Orange v. Commonwealth

61 S.E.2d 267, 191 Va. 423, 1950 Va. LEXIS 231
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedOctober 9, 1950
DocketRecord 3714
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 61 S.E.2d 267 (Orange 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
Orange v. Commonwealth, 61 S.E.2d 267, 191 Va. 423, 1950 Va. LEXIS 231 (Va. 1950).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Myrtle Stoots Orange, referred to herein as defendant, has been convicted of second-degree murder and sentenced to serve fifteen years in the penitentiary for the killing of Charles Lewis McFall. The evidence against her is circumstantial and she here challenges its sufficiency to support the verdict, as well as certain rulings of the trial court in admitting and rejecting evidence and in giving and refusing instructions.

She was indicted February 21, 1949, jointly with her brother, Frank Stoots, and her nephew, LeRoy Stoots. * On her statement that she was without means to employ counsel, the court immediately appointed counsel for her, and he has conducted her defense with energy and ability *428 both in the trial court and in this court. She elected to be tried separately and after a trial lasting three days she was convicted by a jury and sentenced as stated. Frank Stoots and LeRoy Stoots testified as witnesses for the Commonwealth.

The sufficiency of the evidence against her was challenged first by a motion to strike at the conclusion of the Commonwealth’s evidence and again at the conclusion of all the evidence. The defendant lost her right to rely on her motion to strike at the conclusion of the Commonwealth’s evidence by afterwards introducing her own. Spangler v. Commonwealth, 188 Va. 436, 438, 50 S. E. (2d) 265, 266; Interstate Veneer Co. v. Edwards, ante, pp. 107, 110, 60 S. E. (2d) 4, 6. The sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict is therefore, to be determined from the entire record.

McFall’s body was found on Sunday afternoon, February 13, 1949, about five o’clock, in a cistern in his back yard. His throat had been cut, the external jugular vein had been severed and his death resulted from the hemorrhage. An autopsy showed there was no water in his lungs and the coroner was of opinion that necessarily he was dead when his body entered the cistern, which held about eight feet of water.

McFall, who was fifty-three years old and unmarried, lived in a three-room house on State Route 99 about two miles east of the town of Pulaski. The defendant, who was thirty-six, was married but living apart from her husband. She lived with her father and mother, her brother Frank and her nephew LeRoy, in a house on the same road about a quarter of a mile west of the McFall house. Her acquaintance with McFall began December 18, 1948, about two months before his death. A colored girl who knew him took the defendant to his house that afternoon. The three began drinking and during the evening two colored men joined the party, one of whom, Robert Jones, had some sort of difficulty with defendant, hit her and blacked her eye. The colored people later left and the defendant spent the night *429 with McFall. Thereafter defendant regularly went to McFall’s house and stayed with him over the week-ends, drinking with him, cooking his meals and sleeping with him. LeRoy Stoots, defendant’s nephew, spent one of these weekends with defendant and McFall.

Customarily, the defendant went to McFall’s home on Friday. The week-end of this tragedy started a day earlier. McFall picked defendant up at her home on Thursday and she stayed with him all of Friday and Friday night. Saturday morning McFall told the defendant, so she testified, that he was going to town to get some money. He shaved, after asking her whether he needed to. He then went to town and borrowed $150 from a small loan company and as security a life insurance policy was issued to him naming Myrtle McFall, who he said was his wife, as second beneficiary. He also stated that he had $4,000 of life insurance, payable to his wife Myrtle. She testified that he talked that morning about taking her to Michigan and had talked of taking her to Richmond to have her tonsils taken out. He told her that on this trip he had gone by his homeplace and got a gun, stating that he might need it. Later in the afternoon he went out on the porch and fired the pistol, which was what she referred to as a gun, and then gave it to her along with some shells which she put in her pocketbook. She testified that she kept the shells in her pocketbook and hid the pistol in a potato sack in the kitchen early Sunday morning because he had threatened her and she was afraid. Still later Saturday afternoon they walked to Morris’ service station, about a mile and a half east of McFall’s house, where McFall paid a grocery bill and bought two pints of whiskey. They had been drinking and McFall drank on the way home. She said she had to help him back home and into bed.

Frank and LeRoy Stoots, witnesses for the Commonwealth, testified that they went to the McFall house Sunday morning, February 13, about nine-thirty or ten o’clock, to get a drink. McFall got up and let them in. Defendant was *430 still in bed. They were there' twenty or thirty minutes and the four of them drank a pint of liquor and a quart of beer. McFall and defendant appeared to have been drinking already. McFall asked them to go to Morris’ and see if they could find his pocketbook, which he thought he had left there the night before. Defendant suggested that McFall go with them. He thereupon put on khaki pants and shirt, went into the kitchen and came back into the bedroom. Defendant had her pocketbook under the pillow and McFall tried to get it but she lay down on it. He then went back into the kitchen while Frank and LeRoy waited for him at the road. He came out and told them to go ahead and he would get Myrtle up and get some breakfast. He then went back into the house. Frank and LeRoy proceeded to Morris’ and were told the pocketbook was not there. They returned to the McFall house between twelve and twelve-thirty, approaching from the back. They saw the defendant standing on the back porch, dressed only in her slip, bleeding from the head and very bloody. The cover was off of the cistern and there were drops of blood on it and spots of blood from the back porch across the concrete top of the cistern. LeRoy started away and defendant holloed to him three times to come back there a minute, but he ran back toward the railroad and into the highway. In the meantime, he said, he had looked down into the cistern and put the top back on.

Frank testified that he went up to his sister and asked what had happened. She said, “He tried to kill us.” He inquired, “Who?” She said, “Charlie.” He asked, “Where is he then?” She said, “I don’t know.” He testified that her head was “beat up” and she was bloody. He went into the house and found blood “all over the place.” He saw nobody but the defendant. Up to the time of his so testifying he had denied positively that he went into the house. He and LeRoy went back to their home and forty-five minutes to an hour later the defendant came there.

The defendant, testifying for herself, gave this version: *431 When McFall came back to the house she was. standing in the middle of the floor. She told him she thought he was going to see about his pocketbook. He replied that he told the boys to get it and to bring back some liquor. She told him he ought to have gone.

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Bluebook (online)
61 S.E.2d 267, 191 Va. 423, 1950 Va. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orange-v-commonwealth-va-1950.