Special Issue – 135 Years of The Law Reports and The Weekly Law Reports
[DIVISIONAL COURT]
THE QUEEN v. DUDLEY AND STEPHENS.
1884 Dec. 9.
LORD COLERIDGE, C.J., GROVE AND DENMAN, JJ. POLLOCK AND HUDDLESTON, BB.
Criminal Law - Murder - Killing and eating
Flesh of Human Being under Pressure of Hunger - "Necessity" - Special Verdict -
Certiorari - Offence on High Seas - Jurisdiction of High Court.
A
man who, in order to escape death from hunger, kills another for the purpose of
eating his flesh, is guilty of murder; although at the time of the act he is in
such circumstances that he believes and has reasonable ground for believing that
it affords the only chance of preserving his life. At the trial of an
indictment for murder it appeared, upon a special verdict, that the prisoners D.
and S., seamen, and the deceased, a boy between seventeen and eighteen, were
cast away in a storm on the high seas, and compelled to put into an open boat;
that the boat was drifting on the ocean, and was probably more than 1000 miles
from land; that on the eighteenth day, when they had been seven days without
food and five without water, D. proposed to S. that lots should be cast who
should be put to death to save the rest, and that they afterwards thought it
would be better to kill the boy that their lives should be saved; that on the
twentieth day D., with the assent of S., killed the boy, and both D. and S. fed
on his flesh for four days; that at the time of the act there was no sail in
sight nor any reasonable prospect of relief; that under these circumstances
there appeared to the prisoners every probability that unless they then or very
soon fed upon the boy, or one of themselves, they would die of starvation:-
Held, that upon these facts, there was no proof of any such necessity
as could justify the prisoners in killing the boy, and that they were guilty of
murder.
INDICTMENT for the murder of Richard Parker on the high seas
within the jurisdiction of the Admiralty. At the trial before Huddleston,
B., at the Devon and Cornwall Winter Assizes, November 7, 1884, the jury, at the
suggestion of the learned judge, found the facts of the case in a special
verdict which stated "that on July 5, 1884, the prisoners, Thomas Dudley and
Edward Stephens, with one Brooks, all able-bodied English seamen, and the
deceased also an English boy, between seventeen and eighteen years of age, the
crew of an English yacht, a registered English vessel, were cast away in a storm
on the high seas 1600 miles from the Cape of Good Hope, and were compelled to
put into an open boat belonging to the said yacht. That in this boat they had no
supply of water and no supply of food, except two 11b. tins of turnips, and for
three days they had nothing else to subsist upon. That on the fourth day they
caught a small turtle, upon which they subsisted for a few days, and this was
the only food they had up to the twentieth day when the act now in question was
committed. That on the twelfth day the remains of the turtle were entirely
consumed, and for the next eight days they had nothing to eat. That they had no
fresh water, except such rain as they from time to time caught in their oilskin
capes. That the boat was drifting on the ocean, and was probably more than 1000
miles away from land. That on the eighteenth day, when they had been seven days
without food and five without water, the prisoners spoke to Brooks as
to what should be done if no succour came, and suggested that some one should be
sacrificed to save the rest, but Brooks dissented, and the boy, to whom they
were understood to refer, was not consulted. That on the 24th of July, the day
before the act now in question, the prisoner Dudley proposed to Stephens and
Brooks that lots should be cast who should be put to death to save the rest, but
Brooks refused to consent, and it was not put to the boy, and in point of fact
there was no drawing of lots. That on that day the prisoners spoke of their
having families, and suggested it would be better to kill the boy that their
lives should be saved, and Dudley proposed that if there was no vessel in sight
by the morrow morning the boy should be killed. That next day, the 25th of July,
no vessel appearing, Dudley told Brooks that he had better go and have a sleep,
and made signs to Stephens and Brooks that the boy had better be killed. The
prisoner Stephens agreed to the act, but Brooks dissented from it. That the boy
was then lying at the bottom of the boat quite helpless, and extremely weakened
by famine and by drinking sea water, and unable to make any resistance, nor did
he ever assent to his being killed. The prisoner Dudley offered a prayer asking
forgiveness for them all if either of them should be tempted to commit a rash
act, and that their souls might be saved. That Dudley, with the assent of
Stephens, went to the boy, and telling him that his time was come, put a knife
into his throat and killed him then and there; that the three men fed upon the
body and blood of the boy for four days; that on the fourth day after the act
had been committed the boat was picked up by a passing vessel, and the prisoners
were rescued, still alive, but in the lowest state of prostration. That they
were carried to the port of Falmouth, and committed for trial at Exeter. That
if the men had not fed upon the body of the boy they would probably not have
survived to be so picked up and rescued, but would within the four days have
died of famine. That the boy, being in a much weaker condition, was likely to
have died before them. That at the time of the act in question there was no sail
in sight, nor any reasonable prospect of relief. That under these circumstances
there appeared to the prisoners every probability that unless they then fed or
very soon fed upon the boy or one of themselves they would die of starvation.
