79 Va. 5 | Va. | 1884
delivered the opinion of the court:
These cases have once before been brought to this court, and are reported under the style of Boggs and others v. The Commonwealth, 76 Virginia, 989. In each case the judgment of the circuit court was reversed, and the cases remanded for further proceedings. In the order of reversal in each case is the following : “ And it appearing that an order for the sale of the vessel in the indictment and petition mentioned has been entered in said circuit court, and the proceeds are therefore under the control of that court, it is therefore ordered that this cause he remanded to said circuit court, there to he proceeded with upon the petition of the plaintiff in error, and an opportunity be afforded him of showing title to said vessel; and to that end that a jury he empanelled, if desired by either of the parties; and if upon such writ or other proceeding it shall appear that the plaintiff in error had title to said vessel, or any part thereof, or had such title at the time of the finding of the said indictment, the said circuit court is directed to order the payment of the proceeds of the sale to the plaintiff in error,” &c. At the trial, after the cases went hack to the cir
To this judgment, and to similar judgments in the other cases, the commonwealth has been allowed writ of error and supersedeas.
The defendants in error now move to dismiss the cases on the ground that the proceedings, being in their nature criminal, there is no right of appeal on the part of the commonwealth. And
Upon the first ground, the motion must be overruled. With respect to the defendants in error, who were petitioners in the court below, the proceedings in their nature are not criminal, but civil. They were not proceeded against by indictment for the violations of law for which the parties in charge of the vessels when captured were indicted and convicted. As to them, the controversy began upon the filing of their respective petitions asserting their claims to the proceeds of the sales of the vessels, which, by orders made in the criminal cases, had been condemned and sold. Those proceeds not having passed beyond the control of the court were subject to its order, and by the order of this court were directed to be paid to the petitioners, if upon the trial of the issue directed to be made up and tried their claims were established. By the filing of their petitions the petitioners did not become technically parties to the indictments or to the criminal proceedings, but only claimants of a fund then in court, and subject to its order. And while strictly the proceeding is not a suit against the state, it is, nevertheless, of a civil character, prosecuted to recover a fund claimed by the state, and one which it was competent for the court to entertain. The Siren, 7 Wall. 152; McCandlish v. The Commonwealth, 76 Va. 1005; Boggs v. The Commonwealth, Id. 1001. The cases are, therefore, properly here, except the cases against Chandler and Johnson, in neither of which does the matter in controversy amount to the value of $500; and as to them, the motion to dismiss must be granted. Code 1873, chapter 178, section 3.
1. Proceeding, then, to consider the errors assigned in their order, we are of opinion, first, that the circuit court did not err in refusing to grant a continuance of the cases on the motion of the attorney for the commonwealth. The following are the
It has often been decided by this court that a motion for a continuance is addressed to the sound discretion of the court under all the circumstances of the case, and that the action of the court upon such a motion will not be disturbed by an appellate court, unless the same is plainly erroneous. Hewitt v. The Commonwealth, 17 Gratt. 627; Roussel’s Case, 28 Id. 930.
2. The second error assigned is, that the court erred in submitting the issue to the jury in the form in which it was made up and presented. The form of the issue was substantially the same in all the cases. In the case of Mister v. The Commonwealth, the jury were directed to inquire whether the petitioner had title to the vessel “George W. Croswell,” or any part thereof, or had he such title at the time of the finding of the indictment against William Kellam and others on the 13th day of March, 1882, and if so, what part had he, and to what part of the vessel. The form thus adopted is in substantial and almost literal accordance with the form in which the issue was directed by the order of this court to be framed, and the second assignment is not well taken.
3. The third error assigned is the refusal of the court to admit as evidence before the jury the records in the cases of The Commonwealth v. Kellam and others, indicted parties. As the sole issue to be tried in each case was, whether the petitioner had title to the vessel at the time the indictment was found, it is plain that the evidence afforded by the records sought to be introduced was not relevant to the issue to be tried, and that it was properly excluded, apart from the fact that the petitioners were not parties to those records.
It may be true that the order entered by this court, prescribing the form of the issue to be tried, is not in accordance with the views of the court as set forth in the opinion of the court and filed with the record, yet no application having been made to change or modify it within the time allowed by law, it was binding and conclusive not only upon the parties and the circuit court, but now upon this court also. The circuit court, therefore, did not err in excluding the records in question; and the third assignment of error is not well taken.
6. For the same reasons the court did not err in giving to the jury the following instruction at the instance of the plaintiff: "If the jury believe from the evidence that David B. Mister was the half owner of the schooner, ‘George W. Croswell,’ on the 13th day of March, 1882, and before the commission of the offence, they shall so find by their verdict, and in determining this question, any employment of said schooner in the illegal taking or catching of oysters is not to be considered by the jury.”
7. Tire court did not err in refusing to set aside the verdict as contrary to the law and the evidence. The facts proved, as certified, show that the vessel in question was purchased by the petitioner of one William T. Hollard, of Somerset county, Maryland ; that the vessel was duly enrolled under the laws of the United States, and that afterwards the petitioner sold one-half interest therein to William T. Kellam, and that at the date of the indictment against the latter the petitioner was a half owner, and the managing owner of the vessel, and that Kellam owned a like interest therein, and was the master in charge thereof. Upon these facts the jury returned a verdict for the petitioner, and the court properly refused to set it aside.
8. The court did not err in allowing the petition of Mister & Miles to he filed, in which they averred that they had a lien on the vessel “ George W. Croswell,” to secure the payment of a certain debt due them, and prayed that the same be paid out of the proceeds of the sale of the vessel. Those proceeds, as already stated, were under the control of the court, and subject to its order, and it was competent for the court to make such disposition of the fund as was in accordance with the rights of parties whose claims thereto, or to any part of it, were duly established. See authorities referred to above.
For the foregoing reasons the cases of Chandler and Johnson must be dismissed for want of jurisdiction, and the judgments in the other cases affirmed.
Chandler’s and Johnson’s oases dismissed.
Mister’s, Powell’s and Hopkins’ cases affirmed.