143 Va. 579 | Va. | 1925
delivered the opinion of the court.
On the night of December 24, 1923, between seven and eight o’clock, Thomas Martin Coleman, a young white man about twenty-one years of age, was driving a Ford automobile along the public highway in Nelson county. He was at the wheel, next to him sat his sister, and next to her, on the same seat, was Rev. Mr. Phillips. There was no one in the back seat. They stopped at Goodwin’s store to make some purchases, and after remaining there a short time resumed their journey. It was the night before Christmas, and there was considerable noise at and near the store arising from the discharge of explosives of different kinds, chiefly firecrackers, and some pistol shots. Some of the witnesses could not distinguish the noise of one from that of the other. The car had proceeded but a short distance from the store, when one shot was heard, and, after a short pause, three more in rapid succession, the latter from behind the ear.. Mr. Phillips thought the first shot was a “pop-cracker.” Immediately after the last three shots, Coleman’s head dropped to the steering wheel, and when the ear was stopped it was found that he had been shot through the head. The ball entered on the left side of the head “a little behind and on a level with the left ear,” and ranged upwards and came out “about four inches above the top of the right ear.” Coleman died immediately.
The defendant, two of his brothers, and several other colored men were in the Goodwin store when the deceased came in, and the latter bought some cigars and gave one of them to the defendant. The defendant, in company with Andrew Harris and Winborn Pearl, left the store shortly before the deceased and proceeded
On the morning after the accident three shells were found in the road near the scene of the homicide similar to those used in the defendant’s gun, and also a nail, and it was the theory of the Commonwealth that the defendant fired three times instead of two, and that one of these three shots struck the deceased and killed him. It was also the theory of the Commonwealth that the deceased took the first explosion to be a blowout, and turned his head to look back at his rear left wheel, and that one of the three shots fired in rapid succession struck him while his head was in that position. But the testimony of Phillips, who was sitting on the seat with him, was that he at first thought they had a blow-out in the left hind wheel, and so stated to the deceased, but that the latter turned his head towards Phillips, with a sort of smile, and said to him “you are mistaken,” and just at that time there were three reports and the deceased dropped his head.
The defendant testified that immediately after firing the two shots from his pistol, he opened his gun and three of the shells dropped out, and that he was unable to get the other two out at that time. His theory was that it was impossible for either of the shots fired by him to have struck the deceased; that not only was
It also appears from the testimony for the Commonwealth that the defendant was neither drunk nor drinking, and that his reputation for truthfulness and for peace and good order was good.
There are several assignments of error.
It is assigned as error that the trial court erred in refusing to allow a witness for the Commonwealth to answer certain questions propounded by the defendant. A witness was asked if he had not heard of other people being suspected in the ease, which he answered in the affirmative. He was then asked: “Who else have you heard named in this case?” and “Who else have you heard named in this case of probably having done this shooting?” Both of which questions were objected to by the Commonwealth, and the objection was sustained.
It is true that the bill of exception does not show specifically what answer the witness would have given, but it is very manifest that he would have named one or more third persons. It afterwards developed in the testimony that six or eight other men were arrested about the same time that the defendant was, and their names were given, but they were all discharged. This is not a case to which the rule applies that the anticipated answer of the witness must be given, or else the
The second assignment of error was to the action of the trial court in allowing a witness for the Commonwealth to testify as to statements made by the defendant at the preliminary hearing of the case. After the witness had testified as to the statement of the defendant, it developed that the statement had been made while the defendant was under oath; not having testified in his own behalf, but having been called by the magistrate. As soon as this developed, the prosecuting attorney said: “If there is any doubt about his testimony, I want the evidence struck out. Strike Mr. Davis’ evidence out.” To which the court replied: “All right, it has been struck out.”
Prior to the cross-examination of the witness, there was nothing to indicate that the defendant had not voluntarily testified in his own behalf, but as soon as it was discovered that he had not so testified, this
During the examination of a witness for the Commonwealth it was thought desirable to have a view of the automobile in which the deceased was riding at the time of the accident, and a view was had by consent of both parties. Later on, the witness who was testifying at the time as to the automobile was recalled by the defendant, and it was shown by him that he had examined the bullet hole in the back of the car on the morning after the shooting, and that the bullet which went through that hole could not have killed the deceased, as the range of it was in a different direction, and that since his examination the day after the homicide this hole had been punched, with pencils or something of that kind, so that the hole was not in the same condition it was on the morning after the shooting. The defendant thereupon moved the court to exclude all evidence secured by the experiment or illustration at the time of the view, or impression gained by the jurors in dealing with the hole as it then was; but the court overruled the motion.
