85 W. Va. 326 | W. Va. | 1919
Upon an indictment in two counts, the first charging defendant with having feloniously and maliciously stabbed, cut and wounded one Samuel E. Snider, with intent to maim, disfigure, disable and kill him; the second with unlawfully and feloniously beating, wounding and ill-treating him with intent and malice' aforethought to kill and murder him, the jury found him guilty of assault and battery upon said Snider, as charged in the indictment, the lowest offense of which he could have been convicted thereunder; and the judgment now under review was that he pay to the State a fine of two hundred dollars and be also confined in the jail of the county for the p.eriod of sixty days.
Numerous points of error relating to the admission of evidence and to the giving and refusing of instructions, are urged and relied on to reverse the judgment, and a number of them are well founded; but on the defendant’s own testimony the
’ The assault here complained of was committed in October, 1916. The record of an indictment against defendant for a previous assault upon Snider in April of the same year, and his confession of guilt thereon, was admitted in evidence over his objection. We think the evidence showing such a recent assault was properly admitted. But if we exclude that record, still-the evidence of defendant shows beyond question that he was also guilty of this more recent assault and battery upon Snider. Admitting that Snider may have first hit Miller with a piece of coal, he did not stop but went right on, all the time going away from Miller. Miller was in no danger, and it was wholly unnecessary for him, as a means of self-defense, to have pursued
The rule of law applicable to the facts is that an appellate court will not reverse the action of the trial court because of the admission or rejection of evidence or because of erroneous instructions, where it appears to the court upon the whole ease as presented and the admissions of the defendant the verdict ought to be confirmed. Tucker v. The Colonial Fire Insurance Co., 58 W. Va. 30, 43, and cases cited; State v. Hull, 45 W. Va. 767; White v. L. Hoster Brewing Co., 51 W. Va. 259; 1 Enc. Dig. Va. & W. Va. Rep. 592, and cases there digested. In such a case what good would come of a reversal for error when on a .new trial the lowest possible verdict which could be rightly found on the defendant’s own admissions would be the one found by the jury on the first trial? We can not and ought not assume that on another trial the jury would go counter to defendant’s admissions, and acquit him of guilt, when he confesses the facts establishing his guilt beyond any peradventure.
The point most strenuously urged is that the fine imposed is excessive, and that the judgment of imprisonment amounts to cruel and unusual punishment, prohibited by the Constitution. Assault and battery is a common-law offense, of which our courts have jurisdiction, and no statute limits the punishment. The amount of the fine and the term of imprisonment are discretionary with the court, and limited only by the Constitution, that it shall not be excessive, nor cruel and unusual. State v. McKain, 56 W. Va. 128; Ex parte Garrison, 36 W. Va. 686; Ex parte Wait W. Richards, 53 W. Va. 555, 556.
The fine of two hundred dollars and imprisonment for sixty
For these reasons the judgment will be affirmed.
Affirmed.