That there was no appreciable chance of saving life except by killing some one
for the others to eat. That assuming any necessity to kill anybody, there was no
greater necessity for killing the boy than any of the other three men." But
whether upon the whole matter by the jurors found the killing of Richard Parker
by Dudley and Stephens be felony and murder the jurors are ignorant, and pray
the advice of the Court thereupon, and if upon the whole matter the Court shall
be of opinion that the killing of Richard Parker be felony and murder, then the
jurors say that Dudley and Stephens were each guilty of felony and murder as
alleged in the indictment." The learned judge then adjourned the assizes
until the 25th of November at the Royal Courts of Justice. On the application of
the Crown they were again adjourned to the 4th of December, and the case ordered
to be argued before a Court consisting of five judges.
Dec. 4. Sir H.
James, A.G. (A. Charles, Q.C.,C. Mathews, and
Danckwerts, with him), appeared for the Crown. The record having been
read, A. Collins, Q.C. (H. Clark, and Pyke, with him),
for the prisoners, objected, first, that the statement in the verdict that the
yacht was a registered British vessel, and that the boat in which the
prisoners were belonged to the yacht, was not part of any finding by the jury;
secondly, that the formal conclusion of the verdict, "whether upon the whole
matter the prisoners were and are guilty of murder, the jury are ignorant,"
&c., was also no part of the finding of the jury, as they simply found the
facts relating to the death of Parker, and nothing else was referred to them;
thirdly, that the record could not be filed, for it had been brought into the
court by order only, and not by certiorari. Sir H. James, A.G., for
the Crown. As to the first point, the Crown are willing that the statement that
the yacht was a registered British vessel, and that the boat belonged to the
yacht, should be struck out of the record. With regard to the conclusion of the
verdict it is according to the form of special verdicts in the Reports: Rex
v. Pedley Leach, C. C. 242; Rex v. Oneby 2 Ld. Raym. 1485;
Mackally's Case 9 Co. 65 b.; Hazel's Case. Leach, C. C. 368
As for the certiorari there was no necessity for it,
for the Court of Assize is now part of this Court. [THE COURT intimated that
the points taken on behalf of the prisoners were untenable.] With regard to
the substantial question in the case - whether the prisoners in killing Parker
were guilty of murder - the law is that where a private person acting upon his
own judgment takes the life of a fellow creature, his act can only be justified
on the ground of self-defence - self-defence against the acts of the person
whose life is taken. This principle has been extended to include the case of a
man killing another to prevent him from committing some great crime upon a third
person. But the principle has no application to this case, for the prisoners
were not protecting themselves against any act of Parker. If he had had food in
his possession and they had taken it from him, they would have been guilty of
theft; and if they killed him to obtain this food, they would have been guilty
of murder. The case cited by Puffendorf in his Law of Nature and Nations, which
was referred to at the trial, has been found, upon examination in the British
Museum, in the work of Nicolaus Tulpius, a Dutch writer, and it is clear that it
was not a judicial decision.1 .
[He was stopped.] A.
Collins, Q.C., for the prisoners. The facts found on the special verdict
shew that the prisoners were not guilty of murder, at the time when they killed
Parker, but killed him under the pressure of necessity. Necessity will excuse
all act which would otherwise be a crime. Stephen, Digest of Criminal Law, art.
