Pendleton v. Commonwealth

109 S.E. 201, 131 Va. 676, 1921 Va. LEXIS 57
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 22, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 109 S.E. 201 (Pendleton 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
Pendleton v. Commonwealth, 109 S.E. 201, 131 Va. 676, 1921 Va. LEXIS 57 (Va. 1921).

Opinion

Sims, J.,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the following opinion of the court:

The following questions raised by the assignments of error will be disposed of in their order as stated below:

1. Does it appear from the evidence that the judgment under review is plainly wrong or without evidence to support it?

[689]*689This question must be answered in the negative.

[1] It has been earnestly and ably argued before us in behalf of the accused that he was justified in shooting the deceased in order to put an end to his alleged lewd purpose toward and persistent attentions to Daisy Moss. But it affirmatively appears from the evidence that this was not the motive for the shooting and that the shooting was not necessary to accomplish that end, even from the viewpoint of the accused. For, as appears from his testimony, quoted above, the accused stated before the jury, “I was going to him without anything in my hands, I did not need anything but my hands to handle Barker with, if he did not use his gun.”

[2, 3] The plea of self-defense was the sole defense relied on by the accused on the trial to justify the shooting, and hence our consideration of the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict and judgment must be confined to a consideration of the evidence as bearing upon that defense.

In so far as the question of the sufficiency of the evidence is concerned, the case turns upon the issues of fact of whether the gun of the accused was lying on the ground in the weeds as he arose, when Frances Hanson first saw him and made the exclamation shown in. evidence; of whether the deceased turned towards f-he accused and threw his right hand to his right hip pocket; of whether the accused then for the first time “grabbed the gun off of the ground” and fired at the accused, and of whether, just as the accused fired, the girl stumbled in the weeds and the deceased turned back towards her, and thus received the wounds found upon his person; or whether the accused arose with the gun in his hands, and the deceased did not throw his hand to his hip pocket, but had his back practically directl to-'-ardf. the accused when the gun was fired. There was sufficient evidence to support the finding of the jury either way; hence their verdict was binding upon the court below and is binding upon us.

[690]*690The direct testimony for the Commonwealth, it is true tended in part to sustain the version given by the accused of what occurred, but the credibility of such part of the testimony was folely for the determination of the jury: and the circumstantial evidence furnished by the absence of any pistol in the pocket of the deceased, by the mute wounds upon the back of the deceased, and the spontaneous exclamation of Frances Ranson, if it consisted of the words, “Lord, there is Wyatt back of us with a gun,” as the testimony for the Commonwealth tended to show was true, were sufficient to warrant the jury in disbelieving the testimony of and for the accused on the subject of the alleged hip-pocket movement, and, hence, in discarding the self-defense theory.

While possible, it was in the highest degree improbable, if the deceased turned so far facing the accused as to make a demonstration against the latter of drawing a pistol from the hip pocket, that, even if the attention of the deceased was attracted elsewhere by the girl stumbling in the weeds, he would have then turned so far away from the accused as to have received the discharge from the gun practically directly in the back. If this movement had occurred, the strong probability is that the deceased would have been shot in the right or left side, dependent upon whether he had turned to the right or the left in the attempt to draw a pistol. Indeed, it is stated in the petition of the accused for the writ of error, that just at the moment the shot was fired, “Daisy Moss, who had started to run, stumbled in the weeds and Barker, hearing her stumble, partly turned towards her with his hand still on his hip pocket, so that his right side and back were thus turned towards petitioner just as petitioner fired. The shot from petitioner’s gun, therefore, penetrated Barker’s right side and back * * But unfortunately for the accused the uncontroverted testimony of the physician who examined the wounds was as follows:

[691]*691“There were four shot in his left thigh, one came through here; there was one in his right, that is below the hip joint in the pelvic bone, two here and one in the palm of his hand. Then his right forefinger and his right thumb at the end were shot. I counted eight shot in his body—four in his left thigh and one in his right; that is five; two here (indicating), and one in the palm of his hand.”
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Cross-Examination.
“Q. By Mr. Moon. I don’t exactly catch how those shot were. How many shot struck him?
“A. Nine shot I know of.
“Q. Will you show me where they were ?
“A. (Indicating). There were four that went into his left thigh; two came through here, and one in his right thigh and that came through just under the surface of the skin, and one struck him just below the hip bone, and there were two hit him in his buttock, just to the right of the middle line, just about there, and one struck him in the palm of his right hand, and his finger and thumb were shot.”
♦ sfc ❖ * $ # * * * sfc
“Q. They went in sort of from the side and back, those shots did, didn’t they?
“A. I think they were pretty much from the back.
“Q. How did they come out?
“A. They came out straight in front.
“Q. You pointed out where the shot entered. Now point just where they came out.
“A. They came out just to the center of the thigh.
“Q. About the center of the right side? And the left?
“A. Right and left. I don’t know which side of the leg bone they went. The one that went in the right thigh seemed to go right straight through the thigh.”

[692]*692This testimony was sufficient to warrant the jury in concluding that the deceased was shot when his back was practically directly toward the accused.

Again: It is contended for the accused that the fact that one shot penetrated the palm of the right hand of the deceased confirms the testimony of the accused that the right hand of the deceased was in his hip pocket at the time the gun was fired. This may have been so. But, in view of the character of the other wounds aforesaid, the jury may have reasonably regarded the fact to have been that the hand was in the natural position of one fleeing from another, namely, at the side, when the gun was fired, in which position the shot would have penetrated the palm as it did.

[4] 2. Were the dying declarations of the deceased, admitted in evidence over the objection of the accused, of such character as to have been properly admissible in evidence as dying declarations?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 S.E. 201, 131 Va. 676, 1921 Va. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pendleton-v-commonwealth-va-1921.