Jones v. Commonwealth

82 S.E.2d 482, 196 Va. 10, 1954 Va. LEXIS 194
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 21, 1954
DocketRecord 4224
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 82 S.E.2d 482 (Jones 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 v. Commonwealth, 82 S.E.2d 482, 196 Va. 10, 1954 Va. LEXIS 194 (Va. 1954).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Lawrence James Jones was convicted of second degree murder for the homicide of Lawyer Cook and sentenced to twenty years’ confinement in the penitentiary.

The trial was had before a jury, and accused undertook to show that the killing was (a) by misadventure and accidental, or (b) done in self-defense.

The court instructed the jury upon the theory of accidental killing but refused to give any instruction embodying the law of self-defense, and that ruling is assigned as error.

Cook died on January 8, 1952, from a pistol bullet wound inflicted on January 5, 1952. The autopsy disclosed that he had been wounded in the left hand by a pistol bullet, but that his death was caused by a bullet which entered his abdomen, perforated the intestines and lodged in the pelvic bone on tbe left side.

During the afternoon of January 5, 1952, at the instance of deceased, accused and two other men went to Cook’s home in the city of Norfolk for the purpose of gambling. All of them had been drinking intoxicants and while at Cook’s home, they engaged in shooting dice. Deceased was a loser, and he tried, without success, to borrow some money from other players and offered his pistol as security. He secured three dollars by selling a pint of gin to them, and they all partook of the gin.

About 9 p. m. the game broke up and accused left for his home. On the way he stopped by a grocery store to pay a bill, and there discovered that his wallet had been stolen. The theft had been accomplished by cutting his back pocket “all the way down.” Upon discovery of the theft accused *12 returned to Cook’s home and knocked upon the door but no response was obtained. He then went to a nearby restaurant and beer tavern operated by Quincy Moore, Jr. Shortly thereafter deceased entered the restaurant, and it appears from the testimony of Moore that accused stated to Moore that he was going to kill Cook. In response to questions propounded by the Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney, this witness testified that Jones came into the kitchen of the restaurant and showed him a pistol and said that Lawyer Cook had taken “some money from him and he was going to kill him, and he asked me not to call the law because he wasn’t going to kill him inside.” The witness said that accused then left the kitchen and went into the restaurant to where Cook was standing, and a moment thereafter the two men went out of the restaurant, accused being preceded by deceased.

After the killing, accused left the city and was arrested on November 14, 1952, in Chicago, Illinois. He was brought back to Norfolk, and on December 2, 1952, Sergeant L. L. Jones obtained the following statement from him as to what happened when accused met Cook at the restaurant:

“# * * Later on, Lawyer Cook came in. I asked him did he see my wallet up to his house and he said, ‘No.’ I told him that I must have lost it there because I hadn’t been nowhere from there to home.

“Lawyer Cook told me to come on outside if I wanted to talk to him so we went on outside the restaurant. I asked him again did he have my wallet. He didn’t say anything. I told him if he had the wallet, just give me it back and keep the money. Then he told me did I want to make anything out of it. I told him if he had my wallet, it didn’t make any difference to me.

“He started to take his hand from his pocket and it came out of his pocket and I grabbed his arm and he had a pistol. As we were tussling over the pistol, he fired twice. He turned around and ran. He ran up on the porch next door *13 and I ran up behind him. He told me not to shoot anymore, that he would tell me where the money was.

“As I turned around to walk off the porch, Lawyer Cook jumped on my back. Both of us fell on the sidewalk and the pistol fell out of my hand. We both of us got off the ground. Lawyer Cook got the gun. He told me not to come up on him. I walked away from there. I went to the Greyhound Bus Station. I got a ticket for Washington, D. C., and then went to my uncle’s house in Chicago and stayed there for two months and then I got a room by myself and stayed there until November 14th of this year when I got picked up.”

No one other than accused testified as to how the killing occurred. When he testified in his own behalf, he said that when Cook came into the restaurant, he asked him “to go back to his house to see if I lost my money,” but Cook said that he was not going back home. The two men then went outside, and this is what occurred on the outside of the restaurant:

“A. * * * He asked me who I thought had the money and I said that I wasn’t sure. He asked me if I thought he had it. I said, ‘I don’t know.’ He was the closest one to me while gambling, so I told him he must have it. We started arguing.

“He asked me if I wanted to make anything out of it. I told him it didn’t make any difference with me. He put his hand in his pocket and he had a pistol. The pistol went off about three times when we were tussling. I twisted his hand and got the pistol. He ran on the porch. He told me he had the money and he would give it to me.

“I turned around to come back and he jumped on my back and we both fell off the porch and knocked the gun out of my hand. He had the pistol and he told me not to come up on him. He walked off and I walked off. I had been drinking. I saw blood all over my hand and I was scared. I did the first thing that come up to my mind. I left.”

*14 Accused said that he had never owned a pistol since he had been in Norfolk and knew of no reason why Moore should have testified that he had threatened to kill Cook.

The Attorney General contends that the evidence clearly shows that accused was the aggressor or that he voluntarily engaged in mutual combat and thus he is not entitled to any instructions on the law of self-defense.

“The general rule is that one can not provoke an attack, bring on a combat, and then slay his assailant, and claim exemption from the consequences on the ground of self-defense. No one can avail himself of the plea of self-defense, in case of homicide, or assault with intent to murder, when the defendant was himself the aggressor, and wilfully brought on himself, without legal excuse, the necessity for the killing, or the assault made. He who provokes a personal encounter, in any case, thereby disables himself from relying on the plea of self-defense in justification of a blow which he struck during the encounter.” 1 Michie, Homicide, § 112(1), p. 339. Sims v. Commonwealth, 134 Va. 736, 761, 115 S. E. 382; Perkins v. Commonwealth, 186 Va. 867, 44 S. E. (2d) 426; 9 M. J., Homicide, § 42, p. 380.

“When two persons enter willingly into a combat, not for self protection but to gratify their passion by inflicting injury upon each other, the doctrine of self-defense cannot be invoked on behalf of either.” 25 Am. & Eng. Enc., 2d ed., 266, cited with approval in Carr v. Commonwealth, 134 Va. 656, 664, 114 S. E. 791. 26 Am. Jur., Homicide, § 128, p. 243.

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Bluebook (online)
82 S.E.2d 482, 196 Va. 10, 1954 Va. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-commonwealth-va-1954.