delivered the opinion of the court.
A. T. Reynolds, upon an indictment for the murder of his son, Alvis J. Reynolds, was found guilty of that
The evidence in the case upon some of the material points is conflicting, but, from the standpoint of the Commonwealth and as supporting the verdict, justifies the following statement:
The killing occurred on Sunday afternoon, December 19, 1920. The deceased, Alvis Reynolds, a man of about thirty years of age, lived at Danville, and had come to his father’s home on a visit. On the day of the tragedy a number of persons were at the Reynolds home, most of whom, including the accused and the deceased, were drinking. After dinner four of the party, the accused, the deceased, Arthur Reynolds, another son, and Joe Penn, a nephew of the accused, left the house and engaged in a game of cards in the open air near the corn crib. Others of the party, including Edgar Reynolds, the eldest son of the accused, were present watching the game. Some dispute arose among the players, and the accused said he was going to quit. At that juncture Edgar Reynolds mildly remonstrated with his father, telling him not to quit and that the game was going all right. This offended the accused, although it ought not to have done so, and resulted in some angry words between the two for which he was chiefly if not wholly to blame. Finally, in response to a remark which he had provoked from Edgar, he said: “You won’t come up to the house and tell me that.” After, throwing out this challenge, he immediately went to the house, placed a pistol in the right hand pocket of his trousers, and came back. In the meantime Edgar had taken his father’s place in the game. On his return, the accused stood or walked around the party for a short time, keeping his right hand in his pocket and looking at the crowd angrily.
The accused testified that the deceased, when he
We need not‘go into more detail as to the evidence.. It is sufficient to say that it abundantly supported the verdict, and that, therefore, we cannot interfere-with the judgment unless we shall find some error in the rulings of the court in respect to matters other than the sufficiency of the evidence.
The first assignment of error relates to the validity of the venire facias.
After two postponements during the term, the case finally came to trial on May 23, 1921. Both the Commonwealth and the defendant having answered ready, the defendant “craved oyer of the original list of’ veniremen drawn for this term of the court, and the original writ of venire facias for this term, and all additional writs of venire facias summoning veniremen to appear at this term, and when the same were presented moved to quash the same.”
The order of the court merely shows that this motion to quash was based “on the ground of various irregularities in connection therewith.” We have not been shown and have not found any reason why the court might not regularly and safely have proceeded to select the jury from persons already summoned under the original writ supplemented by the alias which had been issued in the instant ease; but the motion was sustained and all the writs were quashed. This left the court without a panel of jurymen, and proceeding upon its own motion it ordered a new venire facias■
The defendant then moved the court to quash the new venire facias on the ground that the persons named in the list furnished by the judge and contained in the writ “were embraced in the previous venire facias and were in attendance upon the court.” This motion was overruled, and the defendant excepted.
There was no error to the prejudice of the accused in the action of the court here complained of. Section 4896 of the Code expressly authorized the trial court, upon quashing the writs, to direct a new one and to furnish a list of jurors to be summoned thereunder. The writ and list were regular, and no reason has been shown why the jurors thus summoned were not duly qualified to serve. Indeed, the record affirmatively shows that they were “free from all legal exception.” As already pointed out, so far as appears, the court might very well have denied the first motion to quash, because it was perfectly proper to supplement by an alias writ the panel which had been summoned and was in attendance under the original writ. This had been done, and it thus appears that the court did an unnecessary thing in quashing the original and alias writs, but an equally harmless thing in directing a new one. If the number and qualifications of the jurors available under the original and alias writs were in accordance with the law, surely it cannot be reasonably said that identically the same
This conclusion is not, as contended by counsel for the defendant, in serious conflict with the decision in Looney v. Commonwealth, 115 Va. 921, 78 S. E. 625. It was there held to have been error for the trial judge to designedly include in a new venire facias the same names embraced in a former writ which had been quashed, but the opinion must be read in the light of its own facts, and in that case the original venire facias had been quashed because the list had been drawn in the presence of a commissioner in chancery who was one of the prosecuting attorneys. While there was no charge of improper motive or intentional misconduct on the part of the commissioner, it was practically a concessum in the case that the persons thus drawn were improper jurors, and ought not to be allowed to serve. There was no formal irregularity in the writ, but an inherent incompetency of the jurors as such, and this being true, of course the mere substitution of a new writ with the same list would not remove the incompetency. In the instant ease we have the converse proposition, namely, a list of persons free from any sort of ineompeteney as jurors, and they certainly cannot be rendered incompetent merely by quashing, for some alleged but undisclosed irregularity, the writ of venire facias under which they have been previously summoned. Furthermore, it is to be noted that the new venire facias condemned in the case cited was in itself vitally at variance with certain mandatory provisions of the statute under which it was issued, while the writ in this ease is strictly regular in every detail.
