delivered the opinion of the court.
D. G. Wallen, who was jointly indicted with Lina Fields for the murder of D. W. Littrell, was convicted of murder in the first degree, and sentenced to the penitentiary for twenty years. To that judgment this writ of error was awarded.
The accused assigns as error the action of the trial court:
1. In refusing to grant a continuance on account of the absence of material witnesses;
2. In refusing to quash the list and venire facias as made up;
3. In refusing to discharge the jury as finally empaneled;
4. In placing the accused on trial without any severance or election;
6. In admitting certain evidence over the objection of the accused;
6i In giving certain instructions on behalf of the Commonwealth; and
7. In refusing to set aside the verdict of the jury because contrary to the law and the evidence.
First Assignment. When the case was called for trial, the accused moved for a continuance on account of the absence of John Snodgrass and Henry Snodgrass, eyewitnesses to the shooting, his counsel stating that they were material witnesses.
John Snodgrass had testified at a former trial of the case and was under a recognizance to be present. Upon inquiry by the court as to his information of the whereabouts of these witnesses, counsel for accused stated that both lived in this State; that he was informed that Henry Snodgrass was temporarily in Ohio; and that John Snodgrass was at or near St. Charles, in Lee
It is well settled, by reason and authority, that the question of continuances rests in the sound discretion of the trial court, and this court will not reverse its judgment unless the ruling of the court was plainly erroneous. Counsel for the accused gave no assurance that the witnesses could be produced if the motion for a continuance were granted. There were several other eyewitnesses to the shooting who testified at the trial, and the testimony of the Snodgrass witnesses would have been largely cumulative and unlikely to have affected the result.
The absence of a witness who has not been summoned, where there is no assurance that his testimony could be had at another trial, if the case were continued, is not ground for a continuance. Likewise, the refusal to grant a continuance will not be considered an abuse of discretion where a witness is beyond the jurisdiction or compulsory process of the court, and there is no reasonable certainty of the party being able to produce
Second Assignment. While the court was selecting and empaneling the jury, but before the jury was sworn, the accused moved to quash the second venire facias, because the court verbally directed the sheriff to go to the town of Coeburn, in Wise county, and summon twelve persons, without any list. On this point the facts appear from the record to be as follows: A sufficient number of jurors to constitute a panel free’ from exception had not been obtained from those summoned and in attendance, and the court ordered another venire facias to be issued to complete the panel, directing the sheriff to summon twenty-five jurors from the by-standers. The venire facias was issued, and the sheriff had partly executed the same, when the court verbally directed that he go to the town of Coeburn and summon twelve persons, which was done. A list of the names of the persons so summoned was returned to the court, and the clerk was directed to call said persons to the jury box. As they responded, the clerk wrote their names in their places on the venire facias for the sheriff to make his return, and when said names had been so written the sheriff signed his return.
Being unable to secure from those summoned and in attendance a sufficient number of jurors to constitute a panel of twenty free from exception, the court was fully authorized by section 4896 of the Code, 1919, to direct another venire facias, and cause to be summoned from the by-standers, or from a list to be furnished by the court, so many persons as were deemed necessary to
It will be observed that section 4896 of the Code, supra, authorized the court to cause to be summoned “from a list to be furnished by the court,” so many persons as were deemed necessary to complete the panel. The position of the Commonwealth is that this was ample authority for the judge to direct the sheriff to summon the twelve citizens of Coeburn, whose names, upon their appearance in court, were furnished to the clerk by the court, as the list of the court, with directions to call them into the jury box. While the proceeding may have been somewhat irregular, yet it is provided by section 4895, Code 1919, not only that the objection to any irregularity in the summoning, returning, or empaneling of jurors shall be made before the jury is sworn, but that it shall not be a cause for setting aside the verdict, unless it also appears that such irregularity was intentional or such as would probably cause injustice to the Commonwealth, or to the accused. In the instant case, there being no evidence to the contrary, the presumption is that the trial judge did what in his opinion he had a right to do, under the statute, and it cannot be said that the alleged irregularity was intentional, or such as probably resulted in any injustice to the accused. This assignment is therefore without merit.
