Herrin v. State
Herrin v. State
Opinion of the Court
This case is an appeal from Lamar county, on a writ of habeas corpus, granted by the Hon. Hardin Hart, and tried before him on the application of the prisoners for hail before indictment found.
The prisoners had been previously committed to the enstody of the sheriff by a justice of the peace, after an examination held on the twenty-sixth day of May, 1870, upon a complaint presented against them, charging them with the murder of one Oliver Irvine, on the twenty-first of May, 1870, and the evidence there given is that presented to us by the record.
It substantially states that the deceased, Irvine, iu company with one William H. Bridge, were riding out upon a hunting excursion, when they were assailed by three men, who came from the bushes into the road, and ordered the deceased and Bridge to half, or they would shoot them, and rode up to within a few yards of Irvine and Bridge.
The evidence discloses that two of these men were the appellants, in -company with one Abe Herrin, and that they were strangers to Irvine and Bridge. Irvine carried a pistol, a revolver, and Bridge was without arms.
The advancing party demanded Irvine’s pistol, and after some parley directed Bridge to take it and lay it on the ground, which
' Abe Herrin accused Bridge of shooting at him, and pursued Bridge a short distance into the bushes, firing several shots at him without effect, when he, Herrin, abandoned the pursuit.
About this time Bridge heard four shots in the direction of the place where he had separated from Irvine and appallants, and heard a cry, which he thought that of Irvine.
Nothing more is known of Irvine until a few hours afterward, when a search was made and his dead body found lying near where Bridge had separated from him, pierced with four bullets, two of which passed through the brain.
His pistol was found by the road side, and two barrels of it empty. Some seventy yards distant, .Abe Herrin, was lying wounded. Other details are given, not necessary to be here considered.
The appellants insist that the proof is not evident, neither the “presumption great,” to connect them with the killing; and farther, that the evidence does not show murder in the first degree.
Brom the evidence in the record, we are at no loss in connecting the appellants with the homicide.
The deceased, when last seen alive, was in their custody; they had already drawn pistols and threatened to shoot, and while the witness Bridge was still near, four shots were fired, corresponding in number with the wounds found upon the body of Irvine.
It is not shown that Irvine fired any shots at all, and if he did fire the two charges missing from Ms pistol, the circumstances leave the inference that it was done in self defense.
These facts are not weakened by the showing that the appellants made no effort to escape.
If tbe killing was minder in tbe first degree, the prisoners were mot entitled to bail. By our statute, “ all murder committed * * * with express malice is murder in the first degree.”
Express malice is a deliberate intention of doing bodily harm to another, not authorized by law. • (1 Hale, P. 0., 451.) This is the common law definition, and has been adopted in prior decisions of this court.
The statutes of most of the States express substantially tbe same meaning by the words “ deliberate, premeditated killing.”
Was there in this case a deliberate, premeditated design upon the part of appellants to take the life of Irvine ?
The evidence shows that the violence was inflicted with deadly weapons, and in such a manner as leaves no room to doubt that death was intended; that they considered of what they would do, and then did it.- ■
It is not shown that Irvine offered any provocation which could reduce the offense to one of inferior degree.
The attempt to get possession of Irvine’s pistol had occupied some fifteen minutes, which was abundant time for the parties to reflect upon what they intended doing.
It is not necessary that the deliberate, premeditated intention ' should he formed and matured prior to the occasion at which it is carried into execution.
If this intention is executed the moment after it has been formed in the mind, the offense is the same as if it had existed for a much longer time. (Jordan v. State, 10 Tex. R., 479; Mitchem v. State, 11 Ga., 615; Green v. State, 13 Mo., 382.)
Judging from such evidence as the record discloses, we think the district judge committed no error in refusing bail. The judgment is therefore affirmed.
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- J. M. Herrin and another v. State
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- Syllabus
- 1. The common law definition of express malice as a deliberate intention of doing bodily barm to another, not authorized by law, has been adopted in former decisions of this court. 3. It is not necessary that the deliberate, premeditated intention should be formed and matured prior to the occasion at which it is carried into execution. If executed the moment it has been formed in the mind, the offense is the same as if it had existed for a much longer time. 3. Deceased and one B., while riding together on a country road, were assailed by three strangers, who rushed from the bushes, with pistols drawn, and ordered them to halt or they would shoot them. B. was unarmed, but deceased had a six-shooter pistol, which the assailing party ordered him to surrender. He refused to surrender it to them, but consented to give it to B., who, under orders from the assailants, received and placed it on the ground. B. made his escape into the hushes, and in a few minutes heard four shots in the direction of where he had left the others, and also heard a cry which he thought was in the voice of the deceased, who, a few hours afterwards, was found dead on the ground, pierced with four bullet wounds, and a short distance off his pistol was found, with two of its barrels discharged. About seventy yards from him lay one of the assailants, severely wounded by a pistol shot; hut, according to B.’s testimony, this man was shot by one of his own comrades (who, by other testimony, was proved to be his brother) ■ on a sudden quarrel arising between them while endeavoring to get deceased’s pistol irom him. The assailing party gave early notice of the difficulty, and stopped at the nearest house, where they were arrested for the murder of the deceased. B. was the only witness of what transpired between the parties. Held, that the facts make a case against the prisoners, in which the “ proof is evident or the presumption great,” and there was no error in refusing them the privilege of bail; for, even if it he assumed that the deceased fired the shots missing from his pistol, yet, as the prisoners had him in their custody, and with their pistols drawn upon him, the inference is that he only acted in self-Jefense, 4. It is a common ruse of parties guilty of homicide to stand their ground, avow their deed, and invent some explanation to circumvent the law ; hut such devices should not avail, when the testimony and the circumstances make a case against them.