25 Gratt. 921 | Va. | 1874
delivered the opinion, of the court.
This is a writ of error to a judgment of the Circuit court of Clarke county, convicting Lyeurgus Little of murder in the second degree, and sentencing him therefor to confinement in the penitentiary for the term of fourteen years, the period by the jurors in their verdict ascertained. # There are seven assignments of error in the judgment, which arise on as many bills of exceptions taken to opifiions of the court given during the progress of the trial. We will consider the questions thus presented for the decision of this court, or such of them as it may be necessary for us to decide, or as we may think it proper to decide, in the order in which they arise on the bills of exceptions.
1. The first bill of exceptions was taken by the-prisoner to the action and ruling of the court in overruling his objection to William A. Riely as a competent juror for his trial. It is very clear that the objection was invalid, and the juror was competent, and that there was no error of the court in this respect. Jackson’s case, 23 Gratt. pp. 919, 927-933, and the-cases there cited. Indeed, this objection, though taken in the court below, does not seem to be relied on in this court.
2. The second bill of exceptions was taken by the-prisoner to the ruling of the court in excluding, as-incompetent evidence, a statement of the prisoner, made to Miss Hattie Prichard, a witness introduced by the commonwealth; the prisoner, by his counsel, contending that the statement was admissible as part of the res gestee.
The surrounding circumstances of a fact in controversy are generally admissible evidence as reasonably tending to explain the nature of such fact, even.
Sow let us apply the principle as thus laid down to this case, which is thus stated in the second bill of exceptions. The commonwealth proved that Clinton Little came to his death by a wound received in the basement of the house, and that the door leading to said basement entered upon the south side of the house, under a porch; and introduced a witness, Miss Hattie Prichard, who testified that on the morning of the 5th of July 1878, after having breakfasted at the usual hour, she, in company with Amanda, the sister of the deceased, and Miss Villary, had gone to an apple tree in the garden, not a great distance from the house; it was the first tree in the garden; that there was a fence between the yard and garden; that she remained but a short time at the tree—about five min
We think that the court erred in refusing to permit the witness to state what was said by the prisoner on the occasion referred to. What was so said might well have been, in whole or in part, admissible evidence, either for or against the prisoner. It was very closely connected, both in time and place, with the homicide, which was the subject of the prosecution, and might well have tended to elucidate that fact as part of the res gestae. It was said when the deceased was lying close by, in a dying state, from the effect of the wounds he had received, and in the presence, and it seems the hearing, of Columbus and Gilbert Little,
3. The third assignment of error is the subject of the third bill of exceptions, and is, that “ the court erred in refusing to allow James F. Milton, jr., to be recalled for the purpose of enabling the prisoner to ask him a question with a view to impeaching his testimony, and also to show malice on the part of said Milton towards the prisoner; it appearing that this ■evidence was only discovered after the said Milton had
“The credit of a witness,” says G-reenleaf, “may also be impeached by proof that he has made statements out of court contrary to what he has testified at the trial. But it is only in such matters as are relevant to the issue, that the witness can be contradicted; and before this can be done, it is generally held necessary, in the case of verbal statements, first to ask him as to the time, place and person involved in the -supposed contradiction. It is not enough to ask him the general question whether he has ever said so and so, nor whether he has always told the same story, because it may frequently happen that, upon the general question, he may not remember whether he has so said; whereas, when his attention is challenged to particular circumstances and occasions, he may recollect and explain what he has formerly said. This course of proceeding is considered indispensable, from a sense of justice to the witness; for as the direct tendency of the evidence is to impeach his veracity, common justice requires that, by first calling his attention to the subject, he should have an opportunity to recollect the
In the Queen’s case, 2 Brod. & Bing. R. 313, this subject was very much discussed, and the rule and the reason of it were' laid down to the same effect in the unanimous opinion of the learned judges, which was delivered by Abbott O. J. See that part of the opinion set out in note 1 to 1 Greenl. on Ev., § 462. In the United States the same course has been generally adopted, as appears from the cases cited in the same note. Though in Massachusetts and some of the other states the rule appears to be different, as appears from cases also cited in the same note. In this state the existence of the rule was affirmed in Unis &c. v. Charlton’s adm’or &c., 12 Gratt. 484, 494, in which the question was for the first time distinctly presented to this court for its decision; though no doubt always our practice has conformed to the rule as laid down by Greenleaf, which we consider a good rule, and one that ought to prevail heré. Conceding that it is our rule, we think that the court ought to have permitted the witness to be recalled, in order to comply with the requisition of the rule. Certainly it ought, if, as is alleged, the prisoner and his counsel were uninformed of the fact set forth in the affidavit of Hesser until after the witness, Milton, had left the stand. But the court ought to have given such permission, even if the fact was known to the prisoner and his counsel before the said witness had left the stand, and the omission then to ask the question of him was a mere oversight. The testimony of that witness was all important, and upon the question of his credibility depended do doubt
4. The fourth assignment of error is the subject of the fourth bill of exceptions, and is that the court refused “to permit the prisoner to prove by Col. Washington Dearmont that the witness, James F. Milton, Jr., had made before the grand jury that indicted the prisoner, a statement of the alleged confession, altogether different from the statement made by him at the trial; and that he did not make before said grand “ jury the statement made by him” at said trial.
