Drinkard v. Commonwealth

183 S.E. 251, 165 Va. 799, 1936 Va. LEXIS 254
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 16, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 183 S.E. 251 (Drinkard 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
Drinkard v. Commonwealth, 183 S.E. 251, 165 Va. 799, 1936 Va. LEXIS 254 (Va. 1936).

Opinion

Hudgins, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The accused was convicted of malicious wounding, and sentenced to confinement in the penitentiary for a period of five years.

The facts are brief, and except in one or two particulars, are undisputed. The accused on Saturday night, [801]*801March 16,1935, with two companions entered a sandwich shop in the city of Lynchburg, where there were fifteen or more other people. Soon after entering the restaurant, the accused, without the slightest provocation, slapped a girl, Nina Chambers, and then knocked her down with a pistol. Immediately thereafter, as Orville Woodson was walking out the rear door, the accused shot him. The bullet entered one of his legs from the rear, near the hip, and stopped just under the skin in the front part of the leg above the knee. Woodson continued out the back door to an alley or street, and fell. Later he was taken to a hospital, where he remained some time. The police officer on duty in that section of the city saw the accused back out of the restaurant with a pistol in his hand making threatening gestures toward the people in the shop. When the accused turned and saw the officer approaching, he immediately dropped the pistol underneath the running board of a parked automobile, and called the policeman whom he knew, by name. The accused was arrested by the officer, and while in custody he struck' Bernard Inge, a young man, who happened to be near the scene.

The accused does not deny any of the above facts, but contends that he spent the previous night (Friday) gambling, and on arriving home about 7 A. M. Saturday morning, in order to relieve his headache, he took a headache powder, and from time to time during the day he took other powders, and drank whiskey and gin. How many powders or how much intoxicating liquor he had taken during the twenty-four hours previous to the shooting he was unable, or unwilling, to say. He testified that he remembered going to a pawn shop about 2 P. M., redeeming his pistol with money he won at the gambling table, and that thereafter he bought gin, and with others drank it. He did not recall anything that happened in the restaurant. He did not know the girl he slapped and struck with the pistol, nor had he ever seen Orville Woodson previous to the night he shot him.

[802]*802Dr. J. W. Devine testified that the bullet in passing through the fleshy part of Woodson’s leg, possibly struck or grazed the hone, thereby causing an injury to the nerve. The full extent of the injury could not be ascertained until an operation had been performed. At the time of the trial Woodson could not, or had had difficulty in raising the injured leg.

There was some evidence tending to show that the pistol was accidently discharged, but as this issue was properly submitted to the jury, no further reference to this phase of the case is deemed necessary.

The accused contends that his mental condition, brought about by his voluntary acts in taking dope and drinking intoxicating liquors, was such that at the time he shot Woodson he was unable to entertain the specific intent to kill.

The principles of law governing this question have been stated and restated many times by this court. In Read’s Case (Read v. Com.), 22 Gratt. (63 Va.) 924, 937, Judge Moncure speaking for the court said: “Whether the the prisoner was guilty of malicious shooting with intent to kill or not, depends entirely upon the question whether, if the prisoner had killed Merriman, instead of only wounding him (with intent to kill, etc.), the offense would have been murder, either in the first or second degree—it matters not which—or would have been only manslaughter, or homicide in self-defense. If it would have been murder, then the prisoner was guilty of the offense of malicious shooting with intent to kill, of which he was convicted. If it would not, then he was not guilty of that offense, however guilty he might have been of another offense, as of unlawful shooting with intent to kill, etc., * * * I will only say on this subject that every unlawful homicide must be either murder or manslaughter; and whether it be one or the other depends alone upon whether the party who perpetrated the act did it with malice or not—malice either express or implied. That [803]*803one word malice is the touchstone by which the grade of the offense must be determined.”

See Boswell’s Case (Boswell v. Com.), 20 Gratt. (61 Va.) 860; Willis’ Case (Willis v. Com.), 32 Gratt. (73 Va.) 929.

The identical question was before this court in Johnson v. Commonwealth, 135 Va. 524, at page 529, 115 S. E. 673, at page 675, 30 A. L. R. 755, in which Judge Kelly, in speaking to the point, said: “It has long been settled in Virginia, and elsewhere generally, that voluntary drunkenness (as distinguished from settled insanity produced by drink) affords no excuse for crime, save only that where premeditation is a material question the intoxication of the accused may be considered by the jury. As between murder in the first degree and murder in the second degree, voluntary drunkenness may be a legitimate subject of inquiry, but as between murder in the second degree and manslaughter it is never material and cannot be considered.”

The accused contends that on the question of intent, the case is controlled by the doctrine stated in Merritt v. Commonwealth, 164 Va. 653, 180 S. E. 395, and in Thacker v. Commonwealth, 134 Va. 767, 114 S. E. 504. The charge in each of those cases was an attempt to kill or murder. In the former, the act alleged was pointing a pistol with the intent to kill. In the latter case, the act alleged was shooting with intent to kill. It was proven that the accused shot at a light with no intent to shoot at any particular person, and in fact no one was hit by the three bullets fired. It was held that in such cases the specific intent to commit the full crime must be charged and proven, thereby imparting to the act done, a special culpability. The distinction between the two classes of crimes was specifically pointed out by Judge Kelly in Johnson v. Commonwealth, supra, 135 Va. 524, page 529, 115 S. E. 673, 675, 30 A. L. R. 755: “The principles of law, therefore, governing the effect of intoxication upon the defendant’s guilt are the same as those which apply in homicide cases. We are not concerned [804]*804here with the law as applied to cases in which a specific intent is an essential element of the offense charged. It is generally said that in contemplation of law no specific intent is essential to the crime of murder in the second degree, but in this case it is sufficient to say that where one man wounds another with a deadly weapon, the law imputes a malicious intent to the act. 17 Am. & Eng. Ency. L. (2d Ed.) 413, and cases cited, and also authorities infra. It is quite true that murder in the first degree involves a premeditated purpose of which an intoxicated person may be incapable, but this distinction is not material to the issues arising under the instructions here. We speak in this case as if we were dealing with a conviction of murder in the second degree.”

Judge Gregory in Little v. Commonwealth, 163 Va. 1020, 1025, 175 S. E.

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Bluebook (online)
183 S.E. 251, 165 Va. 799, 1936 Va. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drinkard-v-commonwealth-va-1936.