Adams v. Commonwealth

111 S.E.2d 396, 201 Va. 321, 1959 Va. LEXIS 229
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 30, 1959
DocketRecord 4993
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 111 S.E.2d 396 (Adams v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Commonwealth, 111 S.E.2d 396, 201 Va. 321, 1959 Va. LEXIS 229 (Va. 1959).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Ollie Adams, Jr., was indicted for the murder of Walker A. Jordan, was convicted by a jury of voluntary manslaughter and sentenced to five years in the penitentiary in accordance with the verdict. He was granted a writ of error. His assignments of error number 23 but in his brief they are resolved into four questions concerning the sufficiency of the evidence, the refusal of an instruction, the admission of certain testimony, and the argument of counsel.

The defendant admitted the slaying but claimed it was done in self-defense. The evidence as the jury could have evaluated it presented the following facts and circumstances of the killing:

Jordan was killed about 11 p.m. on June 16, 1958. Prior to that time he and his wife Barbara were having domestic troubles. She, called as a witness for the defendant, testified that she had been “going with” the defendant for about three months and that in May, before the killing in June, the defendant took her and a friend to look for an apartment and when they got back to the friend’s house Jordan was there and he and the defendant had an argument, during which Jordan told the defendant that if he caught him with her again he would kill him. The friend testified to the same effect, adding that Jordan was angry but did not do anything, just argued. The defendant’s version was that Jordan said if he caught him with his wife again he would kill both of them. She separated from her husband about four weeks before his death and had rented an apartment in her maiden name and without his knowledge on Claiborne avenue in the city of Norfolk.

She and the defendant were in that apartment on the night of June 16 about eleven o’clock when her husband came looking for her. The defendant said he was there to finish some painting in the apartment and was putting his brushes to soak, which was why he was there so *323 late. He testified that when Jordan arrived the door was only partially closed and Jordan walked in and said, “Is Barbara here?” He replied that she was not and Jordan told him he was lying, that she was there. The defendant repeated that she was not there, whereupon Jordan grabbed him by the collar of his shirt, saying, “This time I am going to kill you,” and “cocked his knife up high”; that he then pulled the defendant through the door onto the front stoop, in spite of the defendant’s struggles, and, said the defendant: “I reached in my pocket (demonstrating), and I grabbed my knife. I opened it and he swung at me (demonstrating). He swung at my neck (demonstrating) . I kept my eye on his knife blade all the time. I saw the lick coming. I bowed low (demonstrating) enough for his fist to hit me on the right side of my neck, and I swung (demonstrating) low underarm by being left-handed and stabbed him in the chest. He said, ‘You have cut me.’ Then he released his hold and he began to run toward the gate. I dropped my knife and I ran down behind him. I caught him right at the gate.”

He said that he then took off his own shirt, tried to stop the bleeding, then called to deceased’s wife. He saw a lady going in the door and said to her, “Call the police, call an ambulance, I have hurt this man.” He testified that he stabbed Jordan to keep Jordan from killing him.

Some significant differences appeared between his testimony and that of Barbara Jordan. She said that she and the defendant were getting ready to leave the apartment when her husband came up and knocked on the door; that she then went into the bathroom, from where she heard her husband ask the defendant if she was there, and heard his reply that she was not, to which her husband replied that she was there and that he was going to find her; that she then heard her husband say to the defendant that “this has been going on a long time. * # this was what he had been waiting for, and * * that he was going to kill him.*” But she further testified that when the defendant denied she was there her husband said, “Now, listen, all I want to do is talk to her, and I know she is here,” and that after that she heard somebody walking around in the front room and in the kitchen and later she heard scuffling and heard a jar or vase or something fall, after which she heard the defendant calling to her from the outside. She told police officers that night that she was in the house next door at the time of the killing but later stated to them that she was in the bathroom; that the defendant and her husband went out into the yard, *324 she heard some loud talking, after which the defendant called her and said he had stabbed her husband. It was not until the afternoon of the following day that she stated she heard her husband threaten to kill the defendant.

Photographs showed blood spots in the yard near the door through which Jordan had entered and leading to where his body lay. The defendant’s knife was found near the beginning of the blood spots but no knife was on Jordan’s person nor in the yard, nor anywhere about the premises, although a diligent search was made by the police officers and others for more than two hours that night, beginning very soon after Jordan’s death. Jordan’s wife testified that the only knife she saw that night was the defendant’s; that she saw none in her husband’s hands or anywhere around him when she went to the place where the defendant was holding him up, and that she never knew him to carry a knife.

A man who lived a few doors away was called and on arrival found the defendant kneeling at the yard gate holding Jordan and there was blood on the ground. He asked the defendant what had happened and the defendant replied that the fellow had drawn a knife on him and that he had cut the fellow but hoped he wouldn’t die.

The defendant told one of the police officers that night that he stabbed Jordan in “a tussle” over Jordan’s wife, during which Jordan drew a knife on him and at that time he pulled his own knife and stabbed him during the tussle. He told another officer that night that Jordan had a knife in his hand when he came into the house, so he reached into his pocket and got his; that Jordan then pulled him outside onto the stoop, swung at him, and he, defendant, ducked and stabbed him. He told this officer there had been bad blood between him and Jordan for sometime over Jordan’s wife, and that Jordan had called him a number of times and told him to leave his wife alone. He testified that he had had intercourse with Mrs. Jordan in his car but did not love her and she was not his girl friend.

Although defendant testified that he had just finished painting and was preparing to leave when Jordan came, there was evidence that the only light in the room was a kerosene lamp turned down so low that it gave practically no light, and ^ome of Mrs. Jordan’s underclothing was on a mattress on the floor of j ae room.

While the defendant testified that. e stabbed Jordan to keep Jordan from killing him, yet the jury were n : required to accept the defendant’s statement as to how the killing ccurred simply because the de *325 fendant said it happened that way and no witnesses testified to the contrary.

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Bluebook (online)
111 S.E.2d 396, 201 Va. 321, 1959 Va. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-commonwealth-va-1959.