The second assignment of error involves the action of the court in giving and refusing instructions.
The defendant asked for and the court refused to give instructions “J” and “K” which were, respectively, as follows:
“J. The court instructs the jury that the defendant, A. T. Reynolds, at the time of the shooting of Alvis Reynolds , had the right to determine from appearances, and the actual state of things surrounding him as to the necessity of acting in self-defense; and if he acted from reasonable and honest conviction as to his danger, he will not be held responsible criminally, even if he was mistaken as to the danger he was in.”
‘‘K. The court instructs the jury that where the killing takes place in a combat, the prisoner has the right in determining his danger of great bodily harm, to take into consideration the relative size and strength of the party assaulting him.”
We are of opinion that there was no error in refusing the two instructions above quoted, for the reason that in so far as they correctly stated the principle of the law intended to be invoked thereby, they were sufficiently substituted by instruction “I” given for defendant as follows:
“The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that Alvis Reynolds, at the time*769 of the fatal difficulty, did any act, or acts, of such a character as to cause the defendant, A. T. Reynolds, to reasonably believe that he, the said Alvis Reynolds, intended to kill him, or to inflict upon him some great bodily harm, and that such danger was imminent, then you should find the defendant not guilty.”
It cannot be doubted that if the jury had accepted the theory of self-defence and had credited the testimony of the defendant in support thereof, they would have extended to him exactly the same consideration and leniency by reason of instruction “I” which they would have given him if, instead thereof, or along therewith, the court had likewise given instructions “J” and “K”. It is manifest, therefore, that there was no error in refusing to give the two instructions last mentioned. Nicholas v. Commonwealth, 91 Va. 741, 751, 21 S. E. 364.
Instruction “L,” asked for by the defendant and refused, was as follows: “The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that no angry words had passed between A. T. Reynolds and the deceased, and that no visible signs of anger had manifested themselves on the part of A. T. Reynolds against the deceased, at any time prior to their meeting together at the creek where the killing was done, and that sharp words were spoken by A. J. Reynolds to the defendant at the creek, and that an altercation ensued in which the deceased was killed, these facts are sufficient to warrant the jury in finding that the killing was not done with malice aforethought; but the presumption is that such killing was upon heat of passion and hot blood, and therefore manslaughter only.”
The court was clearly right in refusing this instruction. It is not denied that theré was an alter
“F. Voluntary manslaughter is the unlawful killing of a human being in heat of blood and sudden passion, upon adequate provocation, and not for malice. And involuntary manslaughter is the unintentional killing of a human being in connection with the doing of an unlawful act.”
“O. The court instructs the jury that although they may not believe from the evidence in this case that A. T. Reynolds, the defendant, shot and killed Alvis Reynolds in self-defense, yet if it appears from the evidence that the killing was not because of any previous grudge, or malice, but was done in the course of a sudden quarrel, in mutual combat, upon sudden provocation, and that the provocation was more than*771 slight, then you cannot find the defendant, A. T. Reynolds, guilty of any higher offense than voluntary manslaughter, which is punishable by confinement in the penitentiary not less than one, nor more than five years.”
