94 W. Va. 644 | W. Va. | 1923
Upon a verdict of second degree murder defendant was sentenced to confinement in the penitentiary for five years, June 11, 1921; and he prosecutes this writ of error.
The only error relied upon in defendant’s brief is the refusal of the court to set aside the verdict and award a new trial; and as a basis, it is asserted that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict. This assignment impels a close examination of the evidence. A Hallowe’en party was in progress at the home of Julia Stevens, at Mayberry, McDowell county, on November 1, 1920. The deceased, David Hurt, was a brother of Julia Stevens, and was át the party. The homicide was committed between eleven and twelve o’clock that night. The evidence of Sam Brown is that de
The witnesses for defendant tell quite a different story. It appears that when Price 'first went by the .Stevens house about eleven o’clock that night there were in the car with, him Gillespie, Barksdale, Dickenson, Hamilton and Ollie Gilbert. He took Gillespie and Barksdale a short distance from the Stevens house to a school house where a political speaking was in progress, where Gillespie and Barksdale alighted. It appears that Dickenson and Hamilton were in the car for the purpose of being taken back to Northfork. The latter two men were .in the car on the rear seat when Ollie Gilbert got out at the Stevens home and they heard what transpired on that occasion. They and Price say the car staid. there several minutes on account of some engine trouble which Price was attempting to adjust, and while they were there Sam Brown and Hurt came out of the house to the car, Sam Brown being evidently intoxicated, and began an altercation
It will be seen that the oral evidence is irreconcilably in conflict. None of the witnesses on either side testify that Price ever left the public road, and they all agree that Hurt and Brown were standing at the gate at least thirty feet away when the firing began and were never closer. The state’s witnesses say all of the shooting was done by Price and upon the slight provocation detailed by Brown and Gardner. Defendant’s witnesses say the shooting was begun by Brown at the gate, after making threats against Price in the road, and that the fire was afterwards returned by Price when he reached the Ford automobile. Brown says he was not drinking ; others, including Ollie Gilbert, who possibly danced with him, say he was intoxicated. Thus the conflict in'the oral evidence is startling, and it may be said it was solved by the jury-in favor of the prosecution. Dr. Peters, who immediately attended the- deceased after the shooting, and who was the first witness introduced by the state, stated that the shot was in the left side under the shoulder blade made by a 32 caliber ball; that it ranged upward and inward and that the body was powder burned. The revolver used by Price was- a 41 caliber Colts, and one of the balls was found in a small tree which stood by the gate; and one of the state’s witnesses said another ball had struck the house which was in the direction of where Hurt was found. This evidence of the ball in the neighbor’s house is rather unconvincing. These physical facts militate very strongly against the case made by the state’s witnesses. The location of the wound on the left side under the shoulder blade, that it ranged inward- and upward, that it caused -the death, and that the body was powder burned at the wound, was proved and vouched for by the state. Price, according to all who testified, was on an elevation of about four feet above the ground where Hurt was shot and was at least thirty feet from his antagonist at all times. of
What evidentiary weight shall be given to the undisputed physical fact of the powder bums around the wound? They tell with unmistakable force that the weapon which fired the shot was very near the body when it was fired. But it is argued that the jury has found that the state’s witnesses who say all of the shooting was done by Price, had the province to declare that these witnesses were more credible than the admitted physical fact.
We are not unmindful of the well established rule that the jury is the sole judge of the weight of evidence; the
There are many cases where verdicts have been set aside under this rule, which seems to be based on common sense. In Tillson v. Maine Central R. Co., 102 Me. 463, it was said that "Testimony given in direct contravention of physical laws is necessarily deemed incredible;” and in Groth v. Thomann, 110 Wis., 488, "When physical situations or matters of common knowledge point so certainly to the truth as to leave no room for a contrary determination, based on reason and common sense, such physical situation and reasonable probabilities are not affected by sworn testimony which in mere words, conflicts therewith.” In Wheelan v. Chicago R. Co., 85 Ia. 167, a tract repairer testified that a crowbar in his hands had been struck by an iron two inches wide and an inch thick which was attached to a train running twenty-five or thirty miles an hour and by reason of the impact the crowbar was thrown against his neck and body with such force as to break his jaw bone and arm; but it was shown that no mark whatever had been left upon the crowbar by the impact of the iron bar attached to the train, and the court said it was inconceivable how this could be done as testified to by the track repairer without leaving physical evidence of the claimed impact. In Central Vermont R. Co. v. La Compagnie Ins. Co., 2 Que. Q. B. 450, it was claimed that a fire which burned a village was communicated to a building containing inflammable material standing near the railroad by sparks from a hot box on a railroad car which
When we consider, in addition to this undisputed physical fact, that there was abundant testimony that Brown was drunk, had a small pistol in his hand which he was threatening to use and that Hurt had hold of his arm attempting to prevent him from shooting; that the first shots were fired from the gate after which Hurt immediately ran to the ■ left; that the orifice of the wound upon his body indicated that it was made by a 32 caliber ball; that Price used a 41 caliber pistol; that he was wounded in the knee which was bound up a short time after the shooting; that these incidents occurred in the night time and at a Hallowe’en party where there was supposed to be mint julep, we are inclined to the opinion that the preponderance of the evidence is for the defense. We recognize the rule that the evidence of un-controverted physical facts must be sparingly used; but we conclude that the evidence taken all together has not established the guilt of the defendant with such degree of certainty that the verdict of the jury based thereon should stand.
The judgment of the lower court will be reversed, the verdict set aside and a new trial awarded.
Reversed, verdict set aside, new trial awarded.