J. T. White, who had not engaged in the quarrel, cut Conly with a knife in the stomach. Of this wound the said Conly died, and this (suit was brought by his widow to recover damages against both — ■ father and son. Verdict and judgment were rendered against both, and B. E. White alone appealed. The Referees recommend an affirmance of the judgment, and plaintiff in error has excepted to their report.
. The exceptions are directed mainly to the charge, and to the refusal to charge as requested.
The court charged the jury as follows: “If you find from the proof that Conly and B. F. White were quarreling, and B. F. White advanced upon Conly, and assaulted him, and the fight between the two ensued, and during the progress of the fight J. T. White rushed in and stabbed Conly to death, acting in sympathy and in aid of his father, then both are guilty of an unlawful killing, and are liable to the plaintiff in damages.”
The ease of Beets v. The State, Meigs’ R., 105, is relied upon to sustain the correctness of the charge in this case. In that case the court charged the jury if George Beets was fighting in self-defense, and James Beets shot Rayle, the deceased, without the knowledge or consent of George, George would be guilty of no offense; but if George fought willingly, so that he was guilty of an affray, and, while thus fighting, if James Beets shot Rayle, it would be manslaughter in George, although James shot without the knowledge or consent of George.
This court held. Judge Green delivering the opinion of the court, that there was no error in the charge of the court. " His Honor said, in support of the correctness of the holding, that if a man is-fighting with another, not intending to kill, but by an unlucky blow slays his adversary, he is guilty of manslaughter — not because he intended to kill, but because he was engaged in an unlawful act, and the ■blow and the death were the consequences of that act,
In 1 Bishop’s Cr. Law, sec. 439, it is said: “ The true view is doubtless as follows: Every man is responsible, criminally, for what of wrong, flows ¡directly from his corrupt intentions; but no man, intending wrong, is responsible for an independent act of wrong committed by another.” “ If the wrong Rone was a fresh and independent wrong, springing (wholly from the mind of the doer, the other is not jj j criminal therein, merely because when it was done he was intending to be partaker with the doer in a
The charge of his Honor, the circuit judge, malíes B. E. White responsible for the act of J. T. White, which he neither consented to, advised, or knew of, for we think it satisfactorily appears that B. E. White' did not know that Conly was stabbed until they were separated; nor did J. T. White participate in the quarrel, or say or do anything indicating a purpose to interfere, until he stabbed deceased. The injuries inflicted by B. E. White upon -Conly were slight. The injury of which' he died was not inflicted by B. E. White, nor by his procurement, advice, consent or knowledge, and it cannot be said that what he did was the natural or proximate cause of the death of Conly. To constitute a claim for damages, the party against whom they are claimed must be chargeable with the loss. The loss or injury must be the natural and proximate consequence of the wrong. 9 Heis., 851. And in Manier v. The State, 6 Bax., 600, it is said, in every unlawful homicide the killing must be done by the_ party charged, or by another in complicity with him, or it must be the natural and reasonable sequence of some unlawful or negligent act in which the accused' is engaged; and, it is added, it would be monstrous to
"We hold, therefore, that the charge in this case was erroneous, and that the report of the Referees should be set aside, and the judgment of the circuit court should be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial as to B. F. White.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- B. F. White v. N. E. J. Conly
- Status
- Published