Barnard v. Commonwealth

114 S.E. 563, 134 Va. 613, 1922 Va. LEXIS 185
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 16, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 114 S.E. 563 (Barnard 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
Barnard v. Commonwealth, 114 S.E. 563, 134 Va. 613, 1922 Va. LEXIS 185 (Va. 1922).

Opinion

Prentis, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

E. S. Barnard was indicted for the murder of Dr. Herman Poff, and upon his trial was convicted of murder in the second degree.

[616]*616It is insisted for the Commonwealth that the judgment must be affirmed because there are no proper bills of exception. These bills are subject to criticism, for unquestionably the better practice is for the trial judge so to identify the evidence and the instructions to which the bills relate as to make it impossible to question such identification.

In this case the evidence is stated by the trial judge to be “here filed and identified by the stamp thereon, ‘Archie P. Johnson, shorthand reporter, Christiansburg, Virginia,’ which the court here certifies as all of the evidence that was taken in the case, and certifies the said stenographic report as a part of the record for the trial of this case. ’ ’ This identification is certainly as complete as that which was held sufficient in the case of Norfolk & Western Ry. Co. v. Rhodes, 109 Va. 176, 63 S. E. 445, in which it is held that “A bill of exception which after certifying that the plaintiff and defendant each introduced evidence says, ‘all of which evidence both for the plaintiff and defendant is found in a typewritten booklet marked “A” and is adopted by the court as the evidence introduced by .the plaintiff and defendant,’ and that it contains all the evidence offered by them, sufficiently identifies the evidence and makes it a part of the record of the case.”

The instructions given and refused are identified, some by numbers, and some by letters. While it does not affirmatively appear that these identifying numbers and letters were made thereon by the judge, we think it fair for us to assume that they were made either by him or by his direction. While such method of identifying instructions is worthy of criticism, because it might lead to serious controversies as to the true record in a particular case, we are of the opinion that here the identification is sufficient. Such a prac[617]*617tice, however, must be discouraged, and trial judges should, by some unmistakable mark of their own, so clearly identify instructions which are intended to be embodied in the record as to conclude the parties, and to give the clerk an unerring guide when making up the transcript. There should be neither any question nor any ground for raising a question as to what constitutes the record when the case reaches this court. Ratcliffe v. McDonald’s Adm’r, 123 Va. 788, 97 S. E. 307.

The petitioner assigns numerous errors. We shall neither discuss nor refer to several of them. This because where not waived by the petitioner the errors, if existent, are not likely to be repeated on another trial and are not sufficient in our judgment to justify a reversal.

There are, however, several errors assigned which are serious in character and require consideration. To comprehend their force it is necessary to make a general statement of the issues involved. We will not undertake to include therein every fact disclosed by the record, but only those which are deemed necessary for the consideration of the legal questions involved.

The admissible evidence which tends to support the conviction may be thus stated: The deceased came to his father’s home at Check, in Floyd county, where he was expected, on the night of August 6, 1921, to see his wife and three children, who were concluding a ten day visit there, intending to take them, with a servant, back to his own home by automobile the next morning. The accused, who had recently moved to that village, operated a store there but had not yet brought his wife and child, who were then at Salem, Va., at her father’s home. He boarded with and had his room in the house of J. J. Poff, the father of the deceased. The automo[618]*618bile in which the deceased undertook the journey became stalled on the way, and he with a friend rode to his father’s home on two mules. His sister, Miss Iva PofiE, testified that she was aroused and alarmed by a pistol shot in the hall of the dwelling; that she went there quickly and found her brother, the deceased, at the door of his wife’s room, she being in the room, he with a pistol advancing on his wife, and as she (witness) believed about to shoot her; that she got between them and pushed him to the end of the passageway to the door of a porch, at one end of which was her room and at the other the room occupied by the accused; that at or about the time she got her brother outside of this door and on the porch a shot was fired, apparently from a closed room, followed quickly by other shots; that the deceased reeled and commenced firing his pistol into the room. After the shooting the deceased was found lying on the porch with a fatal wound, of which he died the next day. The bullet which killed him entered his face below the ear at the hinge of the cheek bone and ranged backward through the brain; and he also had a broken leg caused by another shot.

On the contrary, the evidence which tends to show that the accused shot in self-defense may be thus stated: After he had retired for the night, the wife of the deceased came to the door of his chamber in her night clothes and knocked. In response to his inquiry she said she came for a bottle containing a liquid used for shampooing, which she said she had placed on his bureau during the day, the bureau being near an open window, and the bottle being placed there as she explained, in order to keep it out of the reach of her children, of whom she had three. She had been sitting on the porch washing her baby’s head, and had gone off and forgotten the bottle and brush. She, as well [619]*619as all of the other inmates of the household, expected the deceased momentarily, and while waiting she determined to wash her own hair, and pursuant to this purpose went to the door of the accused, as stated. Just about this time, the deceased, who his wife testified was intoxicated, came to the door and took her away to their own room. He had a pistol in his hand, and an altercation followed, during which she was trying to explain to him the innocence of her purpose. During this altercation he fired his pistol in the.passage, with what purpose does not appear. She continued to attempt to reason with him, but he returned to the door of the room of the accused, having previously said, “Where is the d-son of a b-? I am going to kill him,” and this language the accused also heard coming from the deceased. The accused testified that when he heard, this language was the first time he had any thought that the deceased had any enmity against him; that after hearing it he got up out of his bed and went to the bureau drawer and got a pistol; that the deceased pushed the door of his room open and began shooting at him. One of the bullets struck the mattress upon which the accused had just previously been lying, and two other shots were fired at him and into the room by the deceased. That until the deceased. pushed the door open and commenced firing at him, the accused did not fire, but after this he fired two shots at the deceased, one of which killed him.

After these occurrences and while the mother and sister of the deceased were attempting to care for him, Iva Poff, a sister of the deceased and a witness for the Commonwealth, was asked and permitted, over the objection and exception of the accused, to testify thus:

“Q. Did you hear what Dr. Herman Poff told his mother when she got there?

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Bluebook (online)
114 S.E. 563, 134 Va. 613, 1922 Va. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnard-v-commonwealth-va-1922.