This brings us to defendant’s instruction “M,” which was refused, and is as follows:
“The court instructs the jury that proof of ill will against Edgar T. Reynolds some time prior to the killing, cannot be taken as any evidence of malice or ill will against Alvis J. Reynolds, unless there is shown to be some connection between the trouble between A. T. Reynolds and Edgar T. Reynolds, and that between A. T. Reynolds and the deceased.”
We do not perceive any. good reason why this instruction should not have been given if the defendant so desired, but he was not prejudiced by the court’s refusal to give it, for the reason that the evidence of the Commonwealth which, as conclusively shown by the verdict, was accepted by the jury as true, established a direct and immediate “connection between the trouble with A. T. Reynolds and Edgar T. Reynolds, and that between A. T. Reynolds and the deceased,” so that the giving of the instruction would have been tantamount to telling the jury that the defendant’s ill will towards his son Edgar ought to be taken into consideration as evidence of his malice in killing the deceased. The bad feeling between him and his son Edgar may have originated earlier, but the quarrel between them that day grew out of the game of cards. When the accused returned to the game after arming himself, it may be fairly said that he appeared to be mad at the whole party, and “soon afterwards exhibited his temper by a merciless attack. on the mule. After the shooting he said that he had
The proposition of law relied upon in this connection by counsel for the defendant that as a general rule the malice of an accused person against some other than the one whom he subsequently kills is not admissible in evidence to prove his malice against the deceased, has no application to the facts of this particular case.
In McKinney v. State, 8 Tex. App. 626, it was held to be well settled that when the state of mind constitutes an essential part of the crime charged, testimony of such previous acts, conduct or declaration of the accused as tend to establish the state of mind is competent, notwithstanding they may constitute in law a distinct crime. See also Whart. Cr. Ev. (10th ed.), sec. 40, p. 150; State v. Deschamps, 42 La. Ann. 567, 7 So. 703, 21 Am. St. Rep. 392; Whart. on Homicides, sees. 701, 702.
In 8 Eney. Ev., p. 376, it is said: “The circumstances directly leading up to the assault or homicide are admissible as evidence to prove or rebut malice though such evidence may tend to prove the commission of a distinct offense. So also evidence of an assault immediately after an assault or homicide upon another member of the family or party of the person assaulted, or upon one offering him assistance, is admissible to prove the maliciousness of the original act.”
Again in 8 Eney. Ev.,. p. 378, it is said: “Malice against a particular person cannot be proved ordinarily by malicious acts or conduct against another, even if the other be a member of the same family, but it may be proved by evidence of hostility or ill will against the entire family, or against the faction, class or race of which the particular person is a member.” See also Killins v. State, 28 Fla. 313, 334, 9 So. 711; Denson v. State (Tex. Cr. App.), 35 S. W. 150.
In the light of these authorities and of the evidence in this case, which the jury manifestly accepted as true (and to which evidence their belief could not have been influenced by the instruction in question), they must have believed that the anger and malicious state of mind existing on the part of the accused towards his son Edgar was directly connected with and was operating at the time of the homicide. He was, therefore, better off without the instruction than he would have been if the court had given it.
The next assignment of error is based upon the refusal of the trial court to sustain the objection of counsel for the defendant and to a part of the argument made to the jury by the attorney for the Commonwealth. The language complained of was as follows: “In the eyes of the law, if I arm myself with a pistol to kill one special individual, and I go and kill another and different person, I am just as guilty as if I had killed the person I first got the pistol to kill; and when the defendant here, Anthony Reynolds, went to that house and got his pistol for Edgar Reynolds to kill him with, and afterwards killed Alvis Reynolds, under the circumstances claimed to be established by the evidence, with it, he is guilty of malice towards the deceased, Alvis Reynolds.”
It follows from what we have said in connection with the refusal of instruction “M,” that there was no error in refusing to exclude this argument from the jury.
The only remaining assignment of error insisted upon is that the court refused to set aside the verdict on the ground that it was contrary to the law and the evidence. It follows from what has been said in the course of this opinion that this assignment must be overruled.
The judgment complained of is affirmed.
Affirmed.