115 Va. 921 | Va. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff in error, Harvey D. Looney, was found guilty of murder in the first degree, and, in accordance with the verdict of the jury, was sentenced to death by the circuit court of Craig county. The case is before us on a writ of error to that judgment.
The prisoner, when put upon trial, moved the court for a change of venue under section 1036 of the Code, the grounds for the motion being that the county of Craig is a small mountainous county sparsely settled, and that in the town of New Castle, the county seat and scene of the homicide, and throughout the entire county great prejudice and ill-will existed against the accused, both on account of the homicide and of numerous other difficulties in which he had been involved; that the deceased had a
The trial court, in the exercise of the powers conferred upon it by sections 4024 and 4036, must of necessity be allowed a wide discretion, and it is the established rule that this court will not reverse the judgment of the trial court unless it plainly appears that such discretion has been improperly exercised. Wormley’s Case, 10 Gratt. (51 Va.) 658, 672-3; Cahoon’s Case, 21 Gratt. (62 Va.) 822; Sand’s Case, 21 Gratt. (62 Va.) 871, 882-884; Richards’ Case, 107 Va. 881, 59 S. E. 1104; Bowles’ Case, 103 Va. 816, 48 S. E. 527.
It is also the general rule that a motion for a jury from another county or corporation should precede the motion for a change of venue; and where the motion is based on the ground that an impartial jury cannot be obtained in the county or corporation, the conclusive presumption from the fact that an impartial jury has subsequently been secured in the county is that such motion was unfounded. Wright’s Case, 33 Gratt. (74 Va.) 880; Joyce’s Case, 78 Va. 289; Waller’s Case, 84 Va. 492, 496, 5 S. E. 364. Cases
We are of opinion that there is no reversible error in these assignments; nevertheless, as both motions depend upon conditions existing at the time of trial, they are, as a matter of course, renewable upon a new trial whenever the exigencies of the situation may call them into requisition.
The third assignment of ’error is to the refusal of the court to quash the second venire facias. The facts touching this assignment are not disputed. On motion of the prisoner the first venire facias and list of veniremen was quashed because the venire was drawn in the presence of G. W. Layman, the commissioner in chancery designated for that purpose, it appearing that he was the active head of the prosecution. Thereupon the judge asked the sheriff if the persons summoned under the venire which had just been quashed were present in court, and being informed that they were still in attendance, he retired with the clerk to the clerk’s office and shortly returned into court with a list of veniremen and a new venire facias. The accused submitted a motion in writing to quash the second list of veniremen and venire facias for certain reasons enumerated in the motion, which motion the court overruled. In that connection the court made the following statement: “All the names remaining in the jury box were drawn and all the available jurors in the box utilized, including such of the jurors as were upon the venire facias which was quashed in this case as were eligible jurors. That resulted in the drawing of sixty names. The judge of the court supposed that probably at least thirty of the jurors that had been drawn under the former venire facias were in attendance upon the court, and naturally expected that
Section 4018 of the Code prescribes the manner of selecting and summoning a venire in a case of felony. The ordinary course of procedure is for the list to contain the names of twenty persons drawn by the clerk of the court or his deputy from the names in the box as provided for by sections 3142 and 3144. The drawing must be in the presence of the judge of the court, or, in his absence, of one of the commissioners in chancery designated for the purpose under section .3146,. and. also a reputable citizen
The record shows a plain departure from imperative provisions of the statute in several essential particulars. No good cause, or indeed any cause, was shown for directing more than twenty names to be drawn and placed in the
The manifest object of the foregoing provision of the statute is to secure a drawn list of veniremen and to render it impossible to pack the jury. Sixty veniremen, it is true, were in form drawn from the jury box, yet the persons summoned on the second venire were practically the same persons summoned on the quashed venire. Substantially the same result would have followed if there had been no drawing and the court had merely ordered the sheriff to re-summon the original veniremen.
In these circumstances, the persons to be summoned were known in advance, and the solemnity of drawing the veniremen was an empty form. It was clearly the intention of the judge, by the method adopted, to secure the names of the thirty veniremen in attendance on the court; yet, had the statute been complied with, there would have been a list of fifty-six persons instead of thirty from whom to select the jury.