It is not perceived how the court could have excluded from the jury the impressions which they had gotten from viewing the hole in the car. The view was taken, if not at the request of the defendant, certainly with his approval and consent. No material testimony was given at the view, and there was practically nothing for the court to exclude. The testimony as to change in the condition of the hole, and the reasons for it, was all brought out before the jury, and they
• The next assignment of error is tó the ruling of the trial court on the instructions. Instruction 7, asked for by the defendant, was amended by the court and given in the amended form. The amendment made by the court is indicated by italics. The instruction as amended was as follows:
“The court instructs the jury that the absence of all evidence of an inducing cause or motive to commit the crime, when the fact is in reasonable doubt as to who committed it, affords a strong presumption of innocence. But the jury may convict of involuntary manslaughter without proof of inducing motive.”
The instruction, as tendered, stated a mere abstract proposition of law, not applicable to the facts in the case, and might well have been refused on that account. The instruction, as asked, was only applicable to a case where the act was a voluntary act. Where an act is charged to have been involuntary, the absence of any motive to commit it raises no presumption of innocence and is wholly irrelevant. The Commonwealth, by the instruction it asked, admitted that the aet complained of and for which conviction was sought was involuntary, and that the highest crime of which the accused could be convicted was involuntary manslaughter. Criminal intent was excluded by admitting the act to have been involuntary. It would have been improper to have given the instruction as offered by the accused, and certainly, it would have been very misleading if the court had not made the addition to it.
It is further assigned as error that the trial court gave instruction A at the instance of the Commonwealth, and refused instruction 8 tendered by the defendant. Instruction A was intended to present the Commonwealth’s view of the evidence. Instruction 8 was intended to present the view of the defendant.
Instruction A was as follows: “The court instructs the jury that involuntary manslaughter is the unlawful killing of a human being without malice, either express or implied, and without intent to kill or inflict the injury causing death, committed accidentally in the commission of some unlawful act not felonious. The court, therefore, instructs the jury that if they shall believe from the evidence in this case, beyond a reasonable doubt, that on December 24, 1923, the defendant, Sam Nelson, in or on the side of the public road at or near Nelly’s Ford, Nelson county, Virginia, shot off a pistol (which is an unlawful act), without any intent of injuring Thomas Martin Coleman, and without any malice, express or implied, and that the said Thomas Martin Coleman was struck by one of the bullets discharged from the said pistol in the hands of the defendant, Sam Nelson, and that by reason thereof the said Thomas Martin Coleman was killed, then they should find the defendant, Sam Nelson, guilty of involuntary manslaughter, and punish him as set out in another instruction.”
The objection to this instruction was that it “unduly emphasized the fact that there was no other solution of the killing of the deceased than that of involuntary manslaughter.”
Upon the case stated in instruction A, the conclusion drawn in the instruction is plainly right. We find no
Instruction 8, tendered by the defendant and refused, was as follows: “The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that at the time that accused shot he was over on the right-hand side of the road between J. O. Goodwin’s store and the garage, and shot his pistol twice to his right towards the ground, and that, from the evidence at the time the accused shot [the deceased was at or near the end of the garage and shop, which it is admitted is about seventy-five feet long, and that] the deceased was sitting on the left-hand side of the front seat, at the wheel, driving his Ford car, and it was not discovered until he had gone some distance [and near a tobacco barn, 220 yards from the end of the said garage and shop] that he was shot, and it was then found that he was shot directly above the left ear, the bullet there entering and passing entirely in a straight line and diagonally upward through the skull and was removed on the other or right-hand side of his skull, about four inches above the right ear, that then there is no evidence upon which to convict the accused and they must find him not guilty.”
The instruction is unnecessarily long and contains matter of surplusage which might well have been omitted. This surplusage is indicated by brackets. This instruction was intended to present defendant’s view of the case. There was evidence before the jury to support every hypothetical statement made in the instruction, and it intended to present to the jury the idea that if they believed the facts stated in the instruction, then the bullet from the pistol of the defendant could not have killed the deceased but, unfortunately, that instruction concludes with an erroneous
The next assignment of error is because the verdict is contrary to the law and the evidence. As the ease has to be remanded for a new trial, this assignment will not be passed upon.
For the error committed in failing to amend instruction 8, tendered by the defendant, and to give a proper instruction upon the hypothetical case therein stated, the judgment of the trial court must be reversed, the verdict of the jury set aside, and the case remanded for a new trial not inconsistent with the views hereinbefore expressed.
Reversed.