Plymale v. Commonwealth

79 S.E.2d 610, 195 Va. 582, 1954 Va. LEXIS 138
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 25, 1954
DocketRecord 4155
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 79 S.E.2d 610 (Plymale 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
Plymale v. Commonwealth, 79 S.E.2d 610, 195 Va. 582, 1954 Va. LEXIS 138 (Va. 1954).

Opinions

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Robert A. Plymale was indicted for the murder of W. D. Deal. After a trial that lasted three days he was convicted by a jury on September 27, 1952, and his punishment fixed at forty years’ confinement in the penitentiary. From the judgment entered on October 30, 1952, confirming that verdict, writ of error was granted.

Numerous assignments of error are made, but some need not be considered, and those material to this decision may be stated as follows:

Accused contends that:

(1) The corpus delicti was not proved.

(2) The court should have sustained his motion to strike the Commonwealth’s evidence made at the conclusion of all the evidence or sustained the motion to set aside the verdict as contrary to the law and the evidence.

(3) Improper and damaging evidence was admitted.

[584]*584(4) The court erroneously refused to exclude E. A. Thompson, sheriff of Alleghany county, from the court room and allowed him to attend the court and have charge of the jury though he was a material witness for the Commonwealth.

(5) Instructions tendered by accused were improperly refused.

Plymale was arrested on June 19, 1952, about one p. m. upon a warrant sworn out by Sheriff Thompson, and it was upon the latter’s testimony and that of Lewis Goode, deputy fire marshal, that the indictment was returned.

It was established by the Commonwealth that deceased owned a two-story apartment house, known as the Deal building, in Covington, Virginia. He occupied two rooms on the first floor and rented an apartment on that floor to accused, which was occupied by him, his wife, and three children. Two apartments on the second floor were occupied by other families.

On Friday, June 13, 1952, about 3:30 a. m. a woman occupant of the upper floor discovered that a fire was burning in Deal’s apartment below her. She aroused the tenants of the second floor, and then the Plymale family was notified of the danger by calls and knocking on their window, but the fire had gained such headway in Deal’s apartment that it could not be entered nor could Deal be aroused.

When the city fire department arrived, the ceiling of Deal’s bedroom had not collapsed, but before the fire was brought under control, some heavy timbers fell into the room. About six a. m. entry was made into Deal’s apartment which was more severely burned than other parts of the building, and his charred body was found upon his bed under a considerable amount of rubbish, timbers and debris. In preparing the body for burial, the funeral director discovered that deceased’s skull was fractured near the eyebrow. He notified Dr. Hanna, medical examiner for Alleghany county, who examined the body. In making this examination, he removed the upper half of Deal’s skull and the brain. Yet it does not appear that he attached significance to the skull fracture, for [585]*585upon completion of his task, a permit was issued for interment. Because of the burned condition of the body, it was impractical to inject embalming fluid into the arteries. To preserve it the intestines were removed and formaldehyde put into the abdominal cavity and applied externally to the remains. The body, enclosed in a rubber sack and the intestines, brain and skull, treated with formaldehyde and wrapped in a separate package, were all encased in a casket and transported to West Virginia on June 15, 1952, and buried on that day.

Upon discovery of Deal’s burned body, no one seems to have suspected that he had been murdered. However, a day or two after his death examination of his bed disclosed that the partially burned mattress, pillow and pillow case appeared to be stained with blood. Upon further investigation by Sheriff Thompson and Lewis Goode, a warrant was sworn out on June 19, 1952, against Plymale for murder and he was taken into custody about one p. m. on that day.

On June 26, 1952, Deal’s body was exhumed in West Virginia. The next day it was taken to Richmond, Virginia, where an exhaustive post mortem examination was performed by Dr. G. T. Mann, state medical examiner.

This examination revealed that Deal’s skull and face had been fractured in several places and the brain severely injured. By examination of the trachea, bronchi, and lungs, and through analysis of red blood cells found “in the cranial cavity” and in “the left pleural cavity,” it was determined that Deal had ceased to breathe before he was burned. In short, he was dead before he was burned, and Dr. Mann attributed his death to the multiple fractures of his skull and face, which, in his opinion, had been inflicted with some blunt instrument. In summing up his findings and stating his conclusions, he said:

“A. In my opinion, this decedent came to his death from hemorrhage and shock following multiple fractures of the skull and face.”

[586]*586Kenneth Rogers, a brother of Plymale’s wife, who at the time of the trial was under arrest, bailed and awaiting preliminary hearing upon a warrant for forgery, was offered as a witness by the Commonwealth. He testified in part as follows: He said that he was fond of accused, and on Friday, June 13 (the day of the fire) the Plymale family came to the home of his father at nearby Sunnymede and stayed there until they could locate other quarters. Rogers talked to accused that morning and was with him at various times during each of the several days following the fire. On Monday, June 16, 1952, accused, who had been out of employment for some weeks, obtained work in Covington at Lugar’s taxi service. The witness then went on to recount that he met Plymale at Lugar’s taxi service on Tuesday night, June 17, about twelve o’clock when he got off from work, and at the instance of accused, drove him to an alley that extends behind the Deal building. There Plymale alighted from the car, directed Rogers to drive around the block, and accused went into the alley on foot and in a few minutes met Rogers at the appointed place and re-entered the car. They then rode on some distance further until accused told him to stop. He said that Plymale then took a large sum of money out of his pocket and exhibited it, and the witness gave this account of what accused said:

“A. He said you know now what I have done for this and you tell on me and I will do the same for you; he said he killed for this once and I will do it again and he made me promise I would not tell, and he counted out about ten ten dollar bills and put it in one pocket and put the other in the other and he got out of the car and told me to cut out the lights and went up in the woods and was gone about fifteen minutes and he came back and we drove to Sunnymede.”

Rogers further testified that he took accused to work on Wednesday, June 18. On that occasion Plymale told him that there was an iron bar hidden in a chimney in the Deal building and said “for God’s sake get it that is the only thing that will incriminate me in the killing of old man Deal.” [587]*587* * * “He told me to take it and throw it into the river.” Witness then related that he got the bar, but instead of throwing it in the river, he “took it up to Fudge’s hollow and threw it down” beside the road.

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Plymale v. Commonwealth
79 S.E.2d 610 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
79 S.E.2d 610, 195 Va. 582, 1954 Va. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plymale-v-commonwealth-va-1954.