Jordan v. Commonwealth

25 Va. 943
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 15, 1874
StatusPublished

This text of 25 Va. 943 (Jordan 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
Jordan v. Commonwealth, 25 Va. 943 (Va. 1874).

Opinion

STAPLES, J.,

delivered - the opinion of the court.

The first assignment of error arises upon a question ashed a witness, and set out in the first bill of exceptions. This witness had testified that he went to the prosecutor’s house within a few minutes after the robbery was attempted; that the persons implicated in the robbery were described to him by Mrs. Priddy, the wife of the prosecutor; that he went immediately in pursuit of these persons, and found the prisoner and a man named Thos. Oakley, who is also under indictment for the same offence, and several other persons, in a bar-room about a mile distant from the prosecutor’s house; and after the witness had described the dress and general appearance of the prisoner, he was asked by the commonwealth’s attorney “Whether the prisoner and the said Oakley corresponded on that night, in dress and appearance, with two of the men described by Mrs. Priddy?” The witness answered “that they did.” The counsel for the prisoner insists that this was error; that the witness ought to have been *asked to describe the appearance and dress of the prisoner and his companion, so that the jury might judge whether they answered to the description given by the prosecutor’s wife in her testimony.

How, as a matter of fact, that precise course was pursued. The wife of the prosecutor did describe to the jury the appearance and dress of the persons engaged in the attempted robbery; and the other witness described the persons he saw in the bar-room. The jury were thus enabled to judge whether there were any material discrepancies in the description given by these witnesses respectively. But the commonwealth was not necessarilj’ restricted to this mode of examination. The description of the prisoners given a few minutes after the occurrence, was more likely to be correct than any given on a subsequent occasion. On the trial the wife of the prosecutor might fail to remember many particulars or details observed and remembered at the time of the robbery. Her description given to the witness a few minutes afterwards was a part of the res gestas. And it was entirely competent to the commonwealth to prove before the jury the particulars of that description, as was done by the witness without objection by the prisoner. This proof being adduced, there could be no valid objection to an enquiry of the witness whether the appearance and dress of the prisoner and his companion, as seen at the bar-room, corresponded with the description thus given. If it be conceded that the witness was thus requested to express an opinion, it is sufficient to say that upon questions of identity it is competent to the witness to give his opinion; the grounds upon which it rests being always open to the investigation of the adverse party. When the witness states that the prisoner at the bar is the same person *seen on a particular occasion, he is giving his opinion; and when he undertakes to describe the dress and appearance of the prisoner, it is still an opinion. The weight to which it is entitled depends upon his integrity, his intelligence, his accuracy and means of observation. In the present case the question asked the witness was not a violation of the rule, and the evidence thus elicited was clearly admissible.

The second error assigned was the refusal of the court to give the instruction asked for by the prisoner, and in giving another in lieu thereof, as set out in the second bill of exceptions. We do not deem it at all necessary to quote the language of either of these instructions. That given bjr the court in effect affirms the proposition, that if the prisoner, along with other persons, made an assault upon the prosecutor, intending to rob him of his property; and in the course of a scuffle between the parties, one of the assailants snatched a pistol from the hands of the prosecutor and carried it away, and converted it to the use of either of them, this constituted the offence of robbery by the prisoner.

The manifest objection to this instruction is, that it affirms as a conclusion of law, that certain enumerated acts constitute the crime of robbery, without the slightest reference to the intention with which those acts were done. It assumes, that although the prisoner, in taking the pistol, had no design to steal it, but simply to prevent the prosecutor from using it against his assailants, the prisoner may nevertheless be convicted, if he intended to rob the prosecutor of cither property not mentioned in the indictment.

We do not understand the learned judge of the Hustings court as denying that the animus furandi is an essential element in the crime of robbery. On the ^contrary; he affirms that it is. Indeed, the rule upon this subject is too well settled to be now called in question. The taking must in all cases be accompanied with the felonious intent, and no subsequent felonious purpose will render the previous taking felonious. As expressed by Lord Coke, “the intent to steal must be when it cometh to his hands or possession; for if he hath the possession of it unlawfully, though he hath animum furandi afterward and carrieth it away, it is no larceny.”

It is not enough that the prisoner had at the same time an intent to steal other goods; the felonious intent must exist with regard to the goods charged in the indictment. Roscoe 838; 2 Arch. Cr. Pr. & Plead. 508.

This principle is exemplified by a case in which it was held, that the taking was a mere trespass, although the original assault was clearly with a felonious intent. A assaulted B on the highway, cum animo furandi, and searched his pockets for money; but finding none, A pulled off the [627]*627bridle of B’s horse and threw that and some bread which B had in pannels, about the highway; but did not take anything from B. It was resolved, upon conference with all the judges, that this was no robbery, because nothing was taken from B. But East, in his pleas of the crown, says that the better reason seems to be, tha.t the particular goods taken were not taken with a felonious intent; for surely there was a sufficient taking and separation of the goods from the person. The same view of the case was taken by Russell and other writers on the criminal law.

In Rex v. Holloway, 24 Eng. C. E. R. 688, the prisoner was indicted for stealing a gun from the prosecutor, who was a game keeper. Vaughan, B., in summing *up, said, the prisoner might have imagined that the prosecutor would use the gun so as to endanger his life; and if so, his taking it under that impression would not be felony; but if he took it intending at the time to dispose of it, it would be felony. It was a question peculiarly for the jury.

And so in the case at bar, the prisoner and his associates in snatching the pistol from the prosecutor may not have intended at the time to steal it. If they did not so intend, if the only object was to prevent its being used against them, then the subsequent carrying away and conversion would not constitute robbery. On the other hand, if the intention at the time was to deprive the prosecutor wholly of the pistol, the offence is robbery, although the assailants on snatching the pistol, may also have intended to prevent its being used against them. Both intents may have existed at the time. The jury may infer the felonious intent from the immediate asportation and conversion of the property, in the absence of satisfactory countervailing evidence by the prisoner. The whole question is one peculiarly for their consideration, to be determined upon all the facts and circumstances.

This view renders it unnecessary to notice particularly the instruction asked for by prisoner’s counsel.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Va. 943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jordan-v-commonwealth-va-1874.