Enoch v. Commonwealth

126 S.E. 222, 141 Va. 411, 1925 Va. LEXIS 419
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 126 S.E. 222 (Enoch 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
Enoch v. Commonwealth, 126 S.E. 222, 141 Va. 411, 1925 Va. LEXIS 419 (Va. 1925).

Opinions

Burks, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

[415]*415Joseph Enoch, the plaintiff in error, was convicted of murder of the first degree, and sentenced to serve a term of twenty years in the penitentiary. He excepted to several rulings- of the trial court, and these exceptions are made the grounds of the assignments of error in this court.

There was offered in evidence and rejected by the trial court an alleged confession made by the accused. Of course, no exceptions were filed by the accused as the ruling was in his favor, and none by the Commonwealth as it had no right of appeal. The trial judge, however, requested this court to pass on the admissibility of the confession in the event a new trial was awarded, as a'guide for future action, and counsel for the accused and for the Commonwealth have united in the request.

The confession was obtained under substantially the-following circumstances: On Thursday night, April 26, 1923, Celia Shevick, a young girl about sixteen year's of age, wa's murdered in the city of Richmond. The murder was not discovered till early Friday morning. The police defectives werte diligent in their efforts to ascertain who wa’s the murderer. In consequence of' information derived from Mrs. Miller, a young married woman, and her mother, Mrs. Barrett, who live in the neighborhood, they suspected that Joseph Enoch was. the guilty party, and arrested him on Saturday morning and brought him to police headquarters about eleven o’clock that day, although no formal warrant for his arrest was sworn out till Sunday night. Some conversation took place between Enoch and the men who took him into custody at the time of and shortly after his arrest, but that is immaterial to the present enquiry. From eleven o’clock Saturday morning until about one o’clock that night he was practically all of the time [416]*416\ (only slight intermission) under close and constant ex-jamination by not less than two police detectives at a 1 time. One or two of the witnesses for the Commonwealth state that sometimes there were as many as ten policemen in the room at a time, and that they took it by turns asking him questions. It clearly appears that this method of questioning was adopted. About the middle of the day Saturday he was asked particularly if he had not made certain inculpatory statements to Mrs, Miller and Mrs. Barrett and he denied them. Mrs. Miller and Mrs. Barrett were then brought into the room and a colloquy ensued between them on the •one hand Enoch on the other, with questions interspersed by the police, and after they retired the police continued their cross-examination. The questioning continued until eleven o’clock at night when Enoch (who had taken neither food'nor water, although it was offered to him) fainted, and the chief detective “picked him up and put him on the bed and sent for the doctor.” The doctor was promptly on hand. One or two of the witnesses said that the doctor said he was “faking,” but the doctor was not called as a witness, and the chief detective testified: “I didn’t believe he was-faking” * * “I thought he was human regardless of what he did.” During this examination the bloody clothes of the girl were lying on a table in the room, and one of the detectives picked up a pair of bloomers and held them in front of Enoch and said to him: “You might do a thing of this kind; but wouldn’t strike a man.” After the fainting spell about eleven o’clock at night he was given a respite till about eleven forty-five, when he was carried to the scene of the murder and there questioned again, and on this sainé trip, about twelve o’clock, he was taken to the house where the body of the girl lay in her coffin. There the lid of [417]*417the coffin was removed and he was asked several questions by one or other of the detectives present. This was about 12:30 A. M. He was brought back to headquarters and about one o’clock was sent to the police station and locked up for the night.

To what extent Enoch wais questioned Sunday morning is not very clear from the record, but it was stated by Anthony, one of the detectives, that he reported for duty at eight thirty and that he went back twice to talk to him. But from sometime between three and four o’clock in the afternoon till the confession was made, sometime between six an;d seven, the questioning appears to have been practically continuous. In response to these questions the alleged confession was made to detectives, Anthony a)id Cousins. The chief of detectives was ’phoned for and gives the following account of what occurred: “Sometime in the afternoon of Sunday I got a ’phone call to come to the first station in which it was said Mr. Enoch had confessed to Anthony and Cousins and probably some of the others; he said Enoch had made a confession.

“Q. Was that in his presence?

“A. I don’t think so. He was in the office by himself. So I went in and asked had he made a confession. He said he had. I said did he want to make a statement. He said yes. I said: ‘Do you want to make it voluntarily?’ He said: T want to get it off my mind.’ I said: ‘You sit right quiet and I will get a notary public here to take it.’ I ’phoned to second police station to Squire Gentry, who came down there and the preface of this confession I formulated that myself.

“Q. What part of it did you formulate?

“A. Of my own free will and accord do make the following statement, without hesitation or mental [418]*418reservation, without promise of reward or threat of violence to me from anyone.” Enoch’s statement was then added and the paper signed by him. ' But there is no copy of the confession in the record. Shortly after the confession was signed Enoch’s sisters were permitted to see him for a short time and he was then sent to jail. The chief of detectives was asked: “What was his condition then?” He answered: “Well, I couldn’t tell. He was like anybody else would be after what he hád gone through. He looked sort of fagged, but he looked kind of relieved.” In the same connection he stated: “I think Sergeant Smith picked him up and carried him to the wafeon.” In another connection he testified as follows:

“Q. Joe was on such a verge of collapse that you ■said Sergeant Gentry picked him up and carried him to the wagon?”

“A. I don’t know what it was. Gentry picked him up a'nd carried him to the wagon.”

One of his sisters described his condition as follows:

“His face—he was so weak he looked like he was about to collapse; his face was red as fire and at firsst he did not recognize me; thought I was somebody else. He looked at me like he was crazy. He looked like he did not know who he was looking at; just thought somebody else was coming to grill him; his eyes just as big as could be. He was just as r.ed and crazy looking. People had come up to him and grilled him until he didn’t know what he was doing. He was in a terrible condition.”

A disinterested witness testified on the subject as follows:

“What was the condition of Joseph Enoch at that time—physical and mental condition—as far as you could judge?

[419]*419“A. Well, I don’t think I epuld put it better than I expressed to you. He looked like a crazy man. He was red-eyed, his hair disordered, his clothes pulled around; he was pulling his hair, half laughing, half crying, and seemed to me to be rather hysterical and very much wrought up.

“Q. Did you see them when they took him out of the station house?

“A.

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Bluebook (online)
126 S.E. 222, 141 Va. 411, 1925 Va. LEXIS 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/enoch-v-commonwealth-va-1925.