32, Necessity. The law as to compulsion by necessity is further explained in
Stephen's History of the Criminal Law, vol. ii., p. 108, and an opinion is
expressed that in the case often put by casuists, of two drowning men on a plank
large enough to support one only, and one thrusting the other off, the survivor
could not be subjected to legal punishment. In the American case of The
United States v. Holmes 1 Wallace, Jun. 25., the proposition that a passenger on board a
vessel may be thrown overboard to save the others is sanctioned. The law as to
inevitable necessity is fully considered in Russell on Crimes, vol. i. p. 847,
and there are passages relating to it in Bracton, vol. ii. p. 277; Hale's Pleas
of the Crown, p. 54 and c. 40; East's Pleas of the Crown, p. 221, citing Dalton,
c. 98, "Homicide of Necessity," and several cases, amongst others
McGrowther's Case 18 How. St. Tr. 391; Stratton's Case 21 How. St. Tr. 1223.
Lord Bacon, Bac. Max.,
Reg. 5, gives the instance of two shipwrecked persons clinging to the same plank
and one of them thrusting the other from it, finding that it will not support
both, and says that this homicide is excusable through unavoidable necessity and
upon the great universal principle of self-preservation, which prompts every man
to save his own life in preference to that of another, where one of them must
inevitably perish. It is true that Hale's Pleas of the Crown, p. 54, states
distinctly that hunger is no excuse for theft, but that is on the ground that
there can be no such extreme necessity in this country. In the present case the
prisoners were in circumstances where no assistance could be given. The essence
of the crime of murder is intention and here the intention of the prisoners was
only to preserve their lives. Lastly, it is not shewn that there was
jurisdiction to try the prisoners in England. They were part of the crew of an
English yacht, but for anything that appears on the special verdict the boat may
have been a foreign boat, so that they were not within the jurisdiction of the
Admiralty: Reg. v. Keyn2 Ex. D. 63. The indictment is not upon the Act 17 &
18 Vict. c. 104, for an offence committed by seamen employed or recently
employed in a British ship. The special verdict cannot be amended in a capital
case by stating the real facts. Sir H. James, A.G., for the Crown.
[LORD COLERIDGE, C.J. The Court are of opinion that the conviction must be
affirmed. What course do you invite us to take?] To pronounce judgment and
pass sentence. This was the practice even when, as formerly, the record was
removed by certiorari: Rex v. Royce 4 Burr. 2073; Rex v. Athos 8 Mod. 136;
Rex v. Cock. 4 M. & S. 71
THE COURT intimated that judgment would be given on
December 9th.
Dec. 9. The judgment of the Court (Lord Coleridge,
C.J.,Grove and Denman, JJ.,Pollock and Huddleston, BB.) was delivered by
LORD COLERIDGE, C.J.The two prisoners, Thomas Dudley and Edwin Stephens,
were indicted for the murder of Richard Parker on the high seas on the 25th of
July in the present year. They were tried before my Brother Huddleston at Exeter
on the 6th of November, and, under the direction of my learned Brother, the jury
returned a special verdict, the legal effect of which has been argued before us,
and on which we are now to pronounce judgment. The special verdict as, after
certain objections by Mr. Collins to which the Attorney General yielded, it is
finally settled before us is as follows. [His Lordship read the special verdict
as above set out.] From these facts, stated with the cold precision of a special
verdict, it appears sufficiently that the prisoners were subject to terrible
temptation, to sufferings which might break down the bodily power of the
strongest man, and try the conscience of the best. Other details yet more
harrowing, facts still more loathsome and appalling, were presented to the jury,
and are to be found recorded in my learned Brother's notes. But nevertheless
this is clear, that the prisoners put to death a weak and unoffending boy upon
the chance of preserving their own lives by feeding upon his flesh and blood
after he was killed, and with the certainty of depriving him of any
possible chance of survival. The verdict finds in terms that "if the men had not
fed upon the body of the boy they would probably not have survived," and
that "the boy being in a much weaker condition was likely to have died
before them." They might possibly have been picked up next day by a passing
ship; they might possibly not have been picked up at all; in either case it is
obvious that the killing of the boy would have been an unnecessary and
profitless act. It is found by the verdict that the boy was incapable of
resistance, and, in fact, made none; and it is not even suggested that his death
was due to any violence on his part attempted against, or even so much as feared
by, those who killed him. Under these circumstances the jury say that they are
ignorant whether those who killed him were guilty of murder, and have referred
