28 Gratt. 930 | Va. | 1877
On the 11th day of October 1876 Arne
When the case was called for trial, she by her counsel moved the court for a continuance of the cause, on the ground of the absence of a witness. The court overruled the motion, and she excepted.
The single question presented for the consideration of this court upon the writ of error is, whether the court below erred in overruling the prisoner’s motion for a continuance.
In support of her motion, she proved by her counsel that the witness on account of whose absence the motion was made, was George T. Clarke, of the county of Surry, Virginia; that the counsel bad conversed with the witness on the subject of his testimony; that it was material to the defence of the prisoner, and that she expected to prove by said Clarke that M. Goulard, the prosecutor and main witness for the commonwealth (whose goods she was charged in the indictment with having stolen), was unworthy of belief; and that Goulard had disposed of a part, if not the whole of the goods charged to have been stolen, prior to the time at which it was alleged that the prisoner had committed the larceny thereof. In addition to this statement of her counsel, she made an affidavit to the same effect, and further, that she could not safely go to trial in the absence of the witness.
It appears by the record that she was indicted in the corporation court of Norfolk, on the 4th day of October 1875. So that twelve months intervened between the finding of the indictment and her trial and convic
At the November term, to wit, on the 4th day of November, a rule was made against Clarke, returnable to the 10th day of the same month; to which rule the sheriff of Surry made return, that it “ came to hand 15th November, too late to execute.”
The court learning that Clarke was a member of the Virginia legislature, continued the case to the April' term following (1876). The clerk issued a subpoena for Clarke, but by mistake made it returnable to March instead of to the April term. The subpoena was executed, but nothing was done in the case at the April term. At the June term, it is stated in the bill of exceptions, but no copy of any order of the court at that term appears in the record, that Clarke was present and that the case was continued “on the motion of the commonwealth, and not upon the motion of the prisoner.” At the July term the case was continued for the commonwealth, on account of “the illness of an important witness for the commonwealth.”
Whether the witness, Clarke, was in attendance at the July term does not appear. The case was eon
“A motion for a continuance,” says Judge Moncure, delivering the opinion of the court in Hewitt v. Commonwealth, 17 Gratt. 627, 629, “is addressed to the sound discretion of the court, under all the circumstances of the case; and though an appellate court will supervise the action of an inferior court on Buch a motion, it will not reverse a judgment on that ground, unless such action is plainly erroneous.”
The affidavit of the prisoner, that Clarke was a material witness, and that she expected to prove by him certain facts, should, under the circumstances, have further stated, if true, that she could not prove the same facts by any other witness present at the trial.
The counsel for the prisoner, in his printed note of argument, cites in support of his assignment of error the case of Gwatkin v. Commonwealth, 10 Leigh 687. That case was essentially different from the one we are now considering. There it was shown that the absent witness had been duly summoned, that his testimony was material, that facts material to the defence could be proved by him which could not be proved by any other witness, and that the witness was probably prevented from attending by his sickness. The certificate of the judge in the bill of exceptions in this case that the evidence on the trial (which was made a part of the record) was of “a circumstantial nature and
S I ana of opinion that there is no error in the judgment of the corporation court of the city of Norfolk,, and that the said judgment should be affirmed.
Moncure, P., and Christian and Staples, Js., concurred in the opinion of Burks, J.
Anderson, J., dissented.
Judgment aeeirmed.