Hardy v. Commonwealth

67 S.E. 522, 110 Va. 910, 1910 Va. LEXIS 139
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 10, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 67 S.E. 522 (Hardy 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
Hardy v. Commonwealth, 67 S.E. 522, 110 Va. 910, 1910 Va. LEXIS 139 (Va. 1910).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Samuel Hardy was indicted in the Circuit Court of Hansemond county for the murder of Tiberius Gracchus Jones (spoken of in the record as “Grae.” Jones), was found guilty of murder in the first degree, and sentenced to be electrocuted. To this judgment of the circuit court a writ of error was awarded by a judge of this court.

It appears that the deceased, in company with his next door neighbor, one J. H. Joyner, returned on the railroad train, from a trip to Suffolk, to the town of Holland, near which town, in Hansemond county he lived, a little after nine o’clock P. M. October 26, 1908, and after lingering a short time in Holland near the office of a justice of the peace, who was engaged in the trial of a criminal case, he and Joyner left for their homes, walking together till the pathway or road to Joyner’s home was reached, and then the deceased proceeded in the direction of his own home near by. About 10:30 o’clock P. M., just after deceased had gotten inside his inclosure, entering through what is generally spoken of as the eastern gate, he was shot down by some person or persons lying in wait, receiving two wounds in the abdomen, made with Ho. 6 shot fired from a shotgun at short range, and three wounds made by bullets fired from a [914]*914pistol. The shots from both the gun and the pistol were in rapid succession, and both wounds were necessarily fatal, and from them the murdered man died within two or three hours.

Joyner, who was not far away, and who not only heard the shooting, but heard the deceased exclaim “You scoundrel!” was the first person to reach the deceased, who exclaimed as he approached, “Joyner, they have killed me for telling the truth,” and afterwards remarked, that he thought “Sam Hardy or Luke did it.” Still later, when conscious of impending and certain death, he said, that “it was so dark that he could not see, but thought it was Sam Hardy.”

The physicians attending the wounded man did not find either of the pistol bullets in the body of the deceased, but did find in one of the wounds the wad of a cartridge which bore upon it the stamp of the Hnion Metallic Cartridge Co., “Ho. 6 shot, 3 drams powder,” just such a wad as was used in shells shot from a Ho. 12-bore Ithaca shotgun, and just such a gun as Sam Hardy, the accused, owned and had in his possession certainly up to a few days before this murder. The pistol used by the assassin was, as near as could be told from the wounds it made, a 32 calibre, just such a pistol as the accused owned, and as was shown to have been put by him into his pocket on the night of the murder as he was leaving his store, and not over two hours before the murder.

It further appears that the accused and the deceased, who had lived for some years within less than a mile of each other, had been friends until within a few months before the murder of the deceased, when they became exceedingly unfriendly, in fact, bitterly hostile; the deceased having charged the accused with selling liquor. without a license, and openly and in unqualified terms charged him with perjury in the testimony which he had given in a will case just six days previous to the murder of the deceased; and that deceased had not only declared it to be his purpose to prosecute the accused for the illicit sale of liquor, but also for perjury, and had on the very [915]*915day he was assassinated gone to Suffolk to consult an attorney with respect to the institution of such prosecutions. It also appears, as we will see later, that the accused knew what were the declarations and purposes of the deceased in respect to his prosecution for illicit traffic in liquor, but what was very much more serious to him a prosecution for perjury, and he doubtless knew that the charge of perjury could not be maintained without the evidence of the deceased.

It was furthermore shown in the evidence that the accused (Hardy) cherished feelings of intense hostility towards the deceased for some time prior to his death; and that he had made repeated and malignant threats against his life.

Early in the morning following the murder there was found near where the deceased had fallen and was lying when Joyner found him, the forearm of a Ithaca shotgun, which had doubtless bounded from the gun which fired the fatal shots at the deceased—a forearm of just such a shotgun as the accused owned.

Taking up in their order the errors assigned on behalf of the accused, we come first to the question whether or not the trial court erred in overruling the motion of the accused to quash the writ of venire facias.

Pursuant to the statute (section 4018, Code 1904) the judge of the circuit court directed more than twenty names to be drawn and placed in the list, and more than sixteen to be summoned—i. e., the order entered, “for good cause shown,” directed that forty persons be drawn, at least thirty-six of whom should be summoned. Thereupon the clerk issued the writ of venire facias, directing the sheriff to summon the entire forty so drawn, and the failure of the clerk to direct the summoning of thirty-six instead of the entire forty is the ground of the motion of the accused to quash the writ.

That part of section 4018 of the Code, supra> which is pertinent here is ás follows: “Eor good cause shown in any felony case the judge of the court, in term time or vacation, may di[916]*916rect more than twenty names to be drawn and placed in the list, and more than sixteen persons to be summoned. He shall in such case specify the number of names to be drawn and the number of persons to be summoned; the number' drawn shall not be more than four in excess of the number to be summoned.”

That the clerk in this case proceeded strictly in the manner prescribed in the statute to draw forty names from the jury box, which he placed in the list which- he delivered to the sherifE, is not questioned. Therefore the sole question is, was the issuing by tlm clerk of the writ of venire facias directing the sherifE to summon the entire list so drawn such a departure from the mandatory and imperative requirements of the statute as prejudiced, or might have been prejudical to, the accused.

The motion to quash the writ was made in due time, but it is nowhere pointed out that the accused was or might have been prejudiced by the writ directing the summoning of the entire forty instead of only thirty-six of the persons named in the list; nor does there occur, to us any reason for supposing that this irregularity of the clerk, if indeed it could be considered an irregularity, could have by any possibility been prejudical to the accused.

To sustain the contention of the accused, the case of Jones v. Commonwealth, 100 Va. 842, 47 S. E. 951, and Hoback v. Commonwealth, 104 Va. 871, 52 S. E. 575, are greatly relied on, but in our view of those cases they are not authority for the proposition the accused is contending for. In the first of those cases the clerk issued a writ of venire faicias commanding the officer to summon twenty-four persons of his county, instead of sixteen as the statute and the order of the court required; and it was held that the mandatory and imperative provisions of the statute had not been complied with, and that the writ of venire facias should have been quashed. Subsequently the statute was amended, with the evident intent of reducing technical objections in criminal cases to the minimum. See Acts 1902-3-4, p. 882; Acts 1904, p. 16.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 S.E. 522, 110 Va. 910, 1910 Va. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardy-v-commonwealth-va-1910.