it to this Court to determine what is the legal consequence which follows from
the facts which they have found. Certain objections on points of form were
taken by Mr. Collins before he came to argue the main point in the case. First
it was contended that the conclusion of the special verdict as entered on the
record, to the effect that the jury find their verdict in accordance, either
way, with the judgment of the Court, was not put to them by my learned Brother,
and that its forming part of the verdict on the record invalidated the whole
verdict. But the answer is twofold - (1) that it is really what the jury meant,
and that it is but the clothing in legal phraseology of that which is already
contained by necessary implication in their unquestioned finding, and (2) that
it is a matter of the purest form, and that it appears from the precedents with
which we have been furnished from the Crown Office, that this has been the form
of special verdicts in Crown cases for upwards of a century at least. Next
it was objected that the record should have been brought into this Court by
certiorari, and that in this case no writ of certiorari had issued. The fact is
so; but the objection is groundless. Before the passing of the Judicature Act,
1873 (36 & 37 Vict. c. 66), as the courts of Oyer and Terminer and
Gaol delivery were not parts of the Court of Queen's Bench, it was necessary
that the Queen's Bench should issue its writ to bring before it a record not of
its own, but of another Court. But by the 16th section of the Judicature Act,
1873, the courts of Oyer and Terminer and Gaol delivery are now made part of the
High Court, and their jurisdiction is vested in it. An order of the Court has
been made to bring the record from one part of the court into this chamber,
which is another part of the same court; the record is here in obedience to that
order; and we are all of opinion that the objection fails. It was further
objected that, according to the decision of the majority of the judges in the
Franconia Case2 Ex. D. 63, there was no jurisdiction in the Court at Exeter to
try these prisoners. But (1) in that case the prisoner was a German, who had
committed the alleged offence as captain of a German ship; these prisoners were
English seamen, the crew of an English yacht, cast away in a storm on the high
seas, and escaping from her in an open boat; (2) the opinion of the minority in
the Franconia Case2 Ex. D. 63 has been since not only enacted but declared by
Parliament to have been always the law; and (3) 17 & 18 Vict. c. 104, s.
267, is absolutely fatal to this objection. By that section it is enacted as
follows:- "All offences against property or person committed in or at any place
either ashore or afloat, out of her Majesty's dominions by any master seaman or
apprentice who at the time when the offence is committed is or within three
months previously has been employed in any British ship, shall be deemed to be
offences of the same nature respectively, and be inquired of, heard, tried,
determined, and adjudged in the same manner and by the same courts and in the
same places as if such offences had been committed within the jurisdiction of
the Admiralty of England." We are all therefore of opinion that this objection
likewise must be overruled. There remains to be considered the real question
in the case - whether killing under the circumstances set forth in the verdict
be or be not murder. The contention that it could be anything else was, to the
minds of us all, both new and strange, and we stopped the Attorney General in
his negative argument in order that we might hear what could be said in support
of a proposition which appeared to us to be at once dangerous, immoral, and
opposed to all legal principle and analogy. All, no doubt, that can be said has
been urged before us, and we are now to consider and determine what it amounts
to. First it is said that it follows from various definitions of murder in books
of authority, which definitions imply, if they do not state, the doctrine, that
in order to save your own life you may lawfully take away the life of another,
when that other is neither attempting nor threatening yours, nor is guilty of
any illegal act whatever towards you or any one else. But if these definitions
be looked at they will not be found to sustain this contention. The earliest in
point of date is the passage cited to us from Bracton, who lived in the reign of
Henry III. It was at one time the fashion to discredit Bracton, as Mr. Reeve
tells us, because he was supposed to mingle too much of the canonist and
civilian with the common lawyer. There is now no such feeling, but the passage
upon homicide, on which reliance is placed, is a remarkable example of the kind
of writing which may explain it. Sin and crime are spoken of as apparently
equally illegal, and the crime of murder, it is expressly declared, may be
committed "linguâ vel facto"; so that a man, like Hero "done to death by
slanderous tongues," would, it seems, in the opinion of Bracton, be a person in
