134 Va. 554 | Va. | 1922
delivered the opinion of the court.
Ves Cottrell, the accused, who was jointly indicted with Biddle Astrop, Bill Barker, John Blakemore, Rich. Cooper and Tom Cornette, for maliciously wounding Charles H. Redman, was convicted by a jury and sentenced to the penitentiary for ten years. The ease is here upon a writ of error to that judgment.
The accused relies on six assignments of error.
First, the court’s refusal to continue the case on account of the absence of three witnesses, Dana Gilbert, Frank Wygal and Coy Freeman.
The case was called for trial on the 21st day of September, 1921. The accused moved for a continuance on the ground of the absence of these witnesses, who were alleged to be material. Summonses had been issued for them and two of them had accepted service at Middleboro, Ky., while the third had been summoned by a county constable. The court continued the case to September 30th, at which time, on account of the absence of the same witnesses, the accused moved for a continuance to the next term, on the ground that their testimony was material and that there was no other person by whom the same facts could be proved.
It appears from the record that these witnesses, while residents of Lee county, were out of the State working for the Louisville and Nashville Railroad, but made frequent visits of a day or two at their homes.
The matter of continuances is left to the sound discretion of the trial court, under all the circumstances of the case, and where that discretion has not been
It appears from the record that the witnesses in question were “off and on” in the county, yet, after the case was continued on September 21st to September 30th, no rule was asked for against them, no other summonses were issued for them and no other action was taken on behalf of the accused to insure their attendance, except to go to Kentucky and secure their promise to be present. This was not the exercise of due diligence on the part of the accused and we cannot say that the court plainly erred in refusing to grant him a further continuance. The first assignment is without merit.
The second assignment alleges that “the court erred in admitting the evidence of threats, alleged to have been made some months before the act of the commission of the crime, by Barker, Cornette and Astrop.”
It is true, as contended by the accused, that until a conspiracy has been prima facie established the declarations of his alleged co-conspirators, made out of his presence, are not admissible as evidence against the prisoner. The evidence against the accused was circumstantial and the Commonwealth proceeded on the theory that a conspiracy existed between him and those jointly indicted with him, to kill Charles H. Redman, who was° the prohibition enforcement officer in Lee county.
We do not deem it necessary to discuss the evidence in detail. It sufficiently appears that the accused and those jointly indicted with him were engaged in the illicit buying and selling of ardent spirits in Lee county; that Redman, in his efforts to break up the violations of the law by them, had incurred their enmity; and that a gun had been provided and a purse made up to pay the man who would kill him from ambush.
A careful examination of the record convinces us that a prima facie case of conspiracy was established, and that the evidence of threats objected to was properly admitted. This assignment is likewise without merit.
The third assignment is based on the action of the court in allowing the witness, Matt Helan, to tell what the witnesses, Carl Helan and Jack Catron, then in attendance on the court, said with reference to the attempt of the accused to hire these witnesses to kill Redman.
The fourth assignment relates to the action of the court in permitting Charles H. Redman to testify to the attitude of the accused and his alleged co-conspirators towards him.
In the petition for the writ of error it is stated that the objection which the petitioner makes here is the same made under his second assignment. It follows, for the reasons given in disposing of the second assignment, we find no merit in the fourth assignment.
The fifth assignment is “of error in instruction one given for the Commonwealth; error in amending defendant’s instructions two and four, and refusing number six offered by the defendant.” The petition for the writ of error does not point out or discuss any error in the action of the court in granting or refusing instructions, but merely asks the right to discuss them later, if so desired.
A petition for a writ of error is in the nature of a pleading and must state clearly and distinctly the errors relied on to reverse the judgment.
“To require the appellee or the court to hunt through the record for every conceivable error which the court
The party complaining must “lay his finger on the error.” An assignment of error in general terms which requires the appellee or the court to hunt through the record to ascertain what the evidence is that the plaintiff in error considers insufficient to support an instruction, when the plaintiff in error could easily point it out, places a burden upon the court which it ought not to be expected to bear. Lorillard Co. v. Clay, 127 Va. 748, 104 S. E. 384; Bank v. Trigg Co., 106 Va. 327, 56 S. E. 158; Worley v. Mathieson Alkali Works, 119 Va. 862, 89 S. E. 880; Rust v. Reid, 124 Va. 1, 97 S. E. 324; Deitz v. High, 131 Va. 7, 109 S. E. 215; Deitz v. Whyte, 131 Va. 19, 109 S. E. 212; Washington So. R. Co. v. Cheshire, 109 Va. 741, 65 S. E. 27.
