State v. Nash

Decision Date28 February 1883
Citation88 N.C. 618
CourtNorth Carolina Supreme Court
PartiesSTATE v. R. S. NASH.
OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

INDICTMENT for an assault and battery tried at Fall Term, 1882, of RICHMOND Superior Court, before Gilmer, J.

The indictment charged that the assault was committed with a deadly weapon. (See State v. Nash, 86 N. C., 650).

On the trial, Nathan Reynolds, the person on whom the assault was made, testified for the state, that on the night of the 23d of December, 1879, he and other young men of the neighborhood made up a “bell crowd” of about twenty in number, and between eight and nine o'clock that night, went around the defendant's house, ringing bells and blowing horns, and that some of the party carried guns, and perhaps pistols, which were fired off a few times, and after they were going away from the house and had got about thirty-five yards off (but still within the defendant's enclosure, not having reached the gate), the defendant came out on his porch and fired his gun at the crowd, inflicting a serious wound on the witness by shooting into his leg eight shot (of the size of duck shot), three of which still remain therein, the others having been extracted.

The defendant was put upon the stand as a witness in his own behalf, admitted that he fired the gun at the crowd, and proposed to prove that before he fired, his child, who was sleeping near a window in the house, through which the noise of the bells and horns and firing was heard and the flash of the firing seen, rose up and ran to the witness with blood on her face (caused as he afterwards learned, but did not then know, by her running against the end of a table), and under the impulse of the moment, believing that she had been shot, he got his gun and went to the door, and, seeing the flash of pistols fired as he supposed by the retreating crowd, fired his gun at and into the crowd. This evidence was objected to by the state and excluded by the court, and the defendant excepted.

The defendant also proposed to testify that on the next day he saw some shot embedded in the plank of the house, which were not there the day before. Objected to and excluded. Defendant excepted.

The court instructed the jury that the defendant had not shown justification for the shooting. Verdict of guilty; judgment; appeal by the defendant.

Attorney-General, for the State .

Messrs. Burwell, Walker & Tillett, for the defendant .

ASHE, J.

The question presented by the record is, was there error in the refusal of the judge to receive the evidence offered by the defendant. We are of the opinion there was error in rejecting so much of the proposed testimony as tended to show, on the part of the defendant, a reasonable ground of belief that the trespassers upon his premises had fired into his house and wounded his child.

It may be, as testified by the prosecutor, that the band of young men, who went to the defendant's house on the night in question, only intended innocent amusement; but there is one unusual and rather extraordinary feature in the transaction, that the party intending a mere serenade, should, on such an occasion, carry guns and pistols; they are certainly very unusual instruments of music in the hands even of a calithumpian band.

They entered the enclosure, twenty in number; marched round his house, blowing horns, ringing bells and firing guns and pistols; which must have greatly frightened the family and the defendant himself, unless he is a man of more than ordinary courage. But whether awed or not by such a display of numbers and lawlessness, yielding to the dictates of prudence, he submitted to the humiliating indignity and remained within doors, until his little daughter, as he proposed to show, ran to him with her face bleeding; and believing, as was natural under the circumstances, that she had been shot, he seized his gun and went to the door, saw the flash of fire-arms, and shot into the crowd and wounded the prosecutor. We must suppose it was all the work of an instant.

Did the defendant, under these circumstances, have reasonable ground to believe that his daughter had been shot, and the assault upon him and his house was continuing? If he had, then he ought to have been acquitted.

We know this has been a much mooted question, but upon an investigation of the authorities, our conclusion is, that a reasonable belief that a felony is in the act of being committed on one, will excuse the killing of the supposed assailant, though no felony was in fact intended. And whatever will excuse homicide, will of course, excuse an assault and battery.

In State v. Scott, 4 Ired., 409, the court say: “In consultation it seemed to us at one time that the case might properly have been left to the jury, favorably to the prisoner, on the principle of Levet's case, Cro. Car., 538 (1...

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39 cases
  • State v. Robinson
    • United States
    • North Carolina Supreme Court
    • 23 Marzo 1938
    ...4. That the jury, and not the party charged, is to determine the reasonableness of the belief or apprehension upon which he acted. State v. Nash, 88 N.C. 618." For application of the principle, see State v. Barrett, supra; State v. Cox, 153 N.C. 638, 69 S.E. 419; State v. Blackwell, supra; ......
  • State v. Holland
    • United States
    • North Carolina Supreme Court
    • 11 Mayo 1927
    ... ... defendant excepted and assigned error ...          Wilson ... Warlick, of Newton, A. A. Whitener, Whitener & Whitener and ... C. L. Whitener, all of Hickory, for appellant ...          Dennis ... G. Brummitt, Atty. Gen. and Frank Nash, Asst. Atty. Gen., for ... the State ...          CLARKSON, ...          The ... first law of nature is that of self-defense. The law of this ... state and elsewhere recognizes this primary impulse and ... inherent right. One being without fault, in defense of his ... ...
  • State v. Knotts
    • United States
    • North Carolina Supreme Court
    • 23 Diciembre 1914
    ... ... quashed, nor the judgment thereon stayed, by reason of any ... informality or refinement, if in the bill or proceeding ... sufficient matter appears to enable the court to proceed to ... judgment. Revisal, § 3254 ...          It is ... true that this court held in State v. Nash, 88 N.C ... 618, that if one commits an indiscriminate assault, by one ... stroke or pistol shot, upon two or more persons, it is an ... assault upon each and every one of them, following State ... v. Merritt, 61 N.C. 134, and that an acquittal or ... conviction for the assault upon one ... ...
  • State v. Holland, (No. 482.)
    • United States
    • North Carolina Supreme Court
    • 11 Mayo 1927
    ...to pass upon the question of his motive in firing the shots, as well as the reasonableness of the grounds of his apprehension. State v. Nash, 88 N. C. 618; State v. Harris, 119 N. C. 861 ; State v. Hough, 138 N. C. 663 ; State V. Blevins, 138 N. C. 668 ; State v. Castle, 133 N. C. 769 ; Sta......
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