Third Assignment. We find in the record nothing to
Fourth Assignment. This was the second trial of the case. The record shows that, after the Commonwealth had closed its evidence in chief, counsel for the accused stated he had noticed on the day before, when the trial began, that Lina Fields was jointly indicted with the accused, and had just learned that the record did not show a severance or election by either party, and that he desired to know of the prosecution what proceeding would be taken with reference to the.other defendant. The attorney for the Commonwealth replied that at the former trial the other defendant had not been arrested and was not present, and that the defendant went to trial without objecting, which was of itself a severance. The court ordered the trial to proceed, to which ruling the accused excepted.
Section 4895, Code of 1919, as amended by Acts of 1920, page 24 (same as section 4029, Code of 1887), provides as follows: “If a person, indicted jointly with others for a felony, elect to be tried separately, the venire summoned for their trial may be used for him who is first tried, and the court shall award a venire facias for the trial of the others, jointly or separately, as they may elect.”
In the ease of Barnes v. Commonwealth, 92 Va. 794, at p. 802, 23 S. E. 784, at p. 786, Judge Buchanan, speaking for the court, said: “The accused was indicted jointly with two other persons, but tried separately. The record does not show upon whose motion she was tried, and this is assigned as error. Each and every person indicted jointly for a felony may elect, as a
In the case in judgment there is nothing to show that either of the defendants elected to be tried jointly, and they could not be so tried without the consent of the attorney for the Commonwealth (Barnes’ Case, supra.) The Commonwealth having proceeded to try the defendant separately, thereby elected that he should be so tried. Besides, it is the duty of the accused to make his election before his trial is begun, and where he fails to do so he will be considered to have waived his right to such election. This assignment is likewise without merit.
Fifth Assignment. This assignment involves objections made to the evidence introduced on behalf of the Commonwealth.
The evidence objected to had reference to conditions immediately preceding the shooting of Littrell, statements of persons immediately following the shooting, testimony as to the relations of the accused with Lina Fields, testimony as to the report of Dr. Gilmer,
In bill of exception No. 4, the part of the question objected to was as follows: “Mr. Blessing, I will ask you to go ahead and state * * what Mr. Littrell did, if anything, just prior to the time the trouble occurred?”
The fifth, sixth and seventh bills of exception relate to certain questions, the answers to which disclosed the fact that Lina Fields, the Snodgrass boys, Godsby, and the other men, both before and at the time of their arrest on the road, were very much intoxicated.
The fifteenth bill of exception complains that E. A. Horner was allowed to testify that a few minutes before the shooting he passed the crowd on the road and the woman and the men were drinking. Bill of exception number sixteen has reference to the action of the court in permitting Marshall Belcher to state that Littrell and Blessing went up to the Gap to see whether or not there was rioting there.
The evidence complained of tended to show the facts and circumstances leading up to the shooting, and was helpful to the jury in determining why the shooting occurred and what actually happened at the time of the shooting. The only issue before the jury was, whether the accused was justified in shooting Littrell, and the evidence objected to, if improperly admitted, was harmless error.
Bill of exception No. 8 relates to the action of the court in allowing the witness, Blessing, to testify that just after the shooting Lina Fields took from him the whiskey he had taken from Snodgrass, drank some, and threw it over the bank.
Bill of exception No. 10 complains that the witness,
The eleventh bill of exception complains that the same witness was allowed to testify that Lina Fields was intoxicated; and the twelfth bill of exception complains .because Sayers was asked whether Lina Fields was doing anything while she was talking to Wallen, and the answer being, “Why, she was walking along; come up alongside of Mr. Wallen.”
Bill of exception No. 13 complains that Mrs. Sayers was allowed to say that, after the shooting, Lina Fields was talking to the accused. Bill of exception No. 18 complains that the Commonwealth was allowed to show a friendship existing between Lina Fields and the accused. The evidence tending to show friendly relations between the accused and Lina Fields was admissible as tending to contradict the contention of the accused, that he had no motive for shooting Littrell; and the other evidence was admissible as a part of the res gestae, or, if inadmissible, its admission was not reversible error..
