136 Va. 658 | Va. | 1923
delivered the opinion of the court.
We are asked to review a judgment against Edward Agostini who, upon an indictment for malicious assault with intent to kill John A. Kelly, was convicted of simple assault and sentenced to pay a fine of five hundred dollars.
The difficulty between the parties occurred at the corner of the Boulevard and Shirley avenue in the city of Norfolk, where the accused and Kelly were employed, respectively, as general foreman and workman in the construction of a new building.
The accused' relies on five assignments of error.
First Assignment. He complains of the action of the court in refusing to permit him to testify that he, as general foreman, had the authority, and was required under the contract with subcontractors, to supervise the work and give orders to all workmen employed on the job; and that as such general foreman he approached Kelly concerning the correction of a mistake in his work.
The record shows the accused was permitted to testify that he was employed by Agostini Bros., Inc., as genera! foreman in charge of the erection of the building; that while overlooking the work he saw Kelly setting a stone in the door of the main entrance.to the building and told him not to set the stone until the door frame had been placed; that Kelly insisted the setting of the stone would not interfere with the placing of the frame, and went ahead with the work; that the accused then said to Kelly, “I am the foreman of this job and you must not set the stone until the door frame is ready,” to which Kelly replied, “* * to hell with you,” and raised his hand in which he held a stonemason’s trowel, and made a motion to strike the accused with the trowel; that he thought Kelly was going to strike him with the trowel,
The issues involved were whether the accused struck Kelly and, if so, was he acting in self-defense.
His right of self-defense depended upon the attitude and conduct of Kelly immediately preceding the moment the accused laid his hands upon him. Had the jury believed the testimony of the accused, recited above, they would probably have acquitted him on the ground that he was acting in self-defense. In view of the testimony which the accused was permitted to give, it is clear that he was not prejudiced by the refusal of the court to permit him to testify to the exact facts referred to in this assignment. The assignment is without merit.
It is nowhere contended that he had no lawful right to be there, nor is there any evidence tending to show that he came up to Kelly in an unlawful manner.
‘‘It makes no difference what was the relation of the parties, no person has a right to hit another with a brick, if the accused did hit him, and I do not mean to say that he did use a brick.”
This remark was made when the court was ruling on the admissibility of the contract evidence and was not addressed to or intended to influence the jury. While the remark was improper and should not have been .made in the presence of the jury, the error was not such as to warrant us in disturbing their verdict.
■This assignment is likewise without merit. ' •
“If you believe from the evidence that the defendant was in charge of constructing a building, upon which said building J. Kelly was employed as a workman and that the defendant saw the said J. Kelly engaged in work which to the defendant did not appear proper, then the defendant had a lawful right to speak to the said J. Kelly and instruct him concerning the work in question; and if you further believe from the evidence, that the defendant so spoke to the said J. Kelly in a proper and lawful manner and that the said J. Kelly replied by cursing, or using insulting language to the defendant and made threatening motions with a stone or brick trowel, or any tool with which a bodily injury could be inflicted, and that the defendant reasonably apprehended that the said J. Kelly would do him bodily harm, then you are instructed that the defend*663 ant was not compelled to retreat from the said J. Kelly, but might, in his turn, become the assailant, use all force he deemed necessary and inflict bodily wounds until his person was out of danger, if you so find from the evidence, you should find the defendant not guilty.”
The court had already given, at the request of the accused, the following instruction:
1 D. “The court instructs the jury that the use of any dangerous weapon, or the semblance thereof, in an angry or threatening manner, with the intent to alarm or strike another under circumstances calculated to effect that object is an assault, and if you believe from the evidence that J. Kelly had in his hand a dangerous weapon, or semblance thereof, that he angrily cursed the defendant and acted in a threatening manner, then the defendant was assaulted and had a right to use all force reasonably necessary to repel said assault; he was not compelled to retreat from the said J. Kelly, but might in his turn become the assailant.”
A discussion of these instructions in detail would be unprofitable, since it is clear that instruction 1-D fairly and fully presented to the jury the accused’s theory of self-defense. It follows that the court did not err in refusing to give the instruction asked for, and that this assignment is also without merit.
The facts appearing in the Commonwealth’s evidence are substantially these:
Kelly was an employee of a subcontrator. When the accused came up, Kelly was standing in a ditch-like excavation about eighteen inches deep, settingthe stones around the front door of the building. When Kelly said, “To hell with you,” and turned his back and
The accused, in addition to his testimony above stated, testified that at the time of the trouble, Kelly was facing him; that behind Kelly was a brick wall about six feet high, with a step-down rough brick edge about four and a half feet high; that in order to protect himself from the trowel in the hand of Kelly, he rushed in on him, and Kelly, being thrown backwards, struck his head on the rough edge of the bricks, which caused the cut and the wound; that he did not strike Kelly with a brick or any other weapon, and that all he did was in self-defense.
Two other witnesses corroborated in all material respects the testimony of the accused as to how Kelly received his wound. With this conflict in the evidence, the credibility of the witnesses was a question for the jury. There was evidence to support their verdict and we cannot disturb it.
The judgment will be affirmed.
Affirmed.