Hubbard v. Commonwealth

59 S.E.2d 102, 190 Va. 917, 1950 Va. LEXIS 182
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMay 1, 1950
DocketRecord 3677
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 59 S.E.2d 102 (Hubbard 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
Hubbard v. Commonwealth, 59 S.E.2d 102, 190 Va. 917, 1950 Va. LEXIS 182 (Va. 1950).

Opinion

Spratley, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case is here upon a writ of error to a judgment of the Circuit Court of York county, entered on June 1, 1949, wherein the defendant, Douglas D. Hubbard, was sentenced to five years in the penitentiary, pursuant to a verdict of the jury finding him guilty of murder in the second degree.

On Saturday afternoon, January 15, 1949, James W. Montague, while hunting in York county, Virginia, was shot by the defendant, Douglas D. Hubbard, and died shortly after his removal to a hospital. Hubbard admitted the homicide; but claimed, upon his trial, that he acted in self-defense.

James W. Montague, a welder by trade, was. 44 years old at the time of his death, and resided in Warwick county, a county adjoining York. He kept a number of dogs, was fond of hunting, and engaged in that diversion nearly every day during the hunting season.

On the morning of January 15, 1949, Montague,' with three friends, L. J. Gregory, R. C. Marshall, Jr., and G. C. Wood, drove by automobile from Warwick county to York county to hunt rabbits. They carried three hounds *921 belonging to Montague, parked their car near a tavern called the Tiptoe Grill, and hunted for some time in that vicinity. After an hour or more of hunting, two of the dogs became lost. Marshall and Wood went looking for the dogs, while Gregory and Montague stayed at the inn. Not being able to find the dogs, Marshall and Wood returned to the inn, where the party had lunch. Montague drank two bottles of 3.2 beer during the time he remained at the inn. One of the lost dogs returned after lunch, and the group decided to continue the hunt with the hope that the lost dog would hear the other dogs running and return. The group of four was joined by a colored man named Eppes, and all started hunting in the field near the inn. A rabbit was soon located and the dogs ran across the road and into a small body of woods. They soon lost the trail and stopped barking. Montague’s party separated and started looking for the dogs. In a few minutes a shot was heard, followed in two or three seconds by two shots fired closely together. Wood, who had been out of the sight of Montague for three minutes, said “I heard a single shot, then a matter of a few seconds I heard a double shot simultaneously and I could hardly distinguish between the two, the last two, so I then, in turn, turned around and ran back through the woods.” After running 35 to 40 yards, he found Montague lying wounded on the ground on the property of Lincoln Orange, 30 or 40 feet from the land of Douglas D. Hubbard. Two dogs were beside Montague, leashed by his belt to his right hand. Montague’s 12 gauge double barrelled shotgun, with two empty shells in it, was lying under him. He was conscious when found, but spoke only the words: “Leave me alone,” or “Don’t bother me,” before his death. Montague was taken to the hospital in Williamsburg by his companions, where he died within ten.or fifteen minutes.

Marshall testified that he heard “one shot and an interval from 2 to 5 seconds, I’d say, and then then was two shots which seemed almost simultaneously. Just right together.” Hearing his name called, he proceeded to the place where *922 Montague was found. He corroborated Wood as to the details surrounding the finding of Montague and the general surroundings.

At the inquest on the body of Montague it was found that he had received nine buckshot wounds, “one in front of left knee, one in left side,—inside, about 6 inches, above the knee; one in right side,—inside, midway between knee and hip; one right side, lower margin of ribs; one directly over the heart and one half-way between the heart wound and the shoulder on the left side; one in the midpoint of the neck, lower part; one in the middle of the neck on the right side; one in the left arm just above the elbow.”

Philip Montague, son of the deceased, testified that his father was an experienced hunter and always fired his gun from his left shoulder. He viewed the body of his father and discovered a bruise on the finger which was- not there the night before his death. His father’s dogs, on his last hunting trip, were small, one an adult two feet tall, and the “other just beginning to run,” about eighteen inches high.

V. W. Lovelace, sheriff of the city of Williamsburg and county of James city, received a call about two o’clock of the same day to come to Bell’s Hospital because some one had been shot. He promptly responded and went to the emergency room of the hospital, where he found the defendant with a nurse, Mrs. Hubbard, and the Honorable Frank Armistead, Judge of the Fourteenth Circuit, which included the city of Williamsburg and county of York. Upon his arrival, Hubbard asked him, “What the hell I was doing there?” Judge Armistead then requested the sheriff to swear out a warrant for Hubbard which the sheriff immediately did, charging the defendant with the murder of Montague. Lovelace said someone asked Hubbard about the man who was shot, and Hubbard replied that “he would like, to see them pick the shot out of the other man.”

There was considerable evidence regarding terrain, fences, lines of fire, and pattern of shot. No scaled map was introduced.

*923 H. D. Riley, deputy sheriff of York county, testified that he went to the hospital, viewed the body of Montague, and then went to a room where Hubbard was lying in bed. He asked Hubbard if he felt like talking about the shooting. Hubbard replied, “If you want to know anything about it, find my attorney Robert Armistead, and if you do find him, tell him I would like to see him myself because I haven’t seen him as yet.” Riley, at Hubbard’s request, read aloud the warrant charging the latter with the murder of Montague.

Riley thereafter went to the scene of the homicide. He found there a 12 gauge empty shell lying on the Hubbard property beside a poplar tree about 82 feet from a fence. He also found blood on some leaves beside a fence on the Lincoln Orange property approximately 30 steps, or 90 feet, from the tree where the empty shell was found. .There was also evidence of the passage of buckshot and fine shot, No. 6 or No. 8, on the trees and bushes. The lines of fire of the buckshot and fine shot were parallel and travelled through the same point. The land where the empty shell was found was about nine feet and two inches higher than that where Montague had been found wounded. In an examination of the pockets of the coat of Montague, Riley found some shells containing No. 6 and No. 8 small shot.

Dr. B. I. Bell, who treated Hubbard, found 75 or 80 gunshot wounds on the person of the latter. They were made by small shot and entered his body from his forehead to below his knee, with “a good many in the right arm and right side of the body and abdomen. There were 16 in the right leg from the hip down to the knee.”

Dr. H. G. Stokes viewed the body of Montague on the afternoon of the shooting. He did not probe or follow the course of the shots in the body. He said he did not know, but that he thought the wound directly over the heart caused death. He expressed the opinion that Montague could not have aimed and fired two shots after he had been struck as described. He. said his opinion, in that *924

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Clark v. Commonwealth
421 S.E.2d 28 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 1992)
Martinez v. Commonwealth
395 S.E.2d 467 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 1990)
Cheng v. Commonwealth
393 S.E.2d 599 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1990)
Barnes v. Commonwealth
197 S.E.2d 189 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1973)
Timmons v. Commonwealth
129 S.E.2d 697 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1963)
Jackson v. Commonwealth
70 S.E.2d 322 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 S.E.2d 102, 190 Va. 917, 1950 Va. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hubbard-v-commonwealth-va-1950.