McHone v. Commonwealth

57 S.E.2d 109, 190 Va. 435, 1950 Va. LEXIS 142
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 16, 1950
DocketRecord 3623
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 57 S.E.2d 109 (McHone 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
McHone v. Commonwealth, 57 S.E.2d 109, 190 Va. 435, 1950 Va. LEXIS 142 (Va. 1950).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

*438 The defendant, McHone, was convicted of driving while under the influence of intoxicants, sentenced to pay a fine and given a suspended jail sentence. He claims that the judgment should be reversed and that he should be freed of the charge because he was illegally held in jail after his arrest.

By agreement he was tried by the court without a jury. The evidence for the Commonwealth, now to be taken as true, established that in the afternoon of November 9, 1948, Sergeant Akers of the State police met the defendant driving a truck in a manner to excite his suspicion. Akers turned around and followed the defendant for about a mile, and saw the truck twice run off the road onto the shoulder and then back to its left side. Akers stopped the defendant and found that he was drunk. When he got out of the truck he was staggering, the odor of alcohol was extremely strong on his breath, his tongue was thick and the pupils of his eyes were dilated. He at first denied he had been drinking, but later said he had been drinking since that morning. In the truck were an empty pint bottle and another pint bottle with about half an inch of illegal whiskey in it, which the defendant told the officer he had bought on his way from the town of Stuart, but declined to say from whom.

Akers arrested him, told him he was charged with driving his truck while under the influence of whiskey and proceeded with him in the officer’s car to the town of Pulaski. On the way he told Akers he realized he was guilty and insisted on paying his fine to him. They arrived at the jail in Pulaski at about 4:00 p. m., where defendant was turned over to the jailer. Trooper Shelton of the State police came to the jail ten or fifteen minutes later and the defendant repeated to the three officers, as they sat in the jail office, that he realized he was guilty, but did not want to go to jail, and insisted that they permit him to take a cab and go home.

Akers testified that his recollection was that after they arrived at the jail he called the town police department for *439 a justice of the peace and was advised that Mr. Blankenship was still asleep. Blankenship was desk sergeant of the town and a justice, who usually came to his office around five o’clock in the afternoon and was on duty through the night for the purpose of issuing warrants, taking bonds or committing to jail. Akers then told the jailer to bond the defendant when the justice came down and that he had enough money to post his own bond. The jailer testified that his recollection was that Akers called the police department and “I think we contacted two or three parties.”

There was a telephone in the jail office to which the defendant had access and the jailer testified they gave him opportunity to do anything he cared to do. Between five and six o’clock the jailer, at the request of the defendant, telephoned Mr. Powell, the owner of the truck, at Stuart, near defendant’s home, to advise him that defendant was in jail, but on account of weather conditions Powell did not come over that night.

The jailer testified that when Akers left defendant in his custody Akers told the jailer the defendant “would be available for bail at a reasonable time,” but the jailer further testified that “the general instructions, if they are put in, are that they stay there around four hours, * # # until they feel they are capable of taking care of themselves.” Accordingly, when the defendant later on told the jailer he wanted to give bond he was informed that he could do so at the usual time, around four hours. The defendant had about $200 with him and at eight o’clock that evening he gave a cash bond before Blankenship and was released. The warrant on which the defendant was later tried was not issued until November 11—two days after the arrest.

On his trial the defendant introduced one witness who testified that he talked to defendant around one o’clock and noticed nothing wrong with him and that he appeared normal; and another witness, who testified that he spoke to him at about two o’clock from his car while defendant was sitting in his truck about twenty feet away, and noticed *440 nothing unusual about his appearance. The defendant himself testified that when Akers arrested him and told him he smelled liquor on him, “I gave him no argument whatsoever,” but got into his car and went with him. He said that on the way he asked the officer if it was possible to get a bondsman, that he was in a strange territory; that after he got to the jail he insisted on giving bond and showed them he had sufficient money. Asked why he wanted to give bond, he replied, “Well, if I could have gotten out, I could have gotten a doctor or somebody that could have been some benefit in helping me;” that he at that time protested his innocence; that he was informed when inside the jail that he could not get out in less than four hours; that he got the jailer to make the telephone call to Mr. Powell, “and they didn’t let him talk to me;” that at the end of the four hours he was taken before the justice, where he gave bond and was released; that Officer Akers then told him he could drive his truck away if he wanted to, but he replied he was sick and he was going to get a taxicab and go home, which he did.

He further testified that the day before his arrest a doctor in North Carolina had removed a small tumor from his upper thigh by electric needle and had given him some opiate pills to. relieve the pain, which made him sick and dizzy; that next morning he felt strange so he took a small drink of whiskey before breakfast and also took two of the pills; that at the time of his arrest he was drowsy and groggy from the effect of the medicine; he denied ownership of the whiskey in the truck, stating that he was driving Powell’s truck; he denied saying he was drunk or admitting his guilt. He said the jailer at no time refused to make any call for him and while he would not “specifically say” that the officers kept him from giving bond, he was afforded no. opportunity to do so. The defendant asserts that upon this record he was illegally held in jail; that as a consequence he was denied his constitutional right “to call for evidence in his favor,” Va. Const., art. 1, sec. 8, and that under our *441 holding in Winston v. Commonwealth, 188 Va. 386, 49 S. E. (2d) 611, he is entitled to be released from further prosecution.

His contention that he was illegally held in jail is well founded. The State police sergeant had a right to make the arrest, both under section 4827a, Code, 1942 (Michie), and by virtue of his office. Winston v. Commonwealth, supra. But whether he proceeded under the one authority or the other, it was his duty under the law to take the defendant before an officer authorized to issue criminal warrants, so that the officer might determine whether the defendant should be released, admitted to bail or committed to jail. Code, 1942 (Michie), secs. 4826, 4827a, 4828; Winston v. Commonwealth, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
57 S.E.2d 109, 190 Va. 435, 1950 Va. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mchone-v-commonwealth-va-1950.