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R. v.
Dudley and Stephens
(1884), 14 Q.B.D. 273 (C.C.R.)
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 17 and 18 years of age, the crew of an
English ship, 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 ship.
That in this boat they had no supply of water and no supply
of food, except two 1 lb. 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 20th day when the act now in
question was committed. That on the 12th 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 18th 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.
The
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 seawater, 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.
THE COURT concluded that the prisoners' act in this case was willful
murder, that the facts as stated in the verdict are no legal justification
of the homicide; and in its unanimous opinion the prisoners are, upon
this special verdict, guilty of murder.
THE COURT then proceeded to pass sentence of death upon the prisoners.
This sentence was afterwards commuted by the Crown to six months'
imprisonment. |
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