Colvin v. Commonwealth

137 S.E. 476, 147 Va. 663, 1927 Va. LEXIS 336
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 17, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 137 S.E. 476 (Colvin 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
Colvin v. Commonwealth, 137 S.E. 476, 147 Va. 663, 1927 Va. LEXIS 336 (Va. 1927).

Opinion

Burks, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The accused was convicted of malicious wounding and sentenced to the penitentiary for three years. The person wounded was Lamar Colvin, his cousin, with whom he was on very friendly terms. The theory of the prosecution was that he intended to shoot his brother-in-law, Cal Heflin, and shot his cousin by mistake. The defense of the accused was that the shooting was accidental.

Eleven years or more prior to the present controversy, and before Heflin had married the sister of the accused, he had shot Heflin in the ear, claiming to have found him and his sister in a compromising position. “There was a little scrap afterwards over it,” but nothing further was done, Heflin “had some trouble with him,” but had “gotten along with him.” Mrs. ■Heflin testified that “they had trouble several times.” The accused, when drinking, was “fussy,” and Mrs. Heflin testified that “more or less every time he is drinking he takes his spite out on me;” that he struck her once or twice, and that “whenever he gets drunk I just try to keep out of his way.”

On Saturday night, November 21, 1926, there was a corn-shucking at' the home of the father of the accused, at which there were present, on the invitation of the father, the accused, Cal Heflin and his wife, Lamar Colvin, Will Colvin and several others of the family connections. During the shucking, some kind of intoxicating drink was passed around several times, and all of them, more or less, “felt their liquor.” About ten o’clock they were invited to the house to supper. The house contained but two rooms, a kitchen and another room, which were separated by a vestibule or hall about four feet square. When the parties came to [666]*666the house, Mrs. Heflin was in the kitchen, and the accused walked up to her, and, as she says, hit her on the top of her head. Lamar Colvin remonstrated with him about it, and Gal Heflin came in about that time and he and the accused engaged in a fight, but they were separated and Heflin went out of the house, but came back and he and his wife and children then went home. Heflin says that the accused saw him go1 out, but whether he saw him go when he went with his family, he does not know, but thinks he could not have seen him from the position he occupied. Heflin further testified that he went back again into the house, and as soon as he went in he heard the accused “hollering for his gun;” that the accused called to his wife to get his gun; that the accused said, “I shot him eleven years ago, and, damn him, I will get him this time sure.” When the parties were separated in the kitchen, the father of the accused pushed him back into the other room and against the window which was broken out. The accused then got possession of his rifle, and it was discharged, resulting in seriously wounding Lamar Colvin, his cousin, who was just entering the room, which was dark. The accused claims that the gun fell across his feet in the scuffle, and that he picked it up and it went off accidentally in his hands, but the wound showed that the bullet had gone straight through Lamar, horizontally, and on the night of the shooting and shortly thereafter the accused told a disinterested witness, “Mr. Crab-tree, I gót the wrong man.” The doctor who attended Lamar Colvin that night also testified that “Leroy said words to the effect that he had shot but had not hit the object he shot at; that he did not shoot to hit Lamar Colvin. He used some such expression as Lamar Colvin was not what he shot at.” On cross-examination, he testified in part as follows:

[667]*667“Q. The effect then was what you said, that he didn’t hit the object he was aiming at?
“A. That he shot to hit something or some person and that hitting Lamar Colvin was an accident, but that the shooting was not' an accident. That was what I got from his expression.”-

The testimony shows that all of the parties were drinking, and one witness, a preacher, says that the accused was “about two-thirds drunk,” but the testimony for the Commonwealth abundantly shows that he knew very well “what he was doing.”

No complaint is made of the action of the trial court in granting and refusing instructions, and it‘is admitted that “the evidence for and against the petitioner on the merits of the ease was such'as that the jury could have convicted or acquitted, the petitioner claiming the shot fired was the result of an accident, while the theory of the Commonwealth was that it was a wilful and deliberate, shooting.” Hence, the verdict cannot be said to be contrary to the evidence.

■ The ground on which reversal is sought is the admission of improper evidence. There are a number of specifications on this subject, but they may all be reduced to two: (1) Did the trial court err in permitting Cal Heflin to testify as to the reputation of the accused for peace and good order? (2) Did the trial court err in permitting Cal Heflin and his wife to testify as to1 the shooting of Cal Heflin in the ear by the accused more than eleven years ago?

There is much to be said in favor of putting before the jury a man’s general reputation in the community relevant" to the character of the offense with which he is charged, though not first put in issue by him, but it is conceded by the Attorney [668]*668General to be well settled in this State that evidence of the bad general reputation of one on trial for an offense cannot be offered by the Commonwealth unless the accused has put such character in issue by first offering evidence of his good general reputation. Price v. Commonwealth, 21 Gratt. (62 Va.) 846, 868; Mitchell v. Commonwealth, 140 Va. 572, 125 S. E. 311.

The trial court, however, thought that the accused had put his reputation as a peaceable and orderly man in issue by his cross-examination of a witness for the Commonwealth. That cross-examination was as follows:

“Q. What effect does liquor have on him?
“A. Well, I don’t know.
“Q. Doesn’t it make him wild and crazy?
“A. It seemed that way. ■
“Q. He is not that way when he is not under the influence of liquor, is he?
“A. No, sir.
“Q. And he was that way that night, wasn’t he?
“A. Yes, sir.”

The same witness, later on, also testified that when the accused got drunk, he was “right fussy.” The. question: “Doesn’t it make him wild and crazy?” conveys the idea that he was not peaceable and orderly; that he would not respect the rights of others, and that he would act like one who was not merely insane but along with it was wild, unbridled, and bent on having his own way. Such was his condition when, under the influence of liquor, but he was not that way when not under such influence. The. necessary inference is that when he was sober, he was peaceable and orderly. This put in issue his character for peace and good order, when not under the influence of liquor, and warranted inquiry on that subject by the Commonwealth.

[669]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 S.E. 476, 147 Va. 663, 1927 Va. LEXIS 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colvin-v-commonwealth-va-1927.