86 W. Va. 425 | W. Va. | 1920
The defendant was tried before a justice of the peace of Ohio-county upon a warrant charging him with exceeding the speed limit of thirty-ñve miles an hour while driving an automobile over one of the public roads of that county, which trial resulted in his conviction before said justice of the peace, from which judgment he appealed to the Criminal Court of said county. Upon a trial in that court before a jury he was found guilty, and a judgment of fine and imprisonment rendered against him which,
The errors assigned are based upon the action of the court in the admission and rejection of certain evidence; upon the remarks of the prosecuting attorney in his closing argument; and upon the refusal of the court below to set aside the verdict of the jury as not being supported by the evidence. It appears that on the occasion upon which it is charged that Statler violated the law he was returning to the City of Wheeling in his automobile. It seems that there is a considerable down grade at the point where it is charged he exceeded the speed limit. When he started down this grade there was an automobile in front of him going in the same direction, and also one coming in the opposite direction. The one going in the same direction in which he was going was running at a very low rate of speed, and Statler turned to his left for the purpose of passing this car. The car coming in the opposite direction was only a short distance beyond “and, as he says, finding that he would likely not be able to turn back into the road ahead of the'car coming in the opposite direction to that in which he was running, he attempted to run around it on the wrong side, and in doing this ran his own car clear off the paved road. He did not succeed, however, in clearing the opposite car, but ran into the right front end of it, and did some damage. He then observed that his car, if allowed to proceed, would run into a telegraph pole, and in order to avoid this he suddenly turned it back into the road again, with the result that it was overturned. The car which was running in the same direction as the Statler car was operated by a man by the name of Vossler, and the car running in the opposite direction, and with which Statler had the collision, was operated by a man by the name of Wallace. Yossler testifies that he was running along on the proper side of the road at a speed of about ten miles an hour when he heard the Statler car coming over the top of the hill, which was something like one hundred and fifty feet behind him. He says that.from the noise it was making he came to the conclusion that it was running at a dangerous rate of speed, and immediately turned his car out of the paved road to prevent a collision, and that just as he did so the Statler car
• The defendant objected to the witness Yossler being allowed to give his idea of the speed of the Statler car when coming down the hill behind him judging from the noise it was making. When we read the whole evidence of Yossler we find that his judgment of the speed, was based on all of the things which came within his view on that occasion, not only the noise which th.e car made in descending after it came over the hill, but upon the fact that it covered the distance from the top of the hill to the Wallace car in a very short time. The fact that it was running, as he says, at least twenty-five miles an hour when it passed his car, and that the speed had been reduced, as he contends, by the wheels being locked before that time, justified his conclusion that Statler was running at a very much higher rate of speed than the law allows. We cannot say as matter of law that the court erred in allowing his opinion to be given in evidence .based upon the opportunity he had of forming the same at the time.
Exception is taken to the action of the court in permitting the witness Wallace, upon redirect examination, to answer a leading question. The prosecuting attorney, after he had been cross-examined, asked him if his estimate of the speed of thirty-five or forty miles was his best judgment, to which he replied that
Exception is also taken to the action of the court in permitting the witness McClusky to testify concerning a rut or indentation made in the bank where the Statler car ran into it in going around the Wallace car, it being asserted that he was permitted to testify as to whether or not this indentation wa-s the Tesult of speed, force or weight. The answer of the witness declares that he was unable to give an opinion upon this question, so that there was nothing to the prejudice of the defendant in that answer.
Exception is also taken to the action of the court in permitting witnesses to testify that certain marks on the road were made by the application of the brakes to the wheels, and the same being slid over the asphalt road, it being urged that there is nothing to show, that the same sort of marks would not be made by a car running slowly as by a car running rapidly down the hill. This may be entirely true, but this evidence was introduced for the purpose of showing that if the car was running at the rate of twenty-five miles an hour when it hit the Wallace car, it must have been running at a very much more rapid rate a short time before that, because of the fact that the car was running with the wheels locked for a distance of one hundred and fifty feet. It is true Statler and other experts explained to the jury that the brakes being applied and the wheels being locked would not necessarily reduce the speed. The evidence .upon this question all went to.the jury, and it was for them to say what might be the possible result.
It is also objected that the witness Logomarcino was permitted to testify to a conversation he had with the defendant a short
Another error which is confidently insisted upon is that the prosecuting attorney made improper remarks in his closing argument to the jury. It is insisted that the remarks of the prosecuting attorney in regard to the defendant being on a joy ride on this occasion were improper. Apparently these remarks were made in answer to a challenge of defendant’s counsel in his argument, the prosecuting attorney asserting in his remarks that but for that fact he would not malee the statement which he was about to malee, and that was that after the collision between the Statler car and the Wallace car Mr. Vossler ran to the point of collision and there found a woman lying in the road, whom he picked up and placed upon the bank.' Counsel for the defendant insisted that this was improper inasmuch as it was not shown that this woman was in the Statler car at the time of the collision, and the prosecuting attorney remarked that the jury could say from the evidence what the facts were in that regard, and upon the court being requested to pass upon this matter he stated from the bench that that was the evidence given by the witness Vossler, and in this it appears that he was correct. While this argument had nothing to do with the merits of the controversy, it seems to have been provoked by counsel for the defense, and it was no unreasonable deduction from the evidence of Vossler to the conclusion reached by the prosecuting attorney that Statler was on a joy ride on the occasion referred to. We do not think in view of the circumstances under which the remark was made that we would be justified in setting aside the verdict of the jury.
Other remarks made by the prosecuting attorney in his closing argument are complained of, being to the effect that the rule of reasonable doubt was an agency of the devil devised for the purpose of allowing the guilty to escape punishment; charging that the defendant had attempted to bribe an officer after he had been arrested; and also informing the jury that he had been convicted before a justice of the peace upon this charge, and had appealed his case. These remarks and others referred to were improper, and should not have been indulged in by the prosecuting attor
. It follows from what we have said that there is no error in the judgment complained of, and the same is affirmed.
Affirmed.