A warrant issued by a commissioner of a court of the United
States is not void for the want of a seal, the commissioner having
no seal, and not being required by statute to affix one to warrants
issued by him.
The same result is reached under the laws of Arkansas, which
prescribed the form of warrant as attested under hand, but not
under seal.
The settled rule that where a person having authority to arrest,
and using the proper means for that purpose is resisted, he can
repel force with force, and if the party making the resistance is
unavoidably killed, the homicide is justifiable, may be invoked by
a person who resists and kills the officer if he was ignorant of
the fact that he was an officer, and when such a defense is set up
to an indictment for murder, it is error to charge the jury that if
the threatening or violent conduct of the prisoner prevented the
officer from giving notice of his official character, he would not
be required to give notice.
The possession of a conscience void of offense towards God and
man is not an indispensable prerequisite to justification of action
in the face of imminent and deadly peril, nor does the intrinsic
rightfulness of the occupation or situation of a party, having in
itself no bearing upon or connection with an assault, impose a
limitation upon the right to repel it.
The motive of a person, accused of murdering an officer trying
to arrest him, in being where he was at the time of the killing has
nothing to do with the question of his right of self-defense in
itself, and his previous
Page 153 U. S. 615
unlawful conduct should form no element in the solution of that
question except as it throws light on his belief that his arrest
was sought by the officer.
While it is well settled in federal courts that the presiding
judge may sum up the facts to the jury and express an opinion upon
them, he should take care to separate the law from the facts and
leave the latter in unequivocal terms to the judgment of the
jury.
The circumstances of this case apparently aroused the
indignation of the judge who presided at the trial of it in an
uncommon degree, and that indignation was expressed in terms which
were not consistent with due regard to the right and duty of the
jury to exercise an independent judgment in the premises, or with
the circumspection and caution which should characterize judicial
utterances, and this Court is constrained to express its
disapprobation of this mode of instructing and advising a jury.
Henry Starr was convicted of the murder of Floyd Wilson, a white
man, and not an Indian, on December 13, 1892 at the Cherokee
Nation, in the Indian Territory, and November 4, 1893, sentenced to
be hanged on February 20, 1894, and thereupon sued out this writ of
error.
It appeared on the trial that on November 18, 1892, a warrant
was issued by a United States commissioner for the Western District
of Arkansas for the arrest of Starr and others on a charge of
larceny, which was delivered for execution to Henry E. Dickey, a
deputy United States marshal, and that the marshal summoned Floyd
Wilson, the deceased, as his posse to aid in the execution of the
warrant. The evidence tended to show that they proceeded on
horseback to the neighborhood of the place where Starr was to be
found, and after visiting several points, came to the house of one
Dodge, where they concealed themselves to await his coming; that
Starr passed Dodge's house on horseback, whereupon Wilson mounted
his horse, and pursued him; that the two jumped from their horses,
and stood facing each other a short time, apparently talking; that
it looked as if Starr "was trying to work off away from Wilson"
when Wilson mounted his horse again, and rode up to within
twenty-five or thirty feet of Starr, who made no effort to flee,
that Wilson then sprang from his horse, threw his gun to his
shoulder, and fired at Starr, who was then standing with his gun in
both hands, holding it down, but, upon Wilson's shooting, returned
the
Page 153 U. S. 616
fire, and continued to fire rapidly; that Wilson fell, raised
himself in a sitting position, jerked his six-shooter out, and
fired four times, when Starr ran up to him, and fired point blank
into him; Wilson died immediately afterwards. The evidence further
tended to show that during the affray Starr fired one shot at the
marshal; that he picked up Wilson's gun, found the lever out of
order, could not fire it, and turned to go away, and as he turned,
the marshal fired at him; that the marshal's and Starr's horses ran
away, but Starr caught Wilson's horse, and, mounting it, rode off.
The marshal testified that at the time of this occurrence, he had
the writ in his possession, and had instructed Wilson as to his
duties, and told him: "Now, don't kill this boy, if possible to get
along without it. We will call on him to surrender."
