Cox v. Commonwealth

125 S.E. 139, 140 Va. 513, 1924 Va. LEXIS 193
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 13, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 125 S.E. 139 (Cox 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
Cox v. Commonwealth, 125 S.E. 139, 140 Va. 513, 1924 Va. LEXIS 193 (Va. 1924).

Opinion

Burks, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

James M. Cox, the plaintiff in error, was indicted, tried and convicted of unlawfully keeping and storing ardent spirits, and his punishment fixed at a fine of $75.00 and imprisonment in jail for thirty days. He assigns a number of errors, but all of them were abandoned at the hearing except those hereinafter considered.

It is assigned as error that the verdict of the jury was plainly contrary to the evidence and without evidence to support it.

The only testimony offered by the Commonwealth was that of two of the officers who made the arrest. They were not familiar with the location, and were not particularly observant. They were in search of evidence of violation of the prohibition law and found it, but whether their testimony is sufficient to identify Cox -as the violator is the question we have to consider.

These two officers, with others, had a warrant to search the premises of Cox, and they searched them but' found nothing of an incriminating nature except several empty jars that “had a little liquor in them * * just a few drops, what you would leave in there after washing,” and which had “a smell of liquor about “them.” They observed, however, “a plain, slick path leading from the back door” of Cox’s house to a barbed wire fence some seven or eight steps from the Cox house. The fence had some old clothing “or something of that kind” wrapped around it. They followed this path, and about the same distance beyond the [516]*516fence (seven or eight steps) they found two holes in the woods, covered with trash and leaves, and in them were eighteen half gallon jars of liquor, or nine gallons of liquor. The liquor was found on the land of G. H. Burnley, which was separated from the land of Cox by the wire fence aforesaid. The witnesses further testified that “Mr. Cox told us he knew the whisky was there and at the proper time he would tell who it belonged to.” This is the substance of the testimony for the Commonwealth.

Cox testified in his own behalf, and denied all knowledge of the whisky or any connection with it, and especially denied having told the officers that he “knew the whisky was there and at the proper time he would tell who it belonged to.” He also gave valuable testimony on topics detailed by other witnesses examined on his behalf. It clearly appears from the testimony for the defense, and is not controverted by that for the Commonwealth, that several hundred yards north of Cox’s house there is a saw mill operated by three or four men; that on the opposite side of Cox’s house, on the Burnley land, there is a spring; that the men at the saw mill regularly got their drinking water from this spring, and that the nearest and best way to the spring was along the path “right by Cox’s” house, and across the wire fence aforesaid. The witnesses testify that “the saw mill was on one side of the house and the spring on the other;” that they saw the saw mill men “in the path going to the spring for water;” that in going to the spring the men passed “right by his house;” and that this path was the nearest and the best way from the saw mill to the spring. It also appears that from three to forty men had been engaged for several months in picking up loose stone on the Cox and Burnley [517]*517places, and that they too used the spring to get drinking water.

The testimony as a whole is not sufficient to support the verdict of the jury, which must be set aside. Troutner v. Commonwealth, 135 Va. 750, 115 S. E. 693.

A demurrant to the evidence does not give up his unimpeached testimony which is not in conflict with the evidence for the demurree. Burks Pl. & Pr. (2d ed.), section 251, page 479.

To conviet of a crime, the jury must be satisfied from the evidence of the guilt of the accused beyond a reasonable doubt, and they cannot be so satisfied if the evidence is equally consistent with his guilt or innocence. Mere suspicion, however grave, is not sufficient to support a verdict of guilty. The evidence must be not only consistent with the guilt of the accused, but inconsistent with his innocence. Hairston v. Commonwealth, 97 Va. 759, 32 S. E. 797; Davis v. Commonwealth, 99 Va. 838, 38 S. E. 191; Burton & Conquest v. Commonwealth, 108 Va. 892, 62 S. E. 376; Wooden v. Commonwealth, 117 Va. 930, 86 S. E. 305, Anm Cas. 1917-D, 1032; Canter v. Commonwealth, 123 Va. 794, 96 S. E. 284.

It is assigned as error that after all the evidence was in and the jury instructed, “the attorney for the Commonwealth in the argument of the case before the jury was permitted to state to the jury, over objection of counsel for the defendant, that if the accused knew that the liquor in question was there, meaning on property adjoining his, and did not report this fact to the proper authorities, then he, the accused, was particeps criminis, to which argument and line of argument counsel for the accused objected, which objection the court overruled,” and the accused excepted.

The exception is well taken, and the action of the [518]*518trial court in overruling the objection must be reversed. The argument did not correctly state the law and was highly prejudicial to the accused. The jury, no doubt, took the view expressed in the brief for the Commonwealth, that “from the failure of the accused to give the name of the owner of the whisky, the jury had a right to conclude that he was the owner.”

This was the second trial of the case. On the first trial the judge of the trial court signed a bill of exception certifying the facts or a condensed statement of the evidence in narrative form. On the second trial, the witnesses for the Commonwealth testified that “Mr. Cox told us he knew the whisky was there and at the proper time he would tell who it belonged to,” and they were asked if they had so testified on the former trial and they answered that they had. They also testified on the second trial that the whisky was found in certain holes dug in the ground, and that they had made the same statement at the first-trial. The accused insisted' that they had testified at the first trial that the whisky was found in stump holes. The accused offered in evidence the bill of exceptions taken at the first trial, signed by the trial judge, for the purpose of contradicting the witnesses for the Commonwealth in the two particulars above mentioned. The attorney for the Commonwealth objected to the reception of the bill of exceptions for the purpose aforesaid, and the court excluded it.' This action of the trial court is assigned as error.

Whether the whisky was found in stump holes, or in holes dug in the ground was wholly immaterial, and was not a proper subject of contradiction.

The other question, however, was material, but the bill of exception offered in evidence does not show a prior inconsistent statement by the witnesses. It is [519]*519simply silent on the subject. It does not affirmatively show that the witnesses made the statement on the first trial which they made on the second. The testimony is given in narrative form, and the bill does not purport to give the language of the witnesses nor every statement made by them. The bill contains only the substance of so much of the testimony as counsel regarded as material for the purposes for which it was certified.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 S.E. 139, 140 Va. 513, 1924 Va. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-commonwealth-va-1924.