131 S.E. 710 | W. Va. | 1926
Charged with the murder of David Hurt, Robert Price was tried in the Criminal Court of McDowell County in 1921, and found guilty of murder in the second degree. At that trial the state proved that the body of Hurt was powder burned, that the wound which caused his death was inflicted by a small calibre bullet, and that Price fired at Hurt from a distance of about thirty feet. Price proved that the pistol he used was of forty-one calibre.
Upon a writ of error to this court, the verdict was set aside and a new trial awarded, because the physical facts, as proven by the state, were not consistent with the guilt of the accused. The opinion is reported in
The case was tried again in the lower court in July 1925. Prior to the second trial, counsel for the defendant requested the prosecuting attorney to furnish a bill of particulars "on which the state expects to rely in the prosecution of this case." In response to this request the prosecuting attorney stated that the transcript of the record of the case lately pending in the Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia was his bill of particulars. At the second trial the state offered no evidence that the body of the deceased was powder burned; on the contrary it proved by six witnesses that they examined the body of the deceased after the shooting and saw no powder burns. When the state rested its case, the defendant's counsel moved the court to strike out the evidence of the state relative to the powder burns, which motion was overruled. Price was again found guilty of second degree murder. A motion was made by the defendant to the trial court to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial, which motion was refused. The defendant now prosecutes error here, on the ground that he was surprised by the evidence of the state in so far as it attempted to prove that the body of the deceased was not powder burned. *701
A comprehensive definition of surprise is given by Judge MILLER in the case of Henderson v Hazlett,
It was not incumbent upon the prosecuting attorney to provide a bill of particulars, merely upon the request made by counsel. Neither can we consider the former record in this court as such a bill of particulars as our practice contemplates. But the inference intended by, and the inference drawn from the statement of the prosecuting attorney, was that the evidence of the state upon the second trial would conform in a general way to the evidence of the state upon the first trial. Counsel for the defendant were not in default in assuming that, as the state had proved upon the first trial that the body of the deceased was powder burned, the state would *702 offer like evidence upon the second trial. InChamberlain v. Lindsay, (N.Y.) 1 Hun, 231, a new trial was granted because of misleading statements made by counsel for the prevailing party. The comments of the court in that case apply with equal force here.
"It is not supposed that the plaintiffs' counsel really designed to deceive the attorney for the defendants with whom their interviews were held. * * * They had the undoubted right not to respond at all, for it was no part of their duty to disclose the precise course which they designed to take in the trial of the cause, or the reason on which they would endeavor to recover a verdict for the indebtedness sued upon. But when they waived that, and undertook to respond to the inquiries made, it should have been done in such a manner, as not to leave a palpably erroneous impression on the mind of the person making them."
The same general principle is upheld in Merritt v. Mayfield
The six witnesses who testified at the second trial as to the absence of powder burns on the deceased, were witnesses for the state upon the first trial, at which they gave no such testimony. Their evidence on the second trial tended to prove "a different point", and for that reason also, the defendant could well claim surprise. 29 Cyc. 866 (111); Louisville, etc.,Ry. Co. v. Bickel,
At an early date the English courts adopted the rule, which has been followed generally in the States, that "Where a party or his counsel are taken by surprise, whether by fraud or accident, on a material point or circumstance which could not reasonably have been anticipated, and when want of skill, care or attention cannot be justly imputed and injustice has been done, a new trial will be granted." 1 Graham and Waterman, *703 supra, 169; McCall v. Hitchcock (Ky.), 9 Bush 66 (71).
For the foregoing reasons we are of opinion to reverse the judgment of the lower court, set aside the verdict, and award a new trial.
Judgment reversed; verdict set aside; new trial awarded.