Carr v. Commonwealth

114 S.E. 791, 134 Va. 656, 1922 Va. LEXIS 188
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 16, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 114 S.E. 791 (Carr 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
Carr v. Commonwealth, 114 S.E. 791, 134 Va. 656, 1922 Va. LEXIS 188 (Va. 1922).

Opinion

Kelly, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant, Deary Carr, shot and killed one Dock Snead. He was indicted for murder, found guilty of voluntary manslaughter, and sentenced to the penitentiary for one year. To that sentence this writ of error was awarded.

The evidence, although greatly conflicting in some respects, shows that bad feeling existed between certain members of the Carr and Snead families. Sometime before the killing, Deary Carr’s house had been “shot up” in the night time, and some of his horses and saddles carried off, by a party of which Horty Snead, a son of the deceased, was a member. Subsequently, and about eleven o’clock on Sunday night, two days before the killing, the house of Howard Carr, at which Horty Snead was making his home, was also attacked and rocked. Deary Carr testified that he was not in the attacking party, but there was direct and positive testimony to the contrary, which, if true, showed that Deary Carr broke down the door to the house and that he said, “Bring out the damn Sneads.” Horty Snead was in the house at that time but his father was not there.

On the day of the homicide Deary Carr accompanied his father, Howard Carr, to the latter’s house for the alleged purpose of repairing the damage done by the attack on the previous Sunday night. A number of persons were already at the house, including Dock Snead, Horty Snead, Cleese Carr, a brother of Deary Carr, and two of his unmarried sisters. Deary Carr [661]*661had previously ordered Horty Snead to stay off the preñases, and finding him there on that occasion reminded him of that order in such a peremptory manner that Horty jumped over the porch banister and ran away. Deary Carr’s remarks to Horty Snead, and his threatening attitude towards him, resulted in a fight between Dock Snead and Deary Carr. It is difficult from the conflicting evidence on the subject to fix, or perhaps we should say to apportion, the blame for this fight. Dock Snead was armed and was intoxicated, and Deary Carr was at that time unarmed and apparently sober. In one view of the evidence, a jury might have believed that Deary Carr made an unprovoked and felonious assault on Dock Snead. In another view, it might very well have been found that Snead was the aggressor. However this may be, Carr got the better of the fight, striking Snead with a piece of plaster or some heavy substance, badly bruising and disfiguring his face and rendering him temporarily unconscious. In the meantime, Howard Carr got possession of Dock Snead’s pistol and turned it over to his son Deary. In a few minutes after this fight Dock Snead rallied from the effect of his injuries, and, with the aid of Cleese Carr, chased Deary Carr and his father off of the premises and fired a shot gun at them as they ran. The evidence as to this whole disgraceful performance is involved in more or less conflict and confusion, and the details of the occurrence are rendered all the more abhorrent by the part which Cleese Carr, a sixteen year old boy, took in arraying himself against and assaulting his father and brother. It is suggested in the brief for the accused that the Sneads had led this young boy and the two Carr girls into a life of shame, and were thus responsible for their hostile and unnatural attitude and complicity in the affair. We do not find that this sug[662]*662gestión is very well warranted by the record, but the whole situation was distressingly bad at best, and there was fault on both sides.

Deary Carr testified that he made no threats at any time against Dock Snead, but it appears from the testimony of the Commonwealth that at the Howard Carr house, and about the time of the fight, he said: “If I didn’t kill him I am going to kill him,” and that, “By G — d he was going to kill or be killed.” Furthermore, one witness for the Commonwealth testified that he saw Deary Carr on the morning of the tragedy with a gun and heard him say “he was going to tell Dock Snead what he had done to Horty and had made up his mind to kill or be killed.” This alleged reference to “what he had done to Horty,” referred to an attack he had made on Horty after he found that the latter had been a participant in the night attack on Deary Carr’s house. It does not appear that these threats were heard by or communicated to Dock Snead.

The evidence further shows that at the Howard Carr house on the day of the fight Dock Snead had said: ‘ Deary, don’t you believe I will kill you this day?” This statement or question was interpreted by Deary Carr himself and those who heard it as a murderous threat. . There was evidence also to show that Snead had threatened Carr prior to the day of the tragedy, and Carr testified that he had heard of such threats.

After Deary Carr left the Howard Carr house he applied to a magistrate for a warrant against Dock and Horty Snead and Cleese Carr. In the meantime both he and Dock Snead had armed themselves, each with a single barrel shot gun. Deary Carr was walking along the public road in company with two of his brothers, Ernest and Miller, and also with the magistrate and a deputy sheriff and others, going, as Deary Carr testified. [663]*663“to attend to this matter at the hands of the law.” The officers had refused to go to the Howard Carr house, but had agreed to go to Deary’s house. They were proceeding along the road towards the latter’s home when, just as they rounded a curve in the road, they met Dock Snead and his son-in-law, Newton Fitzgerald. As soon as Snead and Carr came in sight of each other the shooting began. As to just what happened at that juncture there is a conflict of evidence. It is only fair to the accused to say that the testimony of all of the eye witnesses, save Newton Fitzgerald, tends to show that Snead shot first, that both parties fired twice, and that Snead was killed by Carr’s second shot. If the duel was carried on in this way, each party had to eject an empty shell and reload. Carr says this was done, and in this he is corroborated by other witnesses and by circumstances. An empty shell was found on the ground near Snead and another like it in his gun.

Newton Fitzgerald, however, testified as follows: “I tried to keep Snead from going up the road. We walked on and heard someone coming. I had my arm around Snead’s; when we came in sight the Carrs raised gun. I reached around and seized gun in hands of Snead and said: ‘For God’s sake don’t shoot or have trouble.’ The gun went off towards the river as best I could tell. Snead’s gun went off first. Deary Carr shot at him twice. Miller Carr fired at him with a pistol. * * * Snead was shot in the right side and arm. * * * I know very little of the actual shooting except that Dock Snead shot first; as soon as I saw that shooting was going to be done, I sprang to the bank and went into the bushes. Snead’s gun went off once and was not reloaded. Right after the. shooting Deary said that he had to do it.”

It is shown, and not disputed, that the fatal shot [664]*664tore away a part of Snead’s right arm and entered his right side. This fact in a measure corroborates Newton Fitzgerald. In nearly all other respects his testimony is seriously contradicted and apparently discredited. However, the same thing may be said, though in much less degree, as to one or more witnesses for the defense. These contradictions, and the question as to the credibility of the witnesses, addressed themselves to the jury, and, if material to the case, must be regarded as settled adversely to the aecused by the verdict.

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Related

Jones v. Commonwealth
82 S.E.2d 482 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1954)
Ballard v. Commonwealth
159 S.E. 222 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1931)
Crook v. Commonwealth
136 S.E. 565 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1927)
Johnson v. Commonwealth
115 S.E. 673 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 S.E. 791, 134 Va. 656, 1922 Va. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carr-v-commonwealth-va-1922.