respect of whom
might be grounded a legal indictment for murder. But in the very passage as to
necessity, on which reliance has been placed, it is clear that Bracton is
speaking of necessity in the ordinary sense - the repelling by violence,
violence justified so far as it was necessary for the object, any illegal
violence used towards oneself. If, says Bracton, the necessity be "evitabilis,
et evadere posset absque occisione, tunc erit reus homicidii" - words which shew
clearly that he is thinking of physical danger from which escape may be
possible, and that the "inevitabilis necessitas" of which he speaks as
justifying homicide is a necessity of the same nature. It is, if possible,
yet clearer that the doctrine contended for receives no support from the great
authority of Lord Hale. It is plain that in his view the necessity which
justified homicide is that only which has always been and is now considered a
justification. "In all these cases of homicide by necessity," says he, "as in
pursuit of a felon, in killing him that assaults to rob, or comes to burn or
break a house, or the like, which are in themselves no felony" (1 Hale's Pleas
of the Crown, p. 491). Again, he says that "the necessity which justifies
homicide is of two kinds: (1) the necessity which is of a private nature; (2)
the necessity which relates to the public justice and safety. The former is that
necessity which obligeth a man to his own defence and safeguard, and this takes
in these inquiries:- (1.) What may be done for the safeguard of a man's own
life;" and then follow three other heads not necessary to pursue. Then Lord Hale
proceeds:- "As touching the first of these - viz., homicide in defence of a
man's own life, which is usually styled se defendendo." It is not possible to
use words more clear to shew that Lord Hale regarded the private necessity which
justified, and alone justified, the taking the life of another for the safeguard
of one's own to be what is commonly called "self-defence." (Hale's Pleas of the
Crown, i. 478.) But if this could be even doubtful upon Lord Hale's words,
Lord Hale himself has made it clear. For in the chapter in which he deals with
the exemption created by compulsion or necessity he thus expresses himself:- "If
a man be desperately assaulted and in peril of death, and cannot otherwise
escape unless, to satisfy his assailant's fury, he will kill an innocent person
then present, the fear and actual force will not acquit him of the crime and
punishment of murder, if he commit the fact, for he ought rather to die himself
than kill an innocent; but if he cannot otherwise save his own life the law
permits him in his own defence to kill the assailant, for by the violence of the
assault, and the offence committed upon him by the assailant himself, the law of
nature, and necessity, hath made him his own protector cum debito moderamine
inculpatæ tutelæ." (Hale's Pleas of the Crown, vol. i. 51.) But,
further still, Lord Hale in the following chapter deals with the position
asserted by the casuists, and sanctioned, as he says, by Grotius and Puffendorf,
that in a case of extreme necessity, either of hunger or clothing; "theft is no
theft, or at least not punishable as theft, as some even of our own lawyers have
asserted the same." "But," says Lord Hale, "I take it that here in England, that
rule, at least by the laws of England, is false; and therefore, if a person,
being under necessity for want of victuals or clothes, shall upon that account
clandestinely and animo furandi steal another man's goods, it is felony, and a
crime by the laws of England punishable with death." (Hale, Pleas of the Crown,
i. 54.) If, therefore, Lord Hale is clear - as he is - that extreme necessity of
hunger does not justify larceny, what would he have said to the
doctrine that it justified murder? It is satisfactory to find that another
great authority, second, probably, only to Lord Hale, speaks with the same
unhesitating clearness on this matter. Sir Michael Foster, in the 3rd chapter of
his Discourse on Homicide, deals with the subject of "homicide founded in
necessity"; and the whole chapter implies, and is insensible unless it does
imply, that in the view of Sir Michael Foster "necessity and self-defence"
(which he defines as "opposing force to force even to the death") are
convertible terms. There is no hint, no trace, of the doctrine now contended
for; the whole reasoning of the chapter is entirely inconsistent with it. In
East's Pleas of the Crown (i. 271) the whole chapter on homicide by necessity is
taken up with an elaborate discussion of the limits within which necessity in
Sir Michael Foster's sense (given above) of self-defence is a justification of
or excuse for homicide. There is a short section at the end very generally and
very doubtfully expressed, in which the only instance discussed is the
well-known one of two shipwrecked men on a plank able to sustain only one of
them, and the conclusion is left by Sir Edward East entirely undetermined.