One Mrs. Padget testified that she saw the transaction from a
distance, called a quarter of a mile, and understood Wilson to say,
"Hold up; I have a warrant for you," and that Starr said, "You hold
up." She also, in answer to a question put by the district
attorney, stated that three or four weeks before the shooting,
Starr told her that he guessed a marshal named Cowden was hunting
for him "for jumping his bond." And Dickey said, in the course of
his testimony, that he went up in Starr's neighborhood to see a
person "shortly after Henry started, got out and jumped his
bond."
The witnesses agreed that Wilson fired the first shot and also
that, during the time he was riding up to Starr, Starr did not
raise his gun or make any effort to stop Wilson. Starr was a
Cherokee Indian, and at that time between 18 and 19 years of
age.
The warrant was signed by Stephen Wheeler, "Commissioner U.S.
Court, Western District of Arkansas," and tested as under seal, but
no seal was affixed, and counsel for defendant objected to the
warrant for the want of a seal, and took exception to its admission
on that ground, though, in answer to questions by the court, they
admitted that Wheeler was a United States commissioner for the
Western District of Arkansas at the time the writ issued, and that
the signature thereto was genuine.
Page 153 U. S. 617
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER, after stating the facts in the
foregoing language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
1. Exception was taken to the admission of the warrant in
evidence, and also to the reference thereto as valid process in the
charge of the court, upon the single ground that it bore no
seal.
It is not contended that a seal is required to such a warrant by
any act of Congress, or any statute of the State of Arkansas, but
the argument is that a warrant of arrest at common law was void if
it were without seal, and that the common law rule so asserted was
applicable.
In
Padfield v. Cabell,Willes 411, it was held that a
warrant need not be under seal unless required by statute, and
Willes, C.J., said:
"A warrant does not,
ex vi termini, apply to an
instrument under seal. It signifies no more than an authority. All
the books in which it said that a warrant must be under seal are
founded on a case in the Year Books, 14 Hen. 8, 16,
a,
where it is said that a justice of the peace is a judge of record,
and hath a seal of office, and that the inferior officer, when he
sees the seal, must give credit thereto."
In
Aylesbury v. Harvey, 3 Lev. 204, the defendant
seized a cup under a warrant by justices of the peace, on a
conviction under the excise law, to levy twenty shillings, and in
answer to an objection taken to the plea, that the warrant was not
pleaded with a profert, the court said: "The statute does not
require that the warrant be under hand and seal, but only in
writing, and no writing is to be so pleaded, except it be a deed,"
etc.
Hawkins P.C., bk. 2, c. 13, § 21, follows Lord Hale in stating
the necessity of the seal to a warrant of a justice of the peace,
but what Lord Hale says is this (1 Hale, P.C. 577): "It must be
under seal, though some have thought it sufficient if it
Page 153 U. S. 618
be in writing, subscribed by the justice." And he refers to
Dalton's Justice, wherein it is laid down that "their warrant or
precept in writing should be under their hand and seal, or under
their hand at least." First ed. 1618, 287. In the third edition
(1630), this is repeated, and it is further said:
"Also, the warrant of the justice of the peace should be under
the seal of the said justice, for every justice of the peace, being
a judge of record, hath a seal of his office, and when he marketh a
warrant under his seal to the officer, then the officer ought to
give credence to the seal, for that is his authority.
Per
Brudenel, 14 Hen. 8, 16."
This was the ground of Lord Coke's statement (2 Inst. 590) that
a mittimus
"must be in writing, in the name and under the seal of him that
makes the same, expressing his office, place, and authority, by
force whereof he marketh the mittimus."
Lord Chief Justice Willes, in
Padfield v. Cabell, thus
explains the language of Coke, and points out that Dalton
"puts two instances of warrants only under hands, one by Lord
Chancellor Ellesmere, for a contempt, A.D. 1607; the other by Chief
Justice Popham, 3 Jac. 1. There is also reference in Dalton to two
precepts or warrants by justices only under their hands."
Blackstone states that the "warrant ought to be under the hand
and seal of the justice" (4 Bl.Com. 290). But Chitty's note on that
passage is that "it seems sufficient if it be in writing, and
signed by him, unless a seal is expressly required by a particular
act of Parliament," citing Willes, 411; Buller N. P. 83. And this
is repeated in 1 Chitty Crim.Law 38.
In
Davis v. Clements, 2 N.H. 390, it was thought to be
well settled, on the authority of the cases in Willes and Levinz,
and Buller's N.P., that a seal was not essential when not
specifically required or provided for, and in
State v.