In what has been said we do not wish to be understood as in any way reflecting upon th’e integrity of the honorable judge of the circuit court; It was conceded that he acted in good faith. He did not think that the ground for quashing the original venire facias involved the eligibility of the veniremen, but merely the fitness of the commissioner in chancery to participate in drawing them, and his sole purpose in pursuing the method adopted was to facilitate the trial of the case. Still, the probity of his motives cannot justify the utter disregard of these imperative and
In Hall’s Gase, 80 Va. 555, 561, the court, speaking through Lewis, P., says: “These provisions of the statute, in respect to empaneling juries, are not directory merely, but imperative. They are rules which are made essential in proceedings involving life or liberty, and it is the right of the accused to demand that they be strictly complied with. The disregard of them is to deprive the accused of that £due process of law’ which is provided by the legislature, and which is required by the fundamental law of the land.”
The importance of the observance by the courts of these safeguards thrown around the accused cannot be overstated. As was well said by Judge Harrison in Hoback’s Case, 104 Va. 871, 879-80, 52 S. E. 575, 578: “Jurors as triers of the fact wield far more power than the judge on the bench, in the trial of an accused person, and the legislature has seen fit to safeguard the rights of the Commonwealth and the accused by the enactment of mandatory provisions for the constitution of this important branch of the judicial system, which the courts are not at liberty to disregard, even if they deemed it expedient to do so.” Jones’ Case, 100 Va. 842, 41 S. E. 951; Patrick’s Case, post p. 78 S. E. 628, in which an opinion has been handed down during the present term.
We may observe that Hardy’s Case, 110 Va. 910, 67 S. E. 522, does not sustain the action of the trial court in the particulars we have been discussing. In that case the irregularity complained of was that the sheriff summoned the entire list of forty persons drawn as veniremen instead of thirty-six as ordered by the court—an irregularity which could not have prejudiced the accused.
The fourth assignment of 'error involves the admission by the court, over the objection of the accused, of the dé
The fifth assignment of error challenges the authentication of the ordinance of the town of New Castle, upon which warrants for the arrest of the prisoner were based.
It is true that the records of the council were kept in a crude and careless manner in an account book or ledger which had been used for other purposes and contained matter other than the by-laws and ordinances, and, moreover, that a sheet of type-written matter, concerning the business of the town, was injected between the by-laws and ordinances and the certification and signatures of the clerk and mayor. But, considering the record as a whole, we think it contains a sufficient authentication of the passage of the ordinance in question, and was properly admitted in evidence.
The sixth and last assignment of 'error which demands our attention relates to the ruling of the court in relation to instructions.
While the record shoAvs that the accused excepted to the refusal of the court to give a number of instructions, and also to its action in modifying other instructions, those to which our attention was specifically drawn by the oral argument were 11, 14, 15, 16 and 20.
The court modified 11 by interpolating the words, “being Avithout fault in.provoking the affray,” and 16 by words of like import. Instruction 11, as modified, is as follows:
*931 “The court further instructs the jury that although they may believe from the evidence that the deceased at the time he was shot was attempting to arrest the accused, yet if they further believe from the evidence that in making such attempt he shot at the accused, and thereupon, because of said shooting at the accused by the deceased, the accused, believing himself in imminent danger of being killed or sustaining great bodily injury, and bemg without fault in provoking the affray, returned the fire and killed the deceased, . . . such killing was not murder, notwithstanding the jury may believe from the evidence that the accused had previously threatened to kill any one who might attempt to arrest him.”
This instruction does not undertake to define the degree of guilt of the accused, if any, in the circumstances set forth in the instruction. But upon substantially the same hypothetical statement of facts the jury are told in instruction 16 that the killing would be justifiable (more accurately, excusable) homicide. Both the instructions, without the modification would have been erroneous, and instruction 14 is amenable to the same objection.
Instructions 15 and 20, which are practically identical, are not a correct exposition of the law. Instruction 15 told the jury “that when the Commonwealth relies upon the fact that the homicide was committed by the defendant during the resistance to a lawful arrest, it has the burden of proving the legality of the arrest beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Where an officer armed with a lawful warrant attempts to make an arrest in obedience to its mandate, the prima facie presumption, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, is that he will discharge his duty in a lawful manner; and the burden rests upon the accuser, who undertakes to resist the arrest, to show that the officer’s conduct was such as to justify such resistance.
For the errors to which attention has been called, the judgment must be reversed, the verdict of the jury set aside, and the case remanded for a new trial to be had therein.
Reversed.