The Speluncean Explorers
The Speluncean Explorers
The Speluncean Explorers
Tolentino
1st year
Part I.
Facts:
Five cave explorers were trapped inside a cave due to landslide. On their 20 th day inside the cave,
a radio contact was established with the rescue team. The spelunkers learned that the rescue would occur
in 10 more days and that they might starve to death. Roger Whetmore, one of the spelunkers and the
victim , asked the rescue camp whether they would be able to survive if they consume the flesh of one of
them and if it is advisable for them to cast lots to determine which of them should be eaten, but no one in
the rescue camp was willing to answer the question. The spelunkers, after deliberation, decided to cast
lots. Prior to the casting lots, Whetmore sought to withdraw from the agreement, a request that was
denied by the others, who proceeded to hold the casting in Whetmore’s absence, the results of which went
against Whetmore. He was thereupon sacrificed for the benefit of the others, who shortly thereafter were
rescued.
Following their rescue and recovery, the survivors were charged with the murder and sentenced
to death. The relevant statute provides that "Whoever shall willfully take the life of another shall be
punished by death", offering no exceptions which would be relevant to the case.
Issue:
1. Whether or not N.C.S.A (N.S) 12-A should be given literal interpretation.
2. Whether or not the defendants are guilty of murder or not.
Decision:
In the case at bar, the statute used is clear and unambiguous, therefore, it shall be applied in its
literal meaning. The general rule is that if the statute is clear and free from ambiguity there is no room for
interpretation. A judge should simply apply the words that the legislature has enacted into law in the form
of a statute if it is not ambiguous. Moral considerations are indeed irrelevant in applying this statute. One
must not forget that law is law.
The defendants in this case willfully killed the victim of Roger Whetmore to free themselves
from starvation and to survive until they get rescued. There is a necessity to live and survive but there is
no sufficient case of necessity to kill. The physician stated that there is a little possibility to survive; it
does not immediately imply the impossibility of survival, it is therefore, not absolute. In the case of
Commonwealth v. Valjean whereby the defendant was indicted for the larceny of a loaf of bread, and
offered as a defense that he was in a condition approaching starvation. The court rejected this defense. As
what Judge Tatting said, “If hunger cannot justify the theft of wholesome and natural food, how can it
justify the killing and eating of a man?”. Necessity is not a defense in murder.
Therefore, the defendants are guilty of the crime of murder for killing Roger Whetmore and shall
be sentenced to death.
Part II. Decide the case/Arguments:
The statute N.C.S.A (N.S) 12-A, which states that: “Whoever shall willfully take the life of
another shall be punished by death” is clear and unambiguous and shall be applied in its literal meaning.
Moral considerations are indeed irrelevant in applying this statute. One must not forget that law is law,
and so is its morality. A judge should simply apply the words that the legislature has enacted into law in
the form of a statute if it is not ambiguous. Keen J is averse to Foster J’s a purposive approach to statutory
interpretation that would allow the court to justify a result it continues proper. He emphasizes that laws
may have many possible purposes, with difficulties arising in divining the actual "purpose" of a piece of
legislation.
The statute prohibited the taking of life that was done ‘willfully’, there is a plausible view that a
killing done under perception of immediate death is not willful at all. However, in the case at bar, the
defendants willfully taken the life of Roger Whetmore. They acted out of self-interest for them to survive.
The defendants cannot use self-defense to mitigate their sentence nor to acquit them because there is no
aggression in the part of the victim. Even though the conduct of the defendants in killing the victim is out
of necessity, it is not a privilege to harm or kill someone else. In the Alexander Holmes’ trial, it was held
that self-preservation is not always a defense to homicide.
Therefore, the defendants, in willfully taking the life of Roger Whetmore, is guilty of the crime of
murder and shall be sentenced to death.