Vaughn, 1 Harp. 313, the Supreme Court of South Carolina
announced a similar conclusion in relation to a warrant of arrest,
the court saying, "There appears to be no reason why the official
act of a magistrate should be under seal, as it derives its
character from the law which prescribes it." The authorities
Page 153 U. S. 619
were reviewed by Foster, J., in the carefully considered case of
Millett v. Baker, 42 Barb. 215, and it was held that at
common law a seal was not necessary, even in criminal cases, unless
required by statute.
We are of opinion that there was no settled rule at common law
invalidating warrants not under seal, unless the magistrate issuing
the warrant had a seal of office, or a seal was required by
statute, and that the warrant of a commissioner of the United
States not having a seal of office, and not being required to affix
a seal thereto, cannot be held void for its omission. The same
result is reached under the laws of Arkansas, by sec. 1993 of which
the requisites and form of warrant, where the offense charged is
felony, are given, the form being attested "under hand," but not
"under seal." Dig.St.Ark. 1884, 505, c. 46, sub. iv, § 1993; 26
Stat. 81, 96, c. 182, § 33.
2. Counsel for defendant asked the court to give to the jury
four instructions. Of these, the first does not appear to have been
given, but no exception was taken to its refusal except as involved
in an exception to the action of the court in refusing the request
as to all. The court modified the last three and gave them, and the
defendant excepted to the modifications and the giving of the
instructions as modified in each instance. As the case will be sent
back for a new trial on other grounds, we will not review the
action of the court in respect of these instructions further than
to indicate our views as to a particular modification of
instruction numbered 3.
That instruction was as follows, the additions and modifications
by the court being italicized:
"The court instructs the jury that if the defendant, being
placed in a position in which his life is imperiled, slay an
officer of whose official character he has no notice,
or had no
reasonable ground to know his character, this is homicide in
self-defense if the killing was apparently necessary to save the
defendant's life, nor does it matter that the officer was legally
seeking to arrest the defendant, the defendant having no notice [of
that fact]
of the facts or no reason to know what the purpose
of the party was, provided the defendant did not
Page 153 U. S. 620
by his threatening and violent conduct prevent the officer
from making his character and mission known. This is given in
connection with the principle I have given you that if a man stands
up and obstructs arrest, prevents arrest, armed with deadly
weapons, and using them in a way that is threatening, then the
officer has no time, nor is he called upon to make proclamation.
The officer can stand on the defensive and overcome the danger and
take his man or overcome him by violence if necessary."
"If the jury believe from the evidence that the defendant was
placed in a position at the time of the killing in which his life
was imperiled by the deceased, and he slew him without having any
notice of his official character, and the killing was apparently
necessary to save his own life, then the killing of the deceased
was homicide in self-defense; nor does it matter that the deceased
was legally seeking to arrest the defendant if the defendant had no
notice of the fact or no reasonable grounds to know that he was an
officer."
"
It is not necessary to know that it is Floyd Wilson, but an
officer. But if the defendant prevented Floyd Wilson from giving
notice of his character or mission by threatening or violent
conduct, then of course he would not be required to give notice. He
can stand, as upon the other proposition, on the defensive. These
propositions are given on the theory that you believe that no
proclamation was made. If a proclamation was made, then the
defendant had express notice, he had positive notice, of
it."
The doctrine expressed in this instruction, as originally drawn,
was taken from section 419 of Wharton's Criminal Law, vol. I, p.
419, where many authorities are cited in its support, and was
accepted as correct by the learned trial judge. But he felt called
upon to qualify it not only in the direction whether the defendant
had reasonable ground to know that Wilson was an officer, but also
to the effect that if the accused prevented Wilson from giving
notice that he was acting officially, then the rule invoked would
not apply. The textbooks lay it down as a general proposition that
where a person having authority to arrest, and using the
Page 153 U. S. 621
proper means for that purpose, is resisted in so doing, he can
repel force with force, and need not give back, and if the party
making the resistance is unavoidably killed in the struggle, the
homicide is justifiable. 1 Russ. Crimes, 9th Am. ed. 892; Hale,
Hawkins, East, and Foster as there cited; 2 Bish.Crim.Law § 647; 1
Whart.Cr.Law § 415, and cases referred to. But the question did not
arise here in respect of homicide by the officer, but by the person
whom he was trying to arrest, and if defendant had no knowledge,
was not informed, and was not chargeable with notice of Wilson's
mission or official character, the fact, if there was evidence
tending to show it, that defendant prevented the giving of notice
had no such relation to defendant's claim of exemption from
liability founded on his ignorance, and the appearance of the facts
to him, as to justify the modification.