What is true of Sir Edward East is true also of Mr. Serjeant Hawkins. The
whole of his chapter on justifiable homicide assumes that the only justifiable
homicide of a private nature is the defence against force of a man's person,
house, or goods. In the 26th section we find again the case of the two
shipwrecked men and the single plank, with the significant expression from a
careful writer, "It is said to be justifiable." So, too, Dalton c. 150,
clearly considers necessity and self-defence in Sir Michael Foster's sense of
that expression, to be convertible terms, though he prints without comment Lord
Bacon's instance of the two men on one plank as a quotation from Lord Bacon,
adding nothing whatever to it of his own. And there is a remarkable passage at
page 339, in which he says that even in the case of a murderous assault upon a
man, yet before he may take the life of the man who assaults him even in
self-defence, "cuncta prius tentanda." The passage in Staundforde, on which
almost the whole of the dicta we have been considering are built, when it comes
to be examined, does not warrant the conclusion which has been derived from it.
The necessity to justify homicide must be, he says, inevitable, and the example
which he gives to illustrate his meaning is the very same which has just been
cited from Dalton, shewing that the necessity he was speaking of was a physical
necessity, and the self-defence a defence against physical violence. Russell
merely repeats the language of the old text-books, and adds no new authority,
nor any fresh considerations. Is there, then, any authority for the
proposition which has been presented to us? Decided cases there are none. The
case of the seven English sailors referred to by the commentator on Grotius and
by Puffendorf has been discovered by a gentleman of the Bar, who communicated
with my Brother Huddleston, to convey the authority (if it conveys so much) of a
single judge of the island of St. Kitts, when that island was possessed partly
by France and partly by this country, somewhere about the year 1641. It is
mentioned in a medical treatise published at Amsterdam, and is altogether, as
authority in an English court, as unsatisfactory as possible. The American case
cited by my Brother Stephen in his Digest, from Wharton on Homicide, in which it
was decided, correctly indeed, that sailors had no right to throw
passengers overboard to save themselves, but on the somewhat strange
ground that the proper mode of determining who was to be sacrificed was to vote
upon the subject by ballot, can hardly, as my Brother Stephen says, be an
authority satisfactory to a court in this country. The observations of Lord
Mansfield in the case of Rex v. Stratton and Others 21
How. St. Tr. at p. 1223, striking and
excellent as they are, were delivered in a political trial, where the question
was whether a political necessity had arisen for deposing a Governor of Madras.
But they have little application to the case before us, which must be decided on
very different considerations. The one real authority of former time is Lord
Bacon, who, in his commentary on the maxim, "necessitas inducit privilegium
quoad jura privata," lays down the law as follows:- "Necessity carrieth a
privilege in itself. Necessity is of three sorts - necessity of conservation of
life, necessity of obedience, and necessity of the act of God or of a stranger.
First of conservation of life; if a man steal viands to satisfy his present
hunger, this is no felony nor larceny. So if divers be in danger of drowning by
the casting away of some boat or barge, and one of them get to some plank, or on
the boat's side to keep himself above water, and another to save his life thrust
him from it, whereby he is drowned, this is neither se defendendo nor by
misadventure, but justifiable." On this it is to be observed that Lord Bacon's
proposition that stealing to satisfy hunger is no larceny is hardly supported by
Staundforde, whom he cites for it, and is expressly contradicted by Lord Hale in
the passage already cited. And for the proposition as to the plank or boat, it
is said to be derived from the canonists. At any rate he cites no authority for
it, and it must stand upon his own. Lord Bacon was great even as a lawyer; but
it is permissible to much smaller men, relying upon principle and on the
authority of others, the equals and even the superiors of Lord Bacon as lawyers,
to question the soundness of his dictum. There are many conceivable states of
things in which it might possibly be true, but if Lord Bacon meant to lay down
the broad proposition that a man may save his life by killing, if necessary, an
innocent and unoffending neighbour, it certainly is not law at the present day.
