Jones and Hall v. Commonwealth

210 Va. 299
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 1, 1969
DocketRecord 7191 and 7213
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 210 Va. 299 (Jones and Hall 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
Jones and Hall v. Commonwealth, 210 Va. 299 (Va. 1969).

Opinion

Snead, C.J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Ernest Thomas Jones and Alvin Hall, on pleas of not guilty, were convicted at separate trials and on separate warrants charging that each did “unlawfully assemble without the authority of law and for the purpose of disturbing the peace or exciting public alarm or *300 disorder.” Code, § 18.1-254.1 (c). (1) A jury fixed the punishment of Jones at confinement in jail for a period of 12 months and a fine of $100. Another jury fixed Hall’s punishment at 12 months in jail and a fine of $200. The trial court sentenced both defendants in accordance with the jury verdicts. We granted each defendant a writ of error to his judgment of conviction.

By their assignments of error, both defendants challenge, among other things,, the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain their convictions and the constitutionality of that portion of § 18.1-254.1 (c), upon which the charge contained in the warrant is based.

Shortly after the assassination of Martin Luther King, on April 4, 1968, there was a series of civil disorders in Richmond. The arrests of Jones and Hall took place during this period.

The pertinent facts which gave rise to the arrest and conviction of each defendant are summarized seriatim below.

JONES v. COMMONWEALTH

Record No. 7191

At approximately 8:50 p.m. on April 8, 1968, Sergeant H. A. Conner of the Richmond Police Bureau, another sergeant and eighteen police officers were in a school bus proceeding west on Broad street. They observed a crowd consisting of about thirty persons walking east on the north side of Broad street toward Second street. Most of them were on the sidewalk but some were “darting” between parked automobiles and parking meters. The school bus stopped between Second and Thud streets. Members of the group were yelling, cursing and using obscene language. The group crossed Second street against the “Don’t Walk” sign. The officers then alighted from the bus, ordered the members of the group to “halt” and with the assistance of other officers proceeded to surround them. The group was contained until patrol wagons arrived at the scene. Thirty or more officers participated.

*301 According to Sergeant Conner no one was brought into the group after it was surrounded and only one person escaped. All were taken to the police station and placed in an empty lockup. Jones, the defendant, was among those transported to the police station. No witness could recall actually seeing him with the group at the scene.

After the group had been loaded into police vehicles there were found several bottles, pieces of brick, sticks and two knives on the ground at the scene.

Jones, age 19, an employee of the State Board of Education, testified that he resided in South Richmond, and that on the night of his arrest he left his home around 8 p.m. in his automobile to go to the YWCA on Chamberlayne avenue to consult with a Miss Craddock concerning a driver education class he was to teach. On the way, he said, he turned left on Broad street from Ninth street and proceeded westward with the intention of turning right at Second street. In the three hundred block he pulled his vehicle to the right and stopped to let a police car with “flashing red lights” and a police bus pass. He then noticed that police were directing westbound traffic to turn left at Third street, so he parked his car where he had stopped. After extinguishing his lights and locking the door to his vehicle he said he was immediately approached by an unidentified police officer who took him to the two hundred block of East Broad street where the group was assembled. He was then searched, put in a police vehicle along with members of the group, taken to the police station and remained there in custody until the next day. Jones introduced evidence showing that at 8:05 a.m. on April 9, 1968 his car was tagged in front of 306 East Broad street, where he parked it the night before, for illegal parking.

HALL v. COMMONWEALTH

Record No. 7213

The defendant Hall was arrested on the same occasion and at the same time as was defendant Jones. (Record No. 7191, supra). The Commonwealth’s evidence relating to the events that occurred prior to the defendant’s arrest and subsequent thereto was substantially the same as was adduced at the trial of Jones. Suffice it to say that Hall was in the group when it was carried to police headquarters.

Hall, age 25, testified that he resided at 1900 North 29th street; that he met a friend, named Sonny, shortly after 8 p.m. at Adams and Broad streets; that he “was going to walk with him down to the *302 poolroom” located at Second and Clay streets; that when he reached Second and Marshall streets (one block north of Broad) he changed his mind and decided to go home because he did not feel well, and that he then walked south on Second street toward Broad where he intended to catch a bus.

About forty feet before he reached Broad street he saw the crowd crossing Second street and heard them singing. He said: “* * * [A]s I come around the corner, there was a crowd of people on the same side of the street that I were on and a busload of policeman came on the corner and jumped out and started telling everybody to move back to Second Street and the State Trooper was on the corner of Second, and they came down and push everybody back to Third and they gathered me up in it and somebody say, ‘Lock them all up’,, and so that’s what happen, they lock me up with a bunch of people I didn’t know anything about, and I had nothing to do with any of them, yelling or saying whatever they said, I was just minding my own business, I was planning to go home, catch the bus there and go home.”

“When the sufficiency of the evidence is challenged after conviction it is our duty to view it in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, granting all reasonable inferences fairly deducible therefrom. The judgment should be affirmed unless ‘it appears from the evidence that such judgment is plainly wrong or without evidence to support it’. § 8-491, Code, 1950; Toler v. Commonwealth, 188 Va. 774, 781, 51 S.E.(2d) 210, 213; Wright v. Commonwealth, 196 Va. 132, 137, 82 S.E.(2d) 603, 606.” Crisman v. Commonwealth, 197 Va. 17, 18, 87 S.E.2d 796, 797.

The burden is upon the Commonwealth to prove the guilt of a person charged with a criminal offense beyond a reasonable doubt. Warren v. Commonwealth, 144 Va. 669, 675, 131 S.E. 227, 228. Every fact necessary to a verdict of guilty must be so proved. Burton and Conquest v. Commonwealth, 108 Va. 892, 898, 62 S. E. 376, 379. The Commonwealth must prove the guilt of an accused to the exclusion of every reasonable hypothesis consistent with his innocence. Spicer v. Commonwealth, 156 Va. 971, 973, 157 S.E. 566.

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

Related

Eric Antonio Newsome v. Commonwealth of Virginia
Court of Appeals of Virginia, 2024
Commonwealth v. Rafferty
402 S.E.2d 17 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1991)
Dickerson v. City of Richmond
346 S.E.2d 333 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 1986)
Patler v. Commonwealth
177 S.E.2d 618 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1970)
Comer v. Commonwealth
176 S.E.2d 432 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1970)
Cameron v. Commonwealth
175 S.E.2d 275 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1970)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
210 Va. 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-and-hall-v-commonwealth-va-1969.