His conduct was part of the
res gestae, and important
in other aspects of the case, but the qualification went too far as
applied to the instruction under consideration.
3. In the case of
Commonwealth v. Selfridge, the
following propositions were laid down by Mr. Justice Parker,
afterwards Chief Justice of Massachusetts:
"
First. A man who, in the lawful pursuit of his
business, is attacked by another under circumstances which denote
an intention to take away his life or do him some enormous bodily
harm may lawfully kill the assailant provided he uses all the means
in his power otherwise to save his own life or prevent the intended
harm, such as retreating as far as he can or disabling his
adversary without killing him, if it be in his power.
Secondly. When the attack upon him is so sudden, fierce,
and violent that a retreat would not diminish, but increase, his
danger, he may instantly kill his adversary without retreating at
all.
Thirdly. When, from the nature of the attack, there
is reasonable ground to believe that there is a design to destroy
his life or commit any felony upon his person, the killing of the
assailant will be excusable homicide although it should afterwards
appear that no felony was intended."
Selfridge's Trial, p. 160.
The learned judge, in his charge in the present case,
referring
Page 153 U. S. 622
to the law as thus declared, said:
"Now what is the first proposition? Before I read it, I say to
you it contemplates a state of actual danger, real danger, in this
case, to this defendant at the time of the killing, springing from
the hands of Floyd Wilson, and danger that he did not create or
bring into existence by a wrongful act of his, because when we
undertake to enter upon the execution of as grave a design as the
taking of the life of individuals, we must enter upon it with clean
hands and a pure heart. If we have created a condition that leads
to a deadly result, the law of self-defense does not apply to it.
If we create that condition by doing a wrongful thing upon our part
which would naturally or reasonably or probably produce a deadly
result, the law says there is no self-defense for us, because we
are in the wrong in the first place. And especially does that
principle apply to a case when we are doing an act which, from its
nature and the way we are doing it, death would be naturally
produced in the conflict that may ensue because of the act that we
do. I say then we must enter upon the execution of this grave act
upon our part with clean hands and a pure heart or, as this law
expresses it, we must be in the lawful pursuit of our business. It
says that a man who in the lawful pursuit of his business -- that
means doing what he had a right to do -- in the right at the time
-- is attacked by another under circumstances which denote an
intention to take away his life or, it may be, to do some enormous
bodily harm, may lawfully kill the assailant -- when? -- provided
he use all the means in his power, otherwise, to save his own life,
or prevent the intended harm, such as retreating as far as he can,
or disabling his adversary without killing him, if it be in his
power. Now that is the first proposition of the law of
self-defense. Now let us see again, by enumerating each condition
that must enter into it, what they are. First we must be in the
right. We must be doing what we had a right to do at the time of
the killing, and when we are so situated, we are attacked by
another. How? What sort attack? . . . Now in this case, this
contemplates, as far as this case is concerned, that at the time
that Floyd Wilson was killed, that this defendant was in the right,
that he
Page 153 U. S. 623
was doing exactly what he had a right to do, and when so
situated, he was attacked by Wilson in such a way as to indicate a
deadly purpose upon his part."
We presume that the learned judge intended to express the view
that the existence of a state of facts which might render the
homicide excusable was subject to the qualification that wrongful
action on defendant's part towards Wilson did not occasion the
attack. But we are of opinion that the language just quoted was
open to a different construction, and tended fatally to mislead.
Whether the right of self-defense is legitimately exercised depends
upon the circumstances of the particular transaction, and we take
it that the possession of a conscience void of offense towards God
and men is not an indispensable prerequisite to justification of
action in the face of imminent and deadly peril. Nor does the
intrinsic rightfulness of the occupation or situation of a party,
having in itself no bearing upon or connection with an assault,
impose a limitation on the right to repel it.
