89 W. Va. 301 | W. Va. | 1921
Defendant prosecutes this writ of error from a judgment of the criminal court entered on the 6th day of April, 1920, sentencing him to confinement in the penitentiary for five years.
In October, 1917, the E. E. White Coal Co. had a controversy with some of its employees, at the Glen White mines, who were members of the United Mine Workers of America, and a strike resulted, the company’s employees who were not members of the union remaining at work. The dispute was decided against the strikers by the United States mediators, and thereafter occurred the shooting for which defendant and the persons named above were indicted. The state’s evidence was to the effect that Toney Stafford, who was an organizer of the United Mine Workers, suggested to Tom McGinnis, the secretary of the miners’ local at Glen White, after the decision of the mediators had been rendered, that some radical means would have to be employed to win the strike; that Stafford later proposed that he furnish the guns and McGin-nis the men to shoot at the nonunion miners when the cage, .in which they were carried up the mine shaft at the close of the day’s work, appeared at the surface; that in pursuance of this arrangement Stafford did furnish a number of high powered guns and ammunition; and that on the afternoon of November 16, 1917, defendant Stafford, together with Tom McGinnis, George Lucas, Dorr Snuffer, Carl Crim, Tom Murphy, Will Owens and others assembled on the mountain side, where the guns and ■ammunition had previously been hid, and lay in wait within shooting distance until the men at work came up in a cage; that from fifty to three hundred shots from high powered rifles were fired at a cage containing, among others, John Hansom, John Spears and H. E. Nuckolls, the bullets striking all around the men but hitting no one. Witnesses testified that Toney Stafford, defendant, was armed with a shot gun and stationed about 300 yards behind the
Many assignments of error are made, but six only are urged, and to these we will confine our consideration.
On October 6, 1919, defendant filed two pleas in abatement to the indictment, averring that the grand jury which had found and returned the indictment had not been selected from a list of grand jurors prepared by the county court in the manner prescribed by law. The court, without objection or exception, proceeded to try the issue joined on these two pleas, and found in favor of the State. Error is assigned because the court so decided. The State objected to the filing of these pleas on the ground that they were tendered by defendant alone, and were not sworn to by him, but by one Lawrence Dwyer, citing Rader v. Adamson, 37 W. Va. 582. It is not necessary to decide this contention, in view of the disposition Ave make of this assignment of error. Section 2, chap. 157, Code, 1918, directs that the county court shall at its levy term annually prepare a list of not less than 100 nor more than 150 freeholders, qualified to serve as grand jurors, and deliver the list so prepared to the clerk of the circuit court, from AAdiich grand jurors shall be draAAm at the time'
Defendant’s second assignment of error relates to the giving of the State’s instruction No. 5, which is as follows: “The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that on the 16th day of November, 1917, that Tony Stafford, Carl Crim, Dorr Snuffer, Tom McGinnis, Tom Murphy, Tony Sarazzo, G-eorge Lucas, Will Owens, Ed Horniek, Tom Lethco, or either or all, or any of them, armed with rifles, guns and pistols, loaded with powder and leaden and steel balls and bullets, did go within range and shooting distance of the tipple of the Glen White mines, in which was the cage that is used for bringing men up out of said mine, and the said Carl Crim, Dorr Snuffer, Tom Murphy, Tony Sorazzo, George Lucas, Will Owens, Ed Horniek and Tom Lethco, did then and there lie in wait until John Ranson and the other persons mentioned in the indictment in this case came up on said cage, and did then and there shoot at the said John Ranson and said other persons mentioned in the indictment, or either, or any, or all of them, with said rifles, guns and pistols, loaded as aforesaid, with intent then and there to kill them, or either or any or all of them; and if the jury believes from the evidence that the said Tony Stafford was then and there present or within about three hundred yards of the said Carl Crim, Dorr Snuffer, Tom Murphy, Tony Sorazzo, George Lucas, Will Owens, Ed Horniek and Tom Lethco, and watching to prevent surprise whilst said Carl Crim, Dorr Snuffer, Tom Murphy, Tony Sorazzo, George Lucas, Will Owens, Ed Horniek and Tom Lethco were on the
The giving of the State’s instruction No. 6 is objected to on cue ground that it states an abstract proposition of law, anu was calculated to. lead the jury into the belief that the trial court believed the defendant guilty of an attempt to commit murder in the first degree. It is in the following words: “The court further instructs the jury that under the law of this State any wilful, deliberate and premeditated killing of a human being by another is murder of the first degree, and that any felonious, wilful, malicious, deliberate and unlawful attempt by one human being to take the life of another is an attempt to commit murder in the first degree.” It is well settled that abstract propositions of law should not be given when there is no evidence on which they can be predicated; but where they are given, and there is evidence in the case to
Assignment of error is based on the giving of instruction No..8 for the State, which reads: “The court instructs the
Error is assigned because, it is asserted, the prosecution was inspired, managed and controlled by employed counsel; and that neither the prosecuting attorney nor his assistant were present or participated in the trial. The record does not bear out this assignment. M. L. Painter, the prosecuting attorney, app'eared at the preliminary examination of defendant before a justice of the peace, summoned witnesses before the grand jury and examined them, participated in and controlled the preparation of the indictment, was present
The remaining assignment of error is predicated on the refusal of the court to sustain a peremptory challenge of defendant to Howard O’Neal, a juror selected on his voir dire on the panel of twenty. Upon an extended and thorough examination of this juror, both by the prosecution and defense, it developed that he had no bias or prejudice against defendant, either on account of his nationality or because he was a member of the United Mine Workers, a labor union, and had no bias or prejudice against him for any other cause, and that he could go upon the jury and render a fair and impartial verdict according to the evidence. However, he stated that he “didn’t think much of labor unions,” and cud not think such unions very conducive to law and order. This juror was at that time loading coal at another coal operation at Pemberton, several miles distant from the G-len White mine, at which first named coal operation a strike had been in progress a year or so before, when he had continued to work, being a non-union workman and not knowing what the strike was about. The court, upon objection, refused to permit him to answer two questions, both of which asked in sub
The general assignment that the court erred in refusing to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial impels us to examine the evidence. It is enough to say that defendant’s whole defense rested upon an alibi. Jb'our witnesses, Tom McGinnis, George Lucas, Carl Crim and Dorr Snuffer, jointly indicted with defendant, and who -participate! in the shooting, testified that defendant had originated the plan, was present at its execution and directing its progress. There were circumstances and other etudence tending to corroborate them. Eight witnesses, and perhaps more, testified that defendant was at Beckley on the day of the shooting and could not have participated in the actual execution of the crime. Upon this question of fact the jury has passed judgment, and we will not disturb its finding.
Perceiving no error, ~w& affirm the judgment and sentence of the loAver court.
Affirmed.