It follows that the errors, if any, committed by the court in granting and refusing instructions are not sufficiently assigned under section 3464 of the Code to require consideration by this court.
The only remaining error assigned is the refusal of the trial court to set aside the verdict as contrary to the law and the evidence.
The evidence on behalf of the Commonwealth is largely circumstantial.
Accused looked at a gun Charley Hayburn had for sale, about two weeks before Redman was shot. On the day before the shooting he purchased the gun and about thirty steel jacketed cartridges. He came to Hayburn’s place about dark and had him bring the gun out to the road, and after he bought the gun he asked Hayburn to “say nothing, about it.”
Accused was seen by Amos Jones about 3.30 o’clock in the afternoon of the day of the shooting crossing a hollow in the woods about three-quarters of a mile from Redman’s house, and across the ridge from the house. He motioned Jones to come to him. When he approached him, accused had a high power gun under his arm and a pistol in his pocket and said he took Jones to be his friend and asked Jones if he knew that Red-man was shot. He told Jones he had not had any water all day and was very thirsty and requested Jones to get John Blakemore’s car to come after him and to tell
Deputy Sheriff Stacy, upon receiving information of the shooting and the probable whereabouts of the accused, left for Pennington Gap. On the way, after daylight, they saw two men standing by the roadside whom they took to be John Blakemore and the accused, and when he and those with him came within fifteen steps of the ear they heard voices which they took to be the voices of Blakemore and the accused. The two men entered the car and drove towards Pennington Gap. The deputy and his assistants went to Pennington Gap. Not finding the accused there they went by Dry Branch, then to Black Mountain, and later to Rose Hill. They arrested John Blakemore, Ves Cottrell’s son, Tom Cornette and Bill Barker about 3.00 a. m. the next day at Pennington Gap and examined a car in the possession of Cornette and Barker and found it wet and muddy with clay mud, noticing at the same time the tread of the car. On the way to Rose Hill, they traced the track of the same kind of tread up to a hillside near Rose Hill, where it was evident the car got stuck in the red mud and turned and came back. They saw a place where it looked like one man had gotten out of the ear and walked on toward Rose Hill.
The accused was seen by Chas. Crockett in Rose Hill early in the morning of the day after the shooting. He purchased a shirt and tie from N. M. Rowlett and put
Accused told Amos Jones that Alex Ely, one of the assistants of the deputy sheriff, while hunting for the accused, walked up and took a seat on a fence in fifteen feet of him and sat there about an hour, and that if Ely had turned his head he would have killed him.
Redman, previous to the shooting, had arrested the accused for being drunk, having whiskey in his possession and for shooting up the town of Pennington Gap. About a month before Redman was shot accused told Robert Harris there was “a fellow we had to get rid of,” and, upon being asked who it was, the accused said it was Charles H. Redman, and added that there was $300.00 for the man who would kill him; that “the guns had been appropriated for the business;” and that one of the guns was a thirty-eight special and the other a high power gun. The accused also told Harris that “a man could go on the hill at St. Charles and do it off the hill,” the hill referred to being the one from which Redman was afterwards shot. During the conversation Carl Helan came up and the accused asked him about committing the crime, and Helan said he had gotten out of the notion. Accused stated to Harris that Jack Catron and Carl Helan intended to kill Red-man but had backed out. Accused then offered Harris and Carl Helan $300.00 if they would kill him and advised them to go up in the bushes in front of Redman’s house. Three weeks before the shooting the accused offered-Carl Helara and Jack Catron $500.00 to kill Red-man and gave them the guns, which the accused had sent to Matt Helan’s house, one being a high power and
The foregoing are among the material facts and circumstances appearing from the evidence introduced on behalf of the Commonwealth.
The accused based his defense upon an alibi and introduced witnesses who testified that he was in Middleboro, Kentucky, the day of the shooting. Other witnesses were sworn for the purpose of impeaching the witnesses for the Commonwealth. Upon the conflicting evidence .thus presented the jury found the accused guilty. There was evidence to support their verdict and under familiar principles we are not authorized to disturb it.
We find no error in the judgment complained of and it will be affirmed.
Affirmed.