42 W. Va. 234 | W. Va. | 1896
J. M. Bingham, Edmund Ery, and David Elaherty were jointly indicted in the Circuit Court of Cabell county under section 10, chapter 148, Code 1891, called the “Red Men’s Act”, the indictment charging that they conspired together to inflict bodily injury upon R. B. Yowell, and did, in pursuance of the conspiracy, beat, wound, and greatly injure him. Bingham was tried separately, convicted, and sentenced to the penitentiary for three years, and has brought his case here.
Brief of counsel for the defendant specifies error in the rejection of certain evidence, but no bill of exception was taken on this specific ground, nor was it pointed out as a ground for a new trial when a new trial was asked; and, though I find the matter in the stenographer’s report of evidence? no finger pointed the judge to it, either by call for bill of exceptions on that point, or by specification in the motion for new trial, and we do not consider it. Brown v. Pt. Pleasant, 36 W. Va. 290 (15 S. E. 209); Gregory's Adm’r v. Railroad Co., 37 W. Va. 606 (16 S. E. 819); Halstead v. Horton, 38 W. Va. 727 (18 S. E. 953). The particular evidence must be specified out of the great mass.
Complaint is made that the two instructions following were given at the state’s request: Instruction No. 1: “If the jury believe from the evidence that the prisoner, Bingham, in pursuance of an understanding and combination between himself and Edmund Ery and David Elaherty, or either of them, assaulted R. B. Yowell in the night-time, on the street, in the city of Huntington, in this county, for the purpose of whipping him or doing him an injury, and did then and there inflict any punishment or bodily injury upon said Yowell, and the said Ery and Elaherty, or either of them, were present when said assault was so made and injury inflicted by said Bingham, and that they, or either of them, aided or abetted said Bingham in said assault, either by word or action, then they must find the prisoner guilty as charged in the indictment.” Instruction No. 2: “The court
It is urged against those instructions that they assert the legal proposition that if oneperson assaults and injures another, and other persons are present, aiding and abetting, the jury may therefore find the fact that they had combined and conspired to do the wrongful act — in other words, find the fact of conspiracy, without other independent proof of conspiracy — whereas there should be proof first of the conspiracy, and then the acts done will be presumed to be done in pursuance of it, and the existence of the conspiracy can not be found merely from the presence of the parties, and the doing of the act by one, and the aiding and abetting by others. It is said that section 9 speaks of a conspiracy, and that section 10 says that if certain acts be done it shall be presumed that they were “in pursuance of such combination or conspiracy” — that is, such a conspiracy as by proof has been established under section 9 — and that it does not say it shall be taken to be in pursuance of a conspiracy. I do not think such a construction is the true construction of the statute. The position would do under the common-law, but the
State’s instruction No. 3 is challenged as bad. Instruction No. 3: “If the jury believe from the evidence in this case that J. M. Bingham and Ery and Flaherty, or either Fry or Flaherty, assaulted and injured E. B. Yowell,in said
I think there is no error in refusing defendant’s Nos. 4,5, and 6. No. 4 is bad because ittells the jury that, if not satisfied that a conspiracy existed, they must find not guilty, which would be true as to felony, but not true as to assault and battery, which was a minor offense well charged within the major pífense alleged in the indictment. I do not say that Nos. 5, and 6 are bad, but all they contemplated or postulated was covered by Nos. 1, 2, and 3 given for the defendant. A court need not — ought not to — give innumerable instructions. They produce confusion of mind in the jury. Even expert lawyers and judges are scarcely able
Without indicating any opinion on the merits, on the evidence, we reverse the judgment, set aside the verdict, and remand the case for a new trial.