There remains the authority of my Brother Stephen, who, both in his Digest
and in his History of the Criminal Law, uses language perhaps wide enough to
cover this case. The language is somewhat vague in both places, but it does not
in either place cover this case of necessity, and we have the best authority for
saying that it was not meant to cover it. If it had been necessary, we must with
true deference have differed from him, but it is satisfactory to know that we
have, probably at least, arrived at no conclusion in which if he had been a
member of the Court he would have been unable to agree. Neither are we in
conflict with any opinion expressed upon the subject by the learned persons who
formed the commission for preparing the Criminal Code. They say on this
subject:- "We are certainly not prepared to suggest that necessity should in
every case be a justification. We are equally unprepared to suggest that
necessity should in no case be a defence; we judge it better to leave such
questions to be dealt with when, if ever, they arise in practice by applying the
principles of law to the circumstances of the particular case." It would
have been satisfactory to us if these eminent persons could have told us whether
the received definitions of legal necessity were in their judgment correct and
exhaustive, and if not, in what way they should be amended, but as it is we have, as they say, "to
apply the principles of law to the circumstances of this particular case."
Now, except for the purpose of testing how far the conservation of a man's
own life is in all cases and under all circumstances, an absolute, unqualified,
and paramount duty, we exclude from our consideration all the incidents of war.
We are dealing with a case of private homicide, not one imposed upon men in the
service of their Sovereign and in the defence of their country. Now it is
admitted that the deliberate killing of this unoffending and unresisting boy was
clearly murder, unless the killing can be justified by some well-recognised
excuse admitted by the law. It is further admitted that there was in this case
no such excuse, unless the killing was justified by what has been called
"necessity." But the temptation to the act which existed here was not what the
law has ever called necessity. Nor is this to be regretted. Though law and
morality are not the same, and many things may be immoral which are not
necessarily illegal, yet the absolute divorce of law from morality would be of
fatal consequence; and such divorce would follow if the temptation to murder in
this case were to be held by law an absolute defence of it. It is not so. To
preserve one's life is generally speaking a duty, but it may be the plainest and
the highest duty to sacrifice it. War is full of instances in which it is a
man's duty not to live, but to die. The duty, in case of shipwreck, of a captain
to his crew, of the crew to the passengers, of soldiers to women and children,
as in the noble case of the Birkenhead; these duties impose on men the
moral necessity, not of the preservation, but of the sacrifice of their lives
for others, from which in no country, least of all, it is to be hoped, in
England, will men ever shrink, as indeed, they have not shrunk. It is not
correct, therefore, to say that there is any absolute or unqualified necessity
to preserve one's life. "Necesse est at eam, non at vivam," is a saying of a
Roman officer quoted by Lord Bacon himself with high eulogy in the very chapter
on necessity to which so much reference has been made. It would be a very easy
and cheap display of commonplace learning to quote from Greek and Latin authors,
from Horace, from Juvenal, from Cicero, from Euripides, passage after passage,
in which the duty of dying for others has been laid down in glowing and emphatic
language as resulting from the principles of heathen ethics; it is enough in a
Christian country to remind ourselves of the Great Example whom we profess to
follow. It is not needful to point out the awful danger of admitting the
principle which has been contended for. Who is to be the judge of this sort of
necessity? By what measure is the comparative value of lives to be measured? Is
it to be strength, or intellect, or what? It is plain that the principle leaves
to him who is to profit by it to determine the necessity which will justify him
in deliberately taking another's life to save his own. In this case the weakest,
the youngest, the most unresisting, was chosen. Was it more necessary to kill
him than one of the grown men? The answer must be "No"-
"So spake the Fiend, and with necessity, The tyrant's plea,
excused his devilish deeds."*
It is not suggested that in this particular case the deeds were
"devilish," but it is quite plain that such a principle once admitted might be
made the legal cloak for unbridled passion and atrocious crime. There is no safe
path for judges to tread but to ascertain the law to the best of their ability
and to declare it according to their judgment; and if in any
case the law appears to be too severe on individuals, to leave it to the
Sovereign to exercise that prerogative of mercy which the Constitution has
intrusted to the hands fittest to dispense it. It must not be supposed that
in refusing to admit temptation to be an excuse for crime it is forgotten how
terrible the temptation was; how awful the suffering; how hard in such trials to
keep the judgment straight and the conduct pure. We are often compelled to set
up standards we cannot reach ourselves, and to lay down rules which we could not
ourselves satisfy. But a man has no right to declare temptation to be an excuse,
though he might himself have yielded to it, nor allow compassion for the
criminal to change or weaken in any manner the legal definition of the crime. It
is therefore our duty to declare that the prisoners' act in this case was wilful
murder, that the facts as stated in the verdict are no legal justification of
the homicide; and to say that in our unanimous opinion the prisoners are upon
this special verdict guilty of murder.2
THE COURT then proceeded to
pass sentence of death upon the prisoners.3
Solicitors for the Crown:
The Solicitors for the Treasury. Solicitors for the prisoners:
Irvine & Hodges.