This Cherokee, when riding across the country, was entitled to
protect his life although he may have forfeited a bail bond and
been seeking to avoid arrest on that account, of which there was
some slight evidence incidentally given. But if such were the fact,
he could not be considered as doing exactly what he had a right to
do, or as having an especially pure heart and clean hands. In a
subsequent part of the charge, the learned judge said, referring to
the defendant:
"He was a fugitive from justice if he had jumped the bond he had
in this court, as they say. If he had forfeited his bond, and was
up in that country hiding out from his usual place of abode to
avoid arrest, he was then a fugitive from justice, and you have a
right to take that condition into consideration. And in passing
upon the question as to what was the probable action of these
parties at that time, as to what would be the rights of the officer
and of this defendant, you have a right to see this transaction in
the condition that surrounded it, and as it was characterized by
the position of the parties towards it. You have a right to look at
that condition and see if he was expecting officers to pursue him.
If he was hiding away from
Page 153 U. S. 624
them, he was then a fugitive from justice, and if that was true,
it is a fact that becomes pertinent for you to take into
consideration, and the question whether he had reasonable ground,
from what transpired, to know that Floyd Wilson was an officer and
was seeking to arrest him."
This was duly excepted to, but apart from the exception, and
assuming that the circumstance that he may have anticipated arrest
for the reason suggested tended to show that he knew or believed
that such was the mission of Wilson, these comments put it beyond
question that the defendant was not doing what he had a right to
do, and if the jury understood that the scope of what had
previously been said embraced the rightfulness of his conduct
generally, rather than his conduct in respect of the immediate
transaction, they could not but have been materially influenced to
his prejudice.
In Selfridge's case, the defendant was walking up State Street
in Boston on an errand to the bank, and undoubtedly was in the
lawful pursuit of his business when he was attacked, and it was in
reference to that fact that the first proposition in the charge in
that case was laid down; but here, the particular words were
inapplicable, and their use calculated to create an erroneous
impression.
The motive of the accused in being where he was had nothing to
do with the question of his right of self-defense, in itself, and
the unlawfulness of his previous conduct formed, in itself, no
element in the solution of that question, but was to be considered
only insofar as it threw light on his belief that his arrest was
sought by the officer.
We are not insensible to the consideration that the learned
judge probably did not intend that his words should bear so
sweeping a signification, but they were used more than once, and
were not withdrawn or so qualified that it can be fairly held that
they were not substantially prejudicial.
4. We are compelled to add some further observations in relation
to the charge before us.
It is true that, in the federal courts, the rule that obtains is
similar to that in the English courts, and the presiding judge may,
if, in his discretion, he think proper, sum up the facts to
Page 153 U. S. 625
the jury, and if no rule of law is incorrectly stated and the
matters of facts are ultimately submitted to the determination of
the jury, it has been held that an expression of opinion upon the
facts is not reviewable on error.
Rucker v. Wheeler,
127 U. S. 85,
127 U. S. 93;
Lovejoy v. United States, 128 U.
S. 171,
128 U. S. 173.
But he should take care to separate the law from the facts and to
leave the latter in unequivocal terms to the judgment of the jury
as their true and peculiar province.
M'Lanahan
v. Universal Insurance Co., 1 Pet. 170,
26 U. S. 182.
As the jurors are the triers of facts, expressions of opinion by
the court should be so guarded as to leave the jury free in the
exercise of their own judgments. They should be made distinctly to
understand that the instruction is not given as to a point of law
by which they are to be governed, but as a mere opinion as to the
facts, to which they should give no more weight than it was
entitled to.
Tracy v.
Swartwout, 10 Pet. 80,
35 U. S. 96;
Games v.
Stiles, 14 Pet. 322. The same rule prevails in the
courts of many of the states, and in the charge in
Commonwealth
v. Selfridge, referred to by the court below, these views were
expressed upon the subject:
"As to the evidence, I have no intention to guide or interfere
with its just and natural operation upon your minds. I hold it the
privilege of the jury to ascertain the facts, and that of the court
to declare the law, to be distinct and independent. Should I
interfere, with my opinion, with the testimony, in order to
influence your minds to incline either way, I should certainly step
out of the province of the judge into that of an advocate. All that
I can see necessary and proper for me to do in this part of the
cause is to call your attention to the points or facts on which the
cause may turn, state the prominent testimony in the case which may
tend to establish or disprove those points, give you some rules by
which you are to weigh the testimony if a contrariety should have
occurred, and leave you to form a decision according to your best
judgment, without giving you to understand, if it can be avoided,
what my own opinion of the subject is. Where the inquiry is merely
into matters of fact, or where the facts and law can be clearly
discriminated, I should always wish the jury to leave the stand
without being able to ascertain what the
Page 153 U. S. 626
opinion of the court as to those facts may be, that their minds
may be left entirely unprejudiced to weigh the testimony and settle
the merits of the case."
