State v. Fisher

Decision Date20 November 1885
Citation3 N.E. 379,103 Ind. 530
PartiesState v. Fisher.
CourtIndiana Supreme Court

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Appeal from White circuit court.

Reynolds & Sellers and W. C. Smith, for the State.

R. Gregory, for appellee, William Fisher.

ZOLLARS, J.

Section 1912, Rev. St. 1881, provides that whoever purposely and maliciously, with intent to maim or disfigure, cuts, bites, or slits the nose, etc., or puts out or destroys an eye of another person, etc., is guilty of malicious mayhem, and upon conviction thereof shall be imprisoned in the state prison not more than 14 years nor less than two years, and be fined not more than $2,000. The following section, 1913, provides that whoever violently and unlawfully deprives another of the use of any bodily member, or unlawfully and willfully disables the eye, etc., of another, is guilty of simple mayhem, and upon conviction thereof shall be fined not more than $2,000 nor less than $5, and shall be imprisoned in the county jail not more than 6 months nor less than 20 days. Appell e was indicted for malicious mayhem.

The indictment charges that he feloniously, purposely, and maliciously destroyed the eye of another, with intent thereby, feloniously, purposely, and maliciously, to maim him. The court refused instructions asked by the state, which were, in substance, that if the jury were not satisfied by the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that appellee was guilty of malicious mayhem, but were convinced by the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that he was guilty of simple mayhem, or of an assault and battery, they might acquit him of malicious mayhem, and convict him of simple mayhem, or of assault and battery. The court gave the following: “Proof showing the defendant guilty of assault and battery only, or of mere simple mayhem, will not be sufficient to sustain this charge. The question here is whether the defendant is guilty of the crime of the malicious mayhem with which he is charged.” The state excepted to the refusal of its instructions, and to the giving of the court's charge. Appellee was acquitted. The state appeals. The question presented by the record, and upon which the state asks the judgment of this court, is: Can a person charged with malicious mayhem, if the evidence warrants it, be convicted of simple mayhem, or of an assault and battery? We think that question must be answered in the affirmative. If a person purposely and maliciously puts out or destroys the eye of another, with the intent to maim him, he is guilty of malicious mayhem. If he violently and unlawfully puts out or destroys the eye of another, but without malice, he is guilty of simple mayhem, or, it may be, of an assault and battery only, according to the evidence. Malicious intent is the only thing that distinguishes malicious mayhem from simple mayhem. Included in malicious mayhem is necessary an assault and battery and simple mayhem. Add to an assault and battery mayhem and malicious intent, and we have the offense of malicious mayhem. Add to mayhem malicious intent, and we again have malicious mayhem. Malicious mayhem cannot be proven without proving necessarily an assault and battery and mayhem.

The statute provides that, upon an indictment for an offense consisting of different degrees, the jury may find ...

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