It does not appear from the bill of exceptions what was the ground of the court’s refusal; but in the petition for the writ of error it is said that “the court refused to permit Col. Dearmont to prove what Milton had stated in the grand-jury room, upon the ground that such testimony was contrary to public policy.” We can conceive of no other ground on which such refusal could have been based.
But, however that may be (and we do not mean to decide the question, because it is unnecessary in this ■case), we consider it very clear that Dearmont was a
5. The fifth assignment of error is the subject of the fifth bill of exceptions, and is that “the court erred in ruling that the question put to the witness James E. Milton, Jr., by counsel for the prisoner, viz: If he Milton, had not stated on last Wednesday, on the front porch of the courthouse, in conversation with two gentlemen whose names were not known, ‘ If I had my way I would kill the damned rascals,’ referring to the prisoners, was improper, and in excluding the same on the ground that the names of the two gentlemen were not given.”
The question presented by the fifth bill of exceptions is not accurately stated in the fifth assignment of' error, though the effect is the same. It appears from
We think that the court erred in so ruling; and that there was a sufficient specification as to the time, place and persons involved in the supposed contradiction, within the meaning of the law on this subject. 1 Greenl. on Ev. § 462. The names of the persons could not be given because it appears they were unknown ; but they were otherwise sufficiently described, and that is -all that the law requires.
6. The sixth bill of exceptions was taken to the refusal of the court to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial, upon the ground that the verdict was contrary to the evidence; which is the subject of the first •assignment of error. The facts proved in the case are certified in the bill of exceptions, except that in some respects therein stated the testimony was conflicting, in which respects, therefore, the facts were not certified.
7. The question presented by the sixth assignment of error and the seventh bill of exceptions (both of which present the same question), is rendered immaterial by our decision of the question arising on the-third assignment of error, and we will therefore take-no further notice of it.
8. The last assignment of error is, that “it is not proven that the felony with which the prisoner was charged was committed within the county of Clarke, as the indictment alleges, or within the jurisdiction of the court that tried him.”
No notice was taken of any such point in the court below, but it is noticed for the first time in the petition for a writ of error. Had it been noticed in the-court below, the alleged defect would no doubt have been at once supplied. The omission in the proof, if any, was a mere oversight. The prisoner is charged in the indictment with committing the offence in the-county of Clarke. It was proved that the act was done in the house of Franklin Little, the father of the prisoner and the deceased, the location of which in the-county of Clarke was no doubt notorious to all the jury and all the parties concerned in the trial. The jury found the prisoner guilty of committing the of-fence in the county of Clarke, as charged in the indictment. And we think the ground relied on in the last assignment of error for the reversal of the judgment,, is insufficient for that purpose.
The judgment was as follows:
This day came as well the plaintiff in error by counsel, as the attorney general on behalf of the commonwealth, and the court having maturely considered the transcript of the record of the judgment aforesaid and the arguments of counsel, is of opinion, for reasons stated in writing and filed with the record, that the Circuit court erred in refusing to permit the witness, Miss Hattie Prichard, to repeat the statement made to her by the prisoner as mentioned in the second bill of exceptions. That statement might well have been, in whole or in part, admissible evidence, either for or against the prisoner. It was very closely connected, both in time and place, with the homicide, which was the subject of the prosecution, and might well have tended to elucidate that fact as part of the res gestee. It was made when the deceased was lying close by in a dying state from the effects of the wounds he had received, and was made in the presence, and no doubt in the hearing, of those who, it seems, were eye-witnesses to the homicide, but who were not examined by the commonwealth as witnesses in regard to the same. At all events, that statement ought to have been heard by the court below, so that such court might determine whether all or any part of it was admissible evidence, and this court might re
The court is further of opinion that the Circuit court erred in overruling the motion of the prisoner, that the witness James F. Milton,'Jr., might be again put on the stand for the purpose of allowing the prisoner to cross-examine him with a view to his contradiction, as mentioned in the third bill of exceptions.
The court is further of opinion that the Circuit court erred in refusing to permit Washington Dearmont, a witness introduced in behalf of the prisoner, to state what the witness James F. Milton, jr., said before the grand jury, as mentioned in the fourth bill of exceptions.
The Court is further of opinion that .the Circuit court erred in sustaining the objection of the attorney for the commonwealth to the question propounded to William Lewis, a witness for the prisoner, as mentioned in the fifth bill of exceptions.
The court is further of opinion that there is no error of the court in any of its other rulings in this cause, except that this court does not decide the question presented by the seventh bill of exceptions, the decision of. which is unnecessary. Therefore, for the reasons aforesaid, it is considered by the court that the said judgment of the Circuit court be reversed and annulled, that the verdict of the jury be set aside, and that the cause be remanded to the said Circuit
Judgment reversed.