Hendricks v. Commonwealth

178 S.E. 8, 163 Va. 1102, 1935 Va. LEXIS 261
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 17, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 178 S.E. 8 (Hendricks 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
Hendricks v. Commonwealth, 178 S.E. 8, 163 Va. 1102, 1935 Va. LEXIS 261 (Va. 1935).

Opinion

Holt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In November, 1933, in the Corporation Court of the city [1104]*1104of Norfolk, J. D. Wood and L. F. Hendricks were indicted for the murder of Ulysses G. McHough. These men elected to be tried separately and Hendricks was first tried. He was found guilty of involuntary manslaughter and his punishment was fixed at six months confinement in jail.

I. Berman conducted a restaurant on east Main street in that city and was the owner of an automobile, a black Chevrolet coach, license number, 137-956. On the evening of October 4, 1933, he left it in an alley near his restaurant. On it were strapped two beer barrels, or kegs, one in front and the other in the rear. He left this car, went into his restaurant and returned in about five minutes to find it gone, whereupon he called the police department of the city and reported that it had been stolen. This report was received at 7:25 p. m. and at 7:34 p. m. was relayed to all the police precincts of the city.

Hendricks, a patrolman, was attached to precinct No. 3 in Berkley ward and was at that time on duty there. Wood, another policeman was then patrolling an adjoining beat. They met about seven o’clock and went to the intersection of Middlesex and Liberty streets to investigate another matter and were there at 7:30. A coach drove up to this corner. Its driver started to get out and had put one foot upon the ground, when, it is said, because he saw the policeman, changed his mind, stepped back into his car, turned and started west on Liberty street, the direction from which he had come, and drove rapidly away. There was a beer keg on .the front bumper. This driver’s conduct appeared to be suspicious and the officers took down his license number. They then went east on Main street and met L. Berman, father of I. Berman, who hailed them and asked if they had received a report on a stolen car. He said that his car had been stolen and gave them the license number which corresponded with that which they had taken down. These officers got into the Berman car and drove around in that vicinity looking for the car charged to have been stolen. At the corner of Liberty and Grayson streets they called up, through box 41, police headquarters and [1105]*1105were told that the theft of this ear had been reported. They cruised along Mahone avenue until near Craig street where a car with a beer keg strapped to its bumper was seen rapidly approaching. It went into Malachi Simpson’s yard, undertook to back out, struck a telegraph pole and was stalled. This was the Berman car. Its driver got out and ran. The situation up to this point is clear enough and there is no conflict in the testimony. Thereafter the movements of the parties are anything but clear.

According to the testimony of the defendant, McHough ran across Simpson’s back yard, pursued by these two officers. Hendricks called upon him several times to halt and fired in the air. McHough did not halt but continued his flight, vaulted a fence and ran across a garden. At some point during the chase Officer Wood turned back and went down Mahone avenue, intending to intercept the fugitive. After then the officers were not in sight of each other and later both of them fired at McHough, at about the same time but not simultaneously. He stumbled for a few feet and fell “right in the corner of the vacant lot,” in some bushes which he had not cleared. This witness said that he did not see Caroline Tillett and of course that he did not say anything to her, and he tells us that he did not go down Mahone¡ avenue.

In the petition for a writ of error is this account of his movements: “Upon coming upon the allegedly stolen car from the rear and as it was backing out of a lane or alley and into the unpaved roadway or street (Mahone avenue), the stolen car either struck a pole and stalled or was stalled by its driver, who immediately opened the door adjacent to the driver’s seat and fled up the lane or alley from which the car appeared to have backed out. Your petitioner left the car in which he was riding and after calling upon the fleeing person to ‘halt’ repeatedly, fired , his revolver once in the air, and pursued the fleeing person, who ran down the lane, across a yard, over a fence five feet ten inches high and thence across a garden. Your petitioner was followed for a few feet by Officer Wood who then went back [1106]*1106to Mahone avenue in the proximity of the two automobiles and thence down Mahone avenue. Your petitioner vaulted the fence and taking a diagonal course across the garden, across which the fleeing person was going, stopped and fired his revolver once in the direction of the fleeing person. Simultaneously with the shot fired by your petitioner, Officer Wood, who could not then be seen by your petitioner, also fired in the direction of the fleeing person, who fell and was later discovered to have been struck by two bullets, one of which inflicted a superficial wound in the arm, the other a wound which in a short while proved fatal.

“At the time your petitioner fired, he was 125 feet from the deceased. He could not see Wood who was then on Mahone avenue and he fired simultaneously or almost so with Officer Wood.

“Officer Wood left your petitioner as he ran down the lane, returned to Mahone avenue and went down Mahone avenue to ‘cut off’ the deceased. He did not again see Hendricks ‘until after the man was shot.’ He fired in the direction of the fleeing person. He heard Hendricks’ shot and said that Hendricks fired it ‘approximately at the same time mine did.’ Hendricks did not run down Mahone avenue.”

An examination of the body shows that it was struck twice, once a slight wound in the arm and again in the back and through the chest. The wounded man was taken to the hospital and died a short time thereafter. He was able to make no statement.

Two defenses are set up. It is contended that it is not possible to say who fired the fatal shot, and that even if it were fired by Hendricks it was fired by an officer in the discharge of his duty in an attempt to arrest a fleeing felon.

Caroline Tillett, a colored woman, was on her way to church. As she went along Mahone avenue to cross Craig, an intersecting street, a white man passed her “walking kind of swift” across Craig street and going towards Mahone avenue. A shot was fired; she heard the whine of [1107]*1107the bullet and screamed. Hendricks ran up and said: “Let me attend to this matter.” He passed her, shot again and said: “Come on boys, we’ve got him.” Elsewhere she said that she did not know who had fired the second shot. The man, shot, fell on the corner of Craig street and Mahone avenue and in the street. There were but two shots. The witness stood near a light on Graig street. With her was another colored woman, Fanny Holly, who testified in part as follows:

“Q. What happened at 9th (Craig street) and Mahone avenue?
“A. Before we got near enough to the house to get there a shot took place.
“Q. What did you do when the shot took place?
“A. I pulled my arm from Caroline Tillett and jumped up on the steps.
“Q. What steps?
“A. The house on the corner.
“Q. The house on the corner ?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 S.E. 8, 163 Va. 1102, 1935 Va. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hendricks-v-commonwealth-va-1935.