A. P. S.
* Editor's note: see Milton, Paradise Lost, Book IV, lines
393-394
1 HUDDLESTON, B., stated that the full facts of
the case had been discovered by Sir Sherston Baker, a member of the Bar, and
communicated to him as follows:- A Dutch writer, Nicolaus Tulpius, the
author of a Latin work, Observationum Medicarum, written at Amsterdam in 1641,
states that the following facts were given him by eye-witnesses. Seven
Englishmen had prepared themselves in the Island of St. Christopher (one of the
Caribbean Islands) for a cruise in a boat for a period of one night only, but a
storm drove them so far out to sea that they could not get back to port before
seventeen days. One of them proposed that they should cast lots to settle on
whoso body they should assuage their ravenous hunger. Lots were cast, and the
lot fell on him who had proposed it. None wished to perform the office of
butcher; and lots were again cast to provide one. The body was afterwards eaten.
At length the boat was cast on the shore of the Isle of St. Martin, one of the
same group, where the six survivors were treated with kindness by the Dutch, and
sent home to St. Christopher. The principal passages in the original are as
follows:- "... Horribilis illa tragoedia quam non ita pridem conspexit India
Occidentalis in septem Britannis; quibus necessitas famem fecit undecim dierum.
Velut nobis sincere relatum, a testibus oculatis qui hæc ipsa ventorum
ludibria et humaniter navibus suis excepêre, et officiosè ad suos
reduxêre, septem Britanni accinxerant se in insulâ
Christophorianâ unius solummodo noctis itineri, ultrâ quam etiam non
extenderant commeatum. At interveniens tempestas abripuit imparatos longius in
mare quam at potuerint reverti ad portum destinatum ante diem septimum decimum
.... Cujus intracti erroris, nullum finem promittente spatioso mari, adigebantur
tandem (O durum necessitatis telum !) ancipiti sorti committere, cujus carne
urgentem famem, et quo sanguine compescerent inexplebilem sitim. Sod jacta alea
(quis eventum hunc non miretur!) destinabit primæ cædi primum hujus
lanienæ auctorem .... Quâ oratione at non parum lenivit horrendi
facinoris atrocitatem, sic erexit utique usque eò flaccidos ipsorum
animos: at tandem reperiretur aliquis, sorte tamen priusductus qui petierit
animose perorantis jugulem, et intulerit vim volenti. Cujus cadaveris expetiit
quilibet illorum tam præproperè frustum, at vix potuerit tam
festinanter dividi. "... At tandem misertus hujus erroris Deus deduxit
ipsorum naviculam ad insulam Martiniam in quâ à præsidio
Belgico et humaniter excepti, et benignè ad suos reducti fuêre. Sed
vix attigerant terram quin accusarentur protinus a prætore homicidii. Sed
diluente crimen inevitabili necessitate, dedit ipsis brevì veniam ipsorum
judex."
2 My brother Grove has furnished me with the following
suggestion, too late to be embodied in the judgment but well worth preserving:
"If the two accused men were justified in killing Parker, then if not rescued in
time, two of the three survivors would be justified in killing the third, and of
the two who remained the stronger would be justified in killing the weaker, so
that three men might be justifiably killed to give the fourth a chance of
surviving." - C.
3 This sentence was afterwards commuted by the
Crown to six months' imprisonment.