49 W. Va. 96 | W. Va. | 1901
Lud Madison was sentenced to death by the criminal court of Fayette County for the murder of Peter Suader, and having been refused a writ of error by the judge of the circuit court, obtained such writ from a judge of this Court.
One assignment of error is, that the court did not give the accused time to consult his attorney, but forced him into trial without time to prepare his defense. About three o’clock n. M. the
“Mail my letter. Mr. Charlie Jordan”- — on the back.
This shows sedate purpose to do the murder. Madison waited till all were asleep, and then shot Suader through the lungs and heart while asleep and helpless, about one o’clock, and fled in the darkness of the night, satchel in hand, and was apprehended at Hinton, in an adjoining county, while, walking the railroad track on his way to Virginia, and when arrested gave the officers his name as “Will Howald.” In his haste, lie left the door of the shanty open. He had had several hours to cool after the slight disagreement between him and Suader. He asked the arresting officer where the shooting had been done, and being informed that it was on Laurel Creek, Madison said nothing for a little while, but when the officer asked him why he shot the man, Madison replied, “Because he cursed me.” At another time and place, while riding along the road while being conveyed back
A second assignment of error is, that the court did not give compulsory process for Harrah as a witness, and forced the trial without his presence. This assignment is unsustained by the facts. The court did award process for this witness on the first day of the trial, adjourned it till the next morning, then till the afternoon, when inquiry of the sheriff revealed that Harrah had not been summoned, and no effort by the sheriff to summon him, and the court went on with the trial. The question is, is the prisoner entitled to a new trial for this cause? If we consider it under the law of continuance just stated, it is not sufficient. The accused knew this constable Harrah, to whom he made the confession. Surely he could, in months, have had him summoned. Counsel say they first learned on the examination of the justice who heard the confession of Madison, the importance of Harrah on the subject of inducement held out to the prisoner to confess; but the attorneys do not state in what that importance consisted, nor do they say that they knew, (they could not know), what evidence Harrah would give, nor that they had ever talked with Harrah, and they 'gave no ground whatever to enable a court to say that Harrah would prove anything for the prisoner. Counsel stated that they wanted \ Harrah “for the purpose of ascertaining and proving, if possible, that inducements were offered to the prisoner.” This was mere hope, mere experiment. The justice who was present when the confession to the constable was made disproves anjr inducement to confess. The prisoner even made no affidavit as to Harrah, or what Har-rah knew, or what the prisoner expected to prove by him. Would he prove inducements? We cannot even guess. No one asserts
The third assignment of error is, that the court refused to strike out the evidence of Cox and Yancey, proving Madison’s confession of the murder. This assignment is based on the idea that there was inducement to confess. There is no evidence of it. The evidence of two witnesses negative any inducement.
The fourth assignment of error rests oh the refusal of an instruction that the jury could consider the good character of Madison, and the bad character of Suader. There was some evidence that Madison had a good reputation for peace and quietude, and a morsel, a mere morsel, of evidence from one witness that Suader had a bad reputation as to peace. It was really nó evidence. It is not shown to be based bn general reputation, and the witness did not personally know Suader.
As to the character of the accused. It may be said that oncé the rule was that it is only in cases where the evidence is circumstantial, and the question whether the accused did the act, that evidence of good character is admitted; but the prevalent rule
As to that feature of the instruction saying that the jury had a right to consider the bad character of the deceased. There was no evidence of it, and such evidence as there was was before the jury. But the jury could not consider it for the reason that the bad character of a person killed cannot be considered where there is not the minutest particle of evidence to show any altercation, any necessity of self-defense. 3 Greenl. Ev., s. 27. It is only where the right of self-defense is involved under the evidence that the bad character of the deceased as to peaceableness is competent. Whart. Crim. Ev., s. 68; Gardner v. State, 35 Am. St. R. 202 and note. Even when one threatened another, it was held that the dangerous character of the deceased was not admissible "where it is shown that the prisoner sought him out and shot him, without attempt on his part to execute his threat.” Pritchett v. State, 58 Am. Dec. 250. Suader had given, say, a
Another assignment is the separation of the jury. One of the attorneys says that while the jury was in charge of the officer in a large room in a hotel, one juror went into the washroom in which was the water closet. Suppose he did. We held in State v. Harrison, 36 W. Va. 729, that mere separation will not vitiate a verdict, and that when a juror went into a water closet, the sheriff being near, as in this case, it would not affect a verdict. In' this case there is no showing that the juror saw or talked with anybody in the washroom. But the officer swears flatly that no such separation as alleged took place.
We must affirm the judgment.
Affirmed.