125 Va. 758 | Va. | 1919
delivered the opinion of the court.
The accused was convicted of murder in the second de
The question is controlled by section 4018 of the Code, the last paragraph of which provides that “no irregularity or error in drawing the names or in making out or copying or signing or failing to sign the list, or in summoning the persons named on the list, shall be cause for summoning a new panel or for setting aside a verdict or granting a new trial, unless objection thereto was made "before the jury was sworn, and unless it appears that such irregularity, error, or failure, was intentional, or is such as to probably cause injustice to the Commonwealth or to the accused.”
It appears that six of the jurors who served were not in the list of jurors named in the original venire facias. If this objection had been made before- the jury was sworn, and the record failed to show that the additional jurors had been lawfully impaneled, then it is clear that the motion should have been sustained. It appears, however, from the bill of exception that this objection was not made until after the jury had been impaneled. A jury is not impaneled until it has been selected, found free from exceptions'and duly sworn in the case, and, in as much as the, clear inference is that the jury had been sworn before the objection was made, it was properly overruled, for it does not appear that the irregularity was intentional, or such as probably to cause any injustice to the accused. While the statutes with reference to the summoning and impaneling of jurors in criminal cases are mandatory and must be strictly followed, yet this court will indulge every proper presumption in favor of the regularity of the proceedings,
That the statute, Code section 3055, expressly gives the-corporation courts of the State concurrent jurisdiction with the circuit courts over criminal offenses committed within one mile of a city, is clear. It is claimed, however, that this statute is unconstitutional, as violative of the constitutional right of the prisoner to have a jury of his vicinage.
The rule in England, from which we get the provision for a trial by a jury of the vicinage, is that the vicinage includes the county in which the crime is committed. In this country, likewise, while as a general rule the county consth tutes the district (and hence the vicinage) of the court in which indictments for crime are prosecuted, still the true construction of the word vicinage as used in the Constitution is that it corresponds with the territorial jurisdiction of the court in which the venue of the crime is laid. In this case, the Corporation Court of the city of Roanoke, under the general statute referred to, is vested-with jurisdiction to try indictments for crimes committed within the city and within one mile of its corporate limits, and this territory constitutes the district over which the court has
In Ruffin’s Case, 21 Gratt. (62 Va.) 790, this court upheld the constitutionality of a statute which had been attacked on this ground, where a convict who had committed a crime in the county of Bath was tried in the Circuit Court of the city of Richmond, basing its ruling upon the .fact that he was a- convict in the penitentiary, under the control and subject to the laws which governed that institution and its inmates.
We have two cases in Virginia in which the declarations of the deceased, not made in the presence of the accused, have been admitted as tending to show his guilt. Cluverius v. Commonwealth, 81 Va. 803; Tilley v. Commonwealth, 89 Va. 153, 15 S. E. 526. In the former case, the statement of the deceased was admitted, that a letter which she had received was the inducement and cause of her going from her home to Richmond, where the crime was committed.
While a large discretion must and should remain vested' in the trial court as to the admission of this class of testimony, it is always safer in cases depending upon circumstantial evidence alone, to admit rather than to reject, and this is the tendency of modern statutes and decisions relating to evidence. The testimony to which we have referred would have been clearly admissible on behalf of the Commonwealth in the prosecution of Ageé for the crime, and in our judgment it is equally admissible in favor of the accused as tending to show that he was not guilty. This evidence tending to show motive on Agee’s part should have
(No. 2.) “The court further instructs the jury that when a mortal wound is given with a deadly weapon in the previous possession of the slayer without any, or upon very slight, provocation, it is prima facie willful, deliberate and premeditated killing, and throws upon the accused the necessity of proving extenuating circumstances, for the rule of law is that a person shall be taken to intend that which he does, or which is the necessary consequence of his act. Therefore, the court tells the jury that if you believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused shot and killed the deceased, as charged'in the indictment, with a deadly weapon which was in the previous possession of the accused without any, or upon very slight, provocation, that prima facie the accused is guilty of willful, deliberate and premeditated killing unless it has appeared from the evidence in the case that there were extenuating circumstances.”
That such an instruction has been frequently given in murder cases in which it was appropriate, is true. It is also true, however, that instructions should relate to the evidence in the case on trial, and that it is harmful error to give an instruction based upon assumptions of fact which does not appear in the evidence. In this case, while true that the deceased was shot with a pistol, there is no testimony which indicates that the prisoner ever had a pistol or any other deadly' weapon. In cases where the evidence shows or tends to show that the accused was in possession of such a weapon, and used it, such an instruction is manifestly proper, and the inferences which the jury may draw from the fact of such possession and use are correctly stated in the
The other instructions which had been given, both for the Commonwealth and for the prisoner, with one exception, contained only the usual general statements of law governing trials in homicide cases, and were correct. The accused, however, was entitled to have the minds of the jury directed to the specific evidence in the case. They had nowhere been told that the mere presence of the accused at the time the murder was committed was not alone sufficient
In view of the evidence in this case, the accused was entitled to have the jury told distinctly and clearly that his mere presence at the time the crime was committed was not alone sufficient to justify a conviction. The refusal of these instructions was also harmful error.
Several other instructions offered for the prisoner were refused and exceptions thereto taken, but as they were either erroneous or mere repetitions in substance of instructions which had already been given in the case, the court properly refused them.
For the reasons indicated, this court will set aside the verdict, reverse the judgment and remand the case for a new trial, if the Commonwealth shall be so advised.
Reversed.