41 W. Va. 537 | W. Va. | 1895
This is a writ of error brought by Kenos Douglass to reverse a sentence of imprisonment for life in the penitentiary imposed upon him by the Circuit Court of the county of Greenbrier for the murder of Thomas Reed on Christmas night, 1893.
Counsel for the prisoner asks us to hold bad the indictment, which is in the form allowed by section 1 of chapter
The refusal to allow a change of venue is relied on as error. The statute requires the accused to show good cause for it. This means that he must show it to the satisfaction of the court. State v. Greer, 22 W. Va. 800. To maintain his motion numerous affidavits were filed—all, I may say, alike in substance—stating that the affiants had heard the case much talked about in the county, and that there was a strong prejudice against Douglass, and that, in the opinion of affiants, a fair and impartial trial could not be had in Greenbrier county. Are these affidavits, taken alone, without reference to the counter affidavits filed by the state, sufficient to show that the circuit court abused the discretion lodged with it? They show what? First. That the ease was much talked about. This is only a basis of opinion that prejudice existed. Second. That there was prejudice, which could only be matter of opinion. Third. That in the opinion of affiants a fair trial could not be had. Now, this all amounts but to an expression of opinion that a fair trial could not be had. There may be public discussion of a case. There always is of murder cases. There may be prejudice—generally is; but is it so prevalent and widespread that, in spite of the safeguards which the law throws around trials, it may—there is serious danger that it may—prevent a fair trial? No facts are given affording a basis of judgment as to whether such trial can be had. Opinions differ so widely. They spring, with different men, from so many different theories, conjectures, bias, partisanship, or solid ground. There must be facts and circumstances so that legal deductions can be made. In Wormsley’s Case, 10 Gratt. 658, the evidence showed much more than here, and was held insufficient, and the rule stated that the prisoner’s affidavit,
Ought the circuit court to have given the prisoner a new trial because the verdict was unsustained by the evidence? I will not detail the pages of evidence. Thomas Reed had a chopping Christmas day, and invited his friends to his cabin home in the mountains to participate in plays usual among the mountaineers on such occasions. Kenos Douglass had not helped at the chopping; and was not invited. He organized a company of five, he being one, and went to Reed’s party, several miles away. He commanded the company. He openly exhibited a pistol along the way. The whole evidence shows that he, at least, designed to create disturbance at the party and carry things on in his own way. He and Ids companions were kindly invited in at Reed’s. Scarcely had he entered than he started a fuss with a young boy, Creed Reed, a brother of Thomas Reed, by boisterous, insulting language, laying his hand on his breast, and pushing him back. Another brother, Johnson Reed, remonstrated with Douglass, saying, “Kenos, that is my brother, and you must not hurt him; he is too young,” and he replied that he had things to go on as he said, swearing as he said this. Then he and a companion started a play of their own, represented as rough, which Thomas Reed did not like, but let them finish it and then said,
Who fired this deadly shot? None other than Kenos Douglass. No one else had had the slightest word out of the way with Reed. lie was the only one seen with the deadly pistol. Just as the door closed, he on its outside, Reed on its inside, before either had time to get away, came the shot. Some say he had the pistol still in hand as he passed the door sill. From whose pistol this deadly bullet? Were there no other evidence, these circumstances would be full proof to reasonable men that he tired the fatal bullet. He was intent on mischief, as his conduct shows. He was intent, it seems, on taking Reed’s life. He was afraid to fire in the room before all eyes, and thought it safer to fire from the outside;but he was careful to tire at once, before Reed would leave the knob of the door, and pointed his pistol at just the proper place to kill Reed. He was so close that the powder burnt the door. Reed’s dying declarations to his father, Elijah Reed, accuse Douglass, llis father was at his bedside when the wounded young man said, “Pa, I don’t want you to grieve for
A wdtness for the defense, Robeit Taylor, says he heard a woman’s voice outside the door say, “Lordy, Kenos don’t shoot,” and he replied, “Damned if I don’t,” and then the shot. Richard Humes and Gordon Falconer say they saw Kenos Douglass fire that shot. Thomas and Miranda Cochran heard Douglass say that night that he would not have shot Reed if he had not shoved him from the door. Did Douglass go into the stricken man’s house, like many others, to minister what comfort he might to him and his w'ailing wife ? lie did not. Did he go home and await the coming of the officer of the law in the consciousness and courage of innocence ? He did not. Whither did he flee? From lióme and the haunts of men to the recesses of the wildest mountains of the state, and in midwinter for five weeks lay in a laurel brake hiding from the eyes of man, never going to a human habitation, and there he was surprised while asleep by a vigilant officer of the law.
Asa jury has said he is guilty of murder in the first degree, we could not say otherwise, unless their finding be plainly, manifestly against or without evidence, so as to assault the conscience as a verdict of palpable injustic; but that verdict is sustained by abundant evidence. The jury showed mercy in not making Kenos Douglass pay the forfeit of his life for the life of Thomas Reed, under the law of the Bible. We would fain somewhat palliate the enormity of this act by attributing it to haste and recklessness of intoxication, but I regret to believe that it is only a cruel, unprovoked murder of a man without fault, within the sacred precincts of his humble home, by one who invaded that home bent on mischief to some one there, certainly; bent, likely, on taking the life of Thomas Reed. Men intend what they do. I repeat that I would gladly at
We therefore affirm the sentence.