Hill v. Commonwealth

2 Va. 595
CourtGeneral Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 15, 1845
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Va. 595 (Hill v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering General Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hill v. Commonwealth, 2 Va. 595 (Va. Super. Ct. 1845).

Opinion

DUNCAN, J.,

delivered the opinion of the majority of the Court.

The prisoner was indicted for the murder of Robert R. Smith; and was found guilty by the petit jury of murder in the first degree ; and sentence of death was pronounced by the Court.

On the trial, the dying declarations of the decedent were given in evidence to the jury, and this was objected to by the prisoner. Before this Court, the objection assumed three distinct grounds: .

1st. That the admission of the djdng declarations in evidence, is a violation of the bill of rights: the 8th article of which secures to evey citizen charged with crime the right to be confronted with the witnesses against him.

2d. That the Court permitted the dying declarations to go to the jury, and be heard by them, before having determined whether the decedent was in the condition at the time to render them legally admissible.

3d. That the decedent was not in the condition when he made the declarations to render them legally admissible as evidence.

After the verdict of the jury, the prisoner moved the Court for a new trial, upon the ground that the evidence *and the law did not authorize the jury to find him guilty of murder in the first degree ; and the motion being overruled by the Court, the prisoner thereupon, moved in arrest of judgment, on the ground that the verdict of the jury was rendered after the expiration of the term of the Nansemond Court; and after the time appointed bj law for the Judge who presided to hold the Court of Isle of Wight county. This motion was also overruled, and sentence of death pronounced upon the prisoner. The cause now comes up before the General Court, upon an application for a writ of error for the causes aforesaid.

In assigning the reasons for the opinion of the Court in this case, it is proposed to pursue the course of the argument of the prisoner’s counsel; and to commence with the application for a new trial, on the ground that the law and evidence did not justify the jury in finding the prisoner guilty of murder in the first degree. In other words, that the evidence did not make out a case under the law, of wilful, deliberate and premeditated killing. Without designing to enter into a disquisition upon the terms of our statute creating the distinction of murder in the first and second degree, we shall content ourselves with the reasoning of the General Court in Jones’s Case, 1 Leigh 598, and adopt it. We also concur with the prisoner’s counsel in their position, that under our statute, every homicide is, prima facie, murder in the second degree ; and in order to elevate the offence to murder in the first degree, the burden is cast upon the Commonwealth to bring it by proof either within the specific class of cases, such as killing by poison, or by laying in wait, &c. enumerated in the statute, or within the general class of “wilful, deliberate and premeditated killing.” On the other hand, in order to reduce the offence from murder in the second degree to manslaughter, the burden is cast upon the accused. As the homicide in question has been found by the jury to *be murder in the first degree, the question arises, was there sufficient evidence before the jury to elevate the offence to that grade? As there was no evidence tending to bring the homicide within the specific class of cases which by the statute are made to constitute murder in the first degree, does the evidence bring it within the general class of “wilful, and premeditated killing?”

The principal difficulty, we apprehend, that exists in distinguishing between murder in the first and second degree, is in deter[494]*494mining what proof is sufficient on the part of the Commonwealth to shew that the killing was wilful, deliberate and premeditated. In order to elevate the offence from murder in the second to murder in the first degree, there must be proof that the accused deliberated ; and that the killing was the result of such deliberation. This being proved, it is not material how recently the deliberation preceded the killing. The practical difficulty in cases of this kind, is, in determining'.what.is sufficient evidence,-qf deliberation. A homicide rarely declares his intention; nay, he often, under the disguise of friendship and kind offices, sedulously conceals his fatal purpose. Often the resolution to kill may be fixed, but the time and the means not determined upon. The most wilful, deliberate and premeditated murders would often go unpunished unless means existed of proving the intention, independent of the admissions or declarations of the homicide. We are of opinion that such means are furnished by the rule: “That a man shall be taken to intend that which he does, or which is the immediate or necessary consequence of his act.” 2 Stark. Evi. 738, and the authorities there referred to.

To illustrate this rule, let us suppose that a man is seen, within shooting distance of another, to raise his gun, take aim, and fire, and the man falls; the ball having inflicted a mortal wound: and that these are all the *facts proved; is this murder in the first or second degree? To respond to this enquiry, we have only to apply the rule just quoted. The taking aim, and firing such a weapon, one from which death would most likely ensue, would itself be prima facie evidence that he intended it; and was, therefore, a wilful, deliberate and premeditated killing.

Now, let us apply this rule to the prisoner’s case; and in the first instance-, to examine it as if all the evidence which are technically classed as dying declarations were out of the case. Some of these declarations, it might be insisted, were parts of the res gesta; and as such, proper evidence. These will be adverted to presently;. and the reasons assigned why they ought to be admitted as part of the res gesta.

The proof to which we will now refer as exclusive of the dying declarations, is as follows: On the evening of the 13th of September last, (the evening of the homicide,) the decedent, who resided 18 miles from Suffolk, being on a visit to his estate adjoining, or near to the town of Suffolk, came to the town, and was at the Washington Hotel. The prisoner who resided in the town of Suffolk, casually met him there: friendly salutations passed between them: a mixed conversation took place in the company; (there being several persons present;) when about the hour of 7 o’clock, the prisoner asked the decedent to walk with him, as he wished. to say something to him. The decedent complied, and they walked off together towards Bayly’s storehouse; which is about SO feet from the end of the porch of the tavern from which they started: and Basdy’s store is in view of persons stationed in the end of the porch. No person seems to have observed the parties after they started on their walk. The prisoner had with him a sword cane. After the lapse of between 5 and 10 minutes, the decedent was seen to approach the tavern, staggering. He fell before he got to the porch. Some *of the company who were in the porch went to his aid, carried him into the porch, and laid him down. He was pulseless, and his countenance was pale and death like. Some of the persons present thought he was dead. He lay in this situation some minutes, when he revived a little, turned himself over and vomited. Remedies were applied to restore sensibility, and in about 10 minutes he was sufficiently restored to be able to speak; and upon being asked what ailed him, ‘ ‘he put his hand to his left breast, and said here it is, here it is.” — “Hunter Hill asked me to walk out, and stabbed me here.” (See Duke’s evidence, page 8 of the record.) His clothes were opened, and a wound discovered in.

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Related

Commonwealth v. Jones
1 Va. 598 (General Court of Virginia, 1829)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Va. 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-commonwealth-vagensess-1845.