Adkins v. Commonwealth

105 S.E.2d 164, 200 Va. 238, 1958 Va. LEXIS 180
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedOctober 13, 1958
DocketRecord 4880
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 105 S.E.2d 164 (Adkins 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
Adkins v. Commonwealth, 105 S.E.2d 164, 200 Va. 238, 1958 Va. LEXIS 180 (Va. 1958).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

*239 The defendant, John P. Adkins, on his trial before a jury, was convicted of grand larceny and sentenced to three years in the penitentiary in accordance with the verdict. Under his assignments of error he contends that the evidence was not sufficient to support the verdict and that the court erred in rejecting certain evidence offered by him and in giving certain instructions for the Commonwealth.

He was charged with stealing walnut logs cut from three walnut trees standing on a tract of land of about 350 acres owned by John R. Francisco in Goochland county. Code § 18-168.

Francisco testified that around the first of August (1957) he made an agreement with the defendant to sell to him only the sycamore trees along the river on this tract at $15 a thousand; that during the timber operations he noticed that the Caterpillar tractor used by the defendant had gone up through the woods; that he followed its tracks and then he “thought about these big walnuts up there, that maybe he had gone and cut them,” so he went on up and came to an area where three walnut trees had been cut and dragged up the hill with the tractor.

He measured the stumps of these trees and two of them were 30y2 inches in diameter and the trees were 40 feet high measured from the stump to the lap; he said the third one was smaller and he did not measure it but guessed it to be about 20 feet high. He stated on cross-examination that he did not find the third tree until after he had gotten the warrant for the defendant and “I estimate that [tree] at about 40 foot long, too,” and he also found there the power saw referred to below. Francisco then was asked if he knew where these logs went and he replied that they, or some of them, went to the Crozet Lumber Company, Crozet, Virginia; and he knew that, he said, “because Adkins told me that he carried them there.” He then related conversations had with the defendant which will also be referred to later on.

The Commonwealth called as its witness J. Howard Smith, vice-president and general manager of Crozet Lumber Company, who testified that on August 23, 1957, he bought and received from the defendant ten walnut logs and paid him $168.77 for them. He introduced the original sales slip and testified therefrom as to the length and diameter of each of the ten logs. He was asked if any of thec-'e logs fitted the 30 \\ inch diameter of the stumps of the two largest trees as measured by Francisco, and he replied, “No, sir, *240 I don’t think they do.” He explained that logs are bought on the small end measurement and stated: “The largest log that was brought on the load of logs that I bought from John Adkins measured 20 inches at the small end. And it is not very practical for a tree to go from 30 /z inches to 20 inches in diameter in nine feet of length,” which was the length of the 20-inch log.

Thereupon the court asked, “Mr. Smith, can you, from the measurement of these logs and the experience you have had [which he had said was 30 years], tell whether any of these logs may have come off of a 30 inch stump?” He answered, “In my opinion they did not come off of a 30 inch stump, no, sir.”

Garland Oliver, the defendant’s brother-in-law, testified that the walnut logs sold to the Crozet Lumber Company were bought by him and the defendant on August 22 from James H. Tanner, in Culpeper county, and they paid him Si00 for them, for which Tanner gave them a receipt, and that they hauled them the next day, August 23, to the Crozet Lumber Company and sold them to that company on that day. The defendant testified to the same effect and so did his brother, Herbert Adkins. The indictment charged that the larceny was committed on or about August 23, 1957.

Francisco testified that the defendant called him on the telephone and said that a warrant had been served on him for cutting these walnut trees and that he wanted Francisco to come to see him; that he was going to pay for the walnut trees if Francisco would drop the case; that he, defendant, was a preacher and it would ruin his reoutation if he were taken into court for stealing trees. Francisco said he asked the defendant where he carried the trees and the defendant said they were taken to Crozet. Later that week Francisco, along with the sheriff, the Commonwealth’s attorney and a deputy sheriff, went to see the defendant, who declined to talk to them together but took Francisco aside and again told him that the logs had been taken to the Crozet Lumber Company and were there on the yard at that time, and that he would pay Francisco any price that anybody could say the trees were worth if Francisco would drop the case, as he was a preacher and could not afford to be taken into court.

The sheriff testified that when he arrested the defendant he asked him when he sold the logs “and he told me that he sold the walnut logs in cuestión to the Crozet Lumber Company in Crozet.” It does not appear whether the words “walnut logs in question” were *241 the sheriff’s phrase or the defendant’s. The final question to the sheriff on cross-examination was: “He told you he sold walnut logs, is that correct?” and he answered, “Yes.”

Francisco also testified that while the defendant and his assistants (who were his brothers Herbert and Everett, partners in the enterprise) were cutting the sycamore logs he found a McCulloch saw which they had left on a log and he took it to the store of a Mr. Hogg after writing down its serial number, and that afterwards he saw this same power saw under one of the walnut trees completely broken up. Hogg gave this saw back to the defendant a few days afterwards and later on, no date being given for these incidents, the defendant was back at his store and in response to a remark by Hogg that he, defendant, was quitting early that day, the defendant told him that they had backed the tractor over their saw and broken it all to pieces.

The deputy sheriff testified that a week or more after the warrant for the defendant had been sworn out he went into the woods with Francisco and they followed the tracks of a tractor to where the two walnut trees had been cut; that they followed the tracks on up and came to a third tree and there found a broken saw. It appeared, he said, “that the saw had been used to saw this walnut log off, and the log had fell on the saw and mashed it into the ground and broke it into 500 pieces.” He said the tractor had moved all the logs up a steep bank, had stalled and made holes “almost three or four feet deep.” The tracks of the tractor were very faint, he said, except at these dug out places. They went to an old logging road and thence through the land of Vernon Hicks to the main road. He conceded that the saw could have been run over by a tractor instead of being broken by the walnut tree.

Hogg, a Commonwealth witness, testified that the saw brought to his store was a one-man saw; that is, it had only one handle on it. The evidence showed, however, that the broken saw was a two-man saw. According to the evidence of the defendant and his two brothers the saw taken to Hogg’s store belonged to Herbert Adkins and the broken saw belonged to Everett Adkins.

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Bluebook (online)
105 S.E.2d 164, 200 Va. 238, 1958 Va. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adkins-v-commonwealth-va-1958.