Rasnake v. Commonwealth

115 S.E. 543, 135 Va. 677, 1923 Va. LEXIS 53
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 18, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 115 S.E. 543 (Rasnake 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
Rasnake v. Commonwealth, 115 S.E. 543, 135 Va. 677, 1923 Va. LEXIS 53 (Va. 1923).

Opinion

Sims, J.,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

There are a number of assignments of error. The questions presented thereby, so far as deemed material, will be disposed of in their order as stated below.

1. Did the trial court err in admitting in evidence the statement of Maude Owens that the boy Perry Wagner “was screaming and crying” as he came up the road from the place at which he had just met the accused, Rasnake and Bumgardner?

The question must be answered in the negative.

It is urged in behalf of the accused that this testimony ■“left the jury free to assume that this child, who had come from the direction in which petitioners had gone, had been mistreated by petitioners in some way.” That—“it tends to prove nothing relevant to the case íjí M

The mistreatment of the boy, which this testimony tended to prove, was that testified to by the boy and denied by both of the accused. It was a part of their wanton and reckless conduct, which tended to show that their condition of mind, immediately preceding the killing, was one which displayed hearts “devoid of social duty and fatally bent on mischief”—(a very ancient definition of a condition of mind which evidences the existence of malice). This evidence was therefore relevant and properly admissible. /

In Muscoe’s Case, 87 Va. 460, 12 S. E. 790, the trial ■court permitted a witness to testify that shortly before the homicide the accused said to the witness, in parting [696]*696from him: “Buster, I feel hot; I feel like I could shoot-a man and make him jump so high before he touches-the ground” (indicating the height by his hand), and— “Don’t tell me to take care of myself. Tell the people-that I pass by to take care of themselves.” This court, in holding that theré was no error committed in the admission of such testimony in evidence, said this: “We are of opinion that this testimony was properly admitted. Coming, as it did, almost immediately before the killing, it shed light upon the condition of the prisoner. It may not be admissible strictly as evidence of intention or of threats, but it certainly shows that the prisoner was in a reckless frame of mind and ready to-use the weapon with which he was armed upon none or the most trifling provocation.” .Citing a number of' authorities.

2. Did the court err in refusing to admit in evidence the - testimony of one Caney Puckett and of one Jake Robinett, to the effect that a short time before* the deceased, Rufus Sutherland, was killed, Puckett-was on his way to the home of Bige Wagner (which, as-aforesaid, was on the land owned or controlled by the* deceased) and met the deceased and Robinett, and. asked Robinett if he had seen anything of Mr. Wagner that morning; whereupon the deceased turned, in an. angry manner, upon Puckett, and said: “What in the-hell do you want to know where Bige Wagner is?” and,, with an oath, asked him what his business with Wagner-was? That thereupon Puckett said that he wanted to-see Mr. Wagner about buying some hogs; whereupon, the deceased, with an oath, told Puckett he had better get out of that hollow, that he had no business there,, that if he didn’t go deceased would piit him in jail, or. words to that effect. That thereupon Puckett left.

The question must be answered in the negative..

[697]*697The authorities are not in harmony upon the question whether particular instances of violent conduct on the part of the deceased, disconnected with the homicide or with the occasion on which the homicide was committed, is admissible in evidence in behalf of the accused upon the claim of self-defense. The authorities are, for the most part, harmonious in the holding that, under a claim of self-defense, where the necessity of the accused’s conduct is to be judged by the facts as they reasonably appeared to him, he may give in- evidence whatever he knew of the character, threats and other prior conduct of the deceased, which may tend to show that under the circumstances of the homicide the deceased might reasonably have been expected to act as the accused claims that he did. 2 Bish. New Cr. Proc. (4th ed.) see. 610; State v. Hardin (W. Va.), 112 S. E. at p. 402, and authorities cited; Poer v. State (Tex. Cr. App.), 67 S. W. 500. But Mr. Bishop, in the learned work, just cited, in section 611, says this: “What was unknown to the defendant cannot be thus shown; because it is impossible he should have acted upon it.” Mr, Wigmore, however, takes the position (which is strongly supported in reason and, as he shows, is also supportéd by an increasing number of the decisions) that the kind of evidence under consideration is admissible when there is other evidence tending to support the claim of self-defense, on the further and distinct ground that it tends to show “what the deceased probably did.” That for this reason such evidence is, in such case, admissible, although unknown to the accused at the time of the homicide. 1 Wigmore on Ev. secs. 198 and 63. See also to the same effect State v. Waldron, 71 W. Va. 1, 75 S. E. 559. But, as laid down by Mr. Wigmore, the number of such instances of violent conduct, which will be permitted to be introduced in evidence, is to be con[698]*698trolled by the discretion of the trial court. And, in reason, this must be so; for otherwise the trial may be unduly prolonged and the issues in the particular case may be too much confused by testimony concerning matters which are chiefly collateral and are only admissible as having what, after all, is but a remote bearing on the issue directly involved, namely, what was the conduct of the deceased at the time of the homicide. Upon the admissibility of such evidence as that in question and concerning the discretion of the court to control the number of instances admitted in evidence, in 1 Wigmore on Ev., sec. 198, supra, this is said: “When the turbulent character of the deceased, in a prosecution for homicide, is