A careful examination of the remaining bills of exception covered by the fifth assignment convinces us that a further consideration of them is unnecessary, as the evidence objected to is plainly admissible, or its admission was harmless error.
Sixth Assignment. The trial court gave the jury seventeen instructions — six on motion of the attorney for the Commonwealth and eleven at the request of the accused. The accused excepted to the granting of instructions Nos. 5 and 6, offered by the Commonwealth, which were as follows:
“5. That the ‘malice’ aforethought necessary to con*784 stitute the crime of murder may be either express or implied. The word ‘malice’ in the foregoing definitions of murder is used in a technical sense, and includes not only anger, hatred and revenge, but every unlawful and unjustifiable motive. It is not confined to ill will to any one or more particular persons, but is intended to denote an action flowing from any wicked and corrupt motive, done with an evil mind and purpose and wrongful intention, where the act has been attended with such circumstances as to carry in them the plain indication of a heart regardless of social duty and deliberately bent on mischief; therefore malice is implied by law from any willful, deliberate and cruel act against another, however sudden. Thus, on a charge of murder, malice is presumed from the fact of killing, when the killing has been proved and is unaccompanied by circumstances of palliation, and the burden of introducing evidence to rebut such presumption rests upon the accused.
“6. That where the plea of self-defense is relied upon in a trial for murder, the law is that the plea of self-defense is not available to a party unless he was without fault in bringing about the difficulty, and, in any case, the necessity relied upon to excuse the killing must not arise out of the prisoner’s own misconduct.”
The principal objection to instruction No. 5 is directed against the last sentence in the instruction, as to the presumption of malice and the burden upon the accused to introduce evidence to rebut such presumption.
We think the definition of malice contained in this instruction states the law with reasonable accuracy; and the last clause as to the burden of proof is in nearly the exact words of an instruction which was approved by this court in the case of Hall v. Commonwealth, 89 Va. 179, 15 S. E. 517, and in the case of Horton v. Commonwealth, 99 Va. 848, 38 S. E. 184.
Besides, all of the instructions must be read together, and when instructions Nos. 5 and 6 are read in connection with other instructions given at the request of the accused, it is apparent that the jury could not have been misled by the instructions.
Seventh Assignment. The accused was a policeman in the town of Appalachia. On Sunday, December 12, 1920, J. M. Blessing, assistant sergeant, and D. W. Littrell, a policeman of Big Stone Gap, were out looking for violators of the law, and met four men and one woman, Lina Fields, standing in the public road about one mile from Big Stone Gap, drinking ardent spirits. The officers arrested them and started back to Big Stone Gap. One of the party, John Snodgrass, dropped a bottle of whiskey and reached for his pistol. Blessing drew his pistol on him, and he dropped his gun, and Blessing picked up the whiskey and the gun. They had walked only a short distance when, being overtaken by an automobile, they “flagged” it for the purpose of securing transportation into Big Stone Gap. All of the prisoners were intoxicated, and while the officers were arranging for their transportation, the accused drove up in a buggy, alighted and walked over into the crowd behind Littrell, put his hand on Littrell’s left shoulder and his gun in his back and fired. Littrell fell to the ground and died in a few minutes. Blessing pulled his “gun”
The foregoing are among the material facts which appear in the evidence relied on by the Commonwealth.
The accused admitted that he killed Littrell, but claimed he shot to save his own life. He testified that when he drove up Littrell was standing there “with his gun up,’-’ and he left his buggy and went across to stop what he supposed to be trouble among those in the crowd, and touched Littrell on the shoulder and said, “Don’t let’s have any trouble,” and that thereupon Littrell “threw his gun across like that” (indicating), and witness “knocked the gun off and it fired.” Witness says he then jerked his pistol out and fired, and does not know where he hit him. Witnesses were introduced by the accused to sustain his version of the shooting and to contradict and impeach the testimony of Blessing, the leading witness for the Commonwealth.
With this conflict in the evidence, the credibility and weight of the testimony were questions for the jury. There was ample evidence to support their verdict, and we have no authority to set it aside.
The judgment complained of will be affirmed.
Affirmed.