So the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania says:
"When there is sufficient evidence upon a given point to go to
the jury, it is the duty of the judge to submit it calmly and
impartially, and if the expression of an opinion upon such evidence
becomes a matter of duty under the circumstances of the particular
case, great care should be exercised that such expression should be
so given as not to mislead, and especially that it should not be
one-sided. The evidence, if stated at all, should be stated
accurately, as well that which makes in favor of a party as that
which makes against him. Deductions and theories not warranted by
the evidence should be studiously avoided. They can hardly fail to
mislead the jury and work injustice."
Burke v. Maxwell, 81 Penn.St. 139, 153.
See
also 2 Thompson on Trials §§ 2293, 2294, and cases cited.
It is obvious that under any system of jury trials, the
influence of the trial judge on the jury is necessarily and
properly of great weight, and that his lightest word or intimation
is received with deference, and may prove controlling.
Hicks v.
United States, 150 U. S. 442,
150 U. S. 452.
The circumstances of this case apparently aroused the indignation
of the learned judge in an uncommon degree, and that indignation
was expressed in terms which were not consistent with due regard to
the right and duty of the jury to exercise an independent judgment
in the premises, or with the circumspection and caution which
should characterize judicial utterances.
In addition to what has already been quoted, the following
remarks, among others, were made:
"How unjust, how cruel, what a mockery, what a sham, what a
bloody crime it would be upon the part of this government to send a
man out into that Golgotha to officers and command them, in the
solemn name of the President of the United States, to execute these
processes, and say to them:"
"Men may defy you; men may arm themselves, and hold you at bay;
they may obstruct your process; they may intimidate your execution
of it; they may hinder you in making
Page 153 U. S. 627
the arrest; they may delay you in doing it by threats of armed
violence upon you, and yet I am unable, as chief executive of this
government, to assure you that you have any protection whatever. .
. ."
"What was this posse to do? What was he commanded to do? To go
into the Indian country, and hunt up Mr. Starr, and say to him that
on a certain day,"
"the judge of the federal court at Fort Smith will want your
attendance at a little trial down there, wherein you are charged
with horse stealing, and you will be kind enough, sir, to put in
your attendance on that day, and the judge sends his compliments to
you, Mr. Starr?"
"Is that his mission? Is that the message from this court that
is to be handed to Mr. Starr upon a silver platter, with all the
formalities of polite society? Is that what Floyd Wilson was
employed or engaged to do? No. This court did not have anything to
do with that command. It does not go in the name of this court. It
goes in the name of the chief executive officer, the President of
the United States. What does he say, of course, acting for the
people? . . . Without these officers, what is the use of this
court? It takes men who are brave to uphold the law here. I say,
because of this, and because there is no protection unless the law
is upheld by men of this kind, if it be true that you are satisfied
of the fact, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Floyd Wilson was a man
of this kind, that he was properly in the execution of the high
duty devolving upon him, and while so properly executing it, by the
light of these principles of the law I have given you, his life was
taken by this defendant, your solemn duty would be to say that he
is guilty of the crime of murder, because, if the law has been
violated, it is to be vindicated. You are to stand by the nation.
You are to say to all the people that no man can trample upon the
law, wickedly, violently, and ruthlessly; that it must be upheld if
it has been violated."
These expressions are qualified to some extent by other parts of
the charge, which we cannot give at length, but we are constrained
to express our disapprobation of this mode of instructing and
advising a jury.
Whatever special necessity for enforcing the law in all its
Page 153 U. S. 628
rigor there may be in a particular quarter of the country, the
rules by which, and the manner in which, the administration of
justice should be conducted are the same everywhere, and
argumentative matter of this sort should not be thrown into the
scales by the judicial officer who holds them.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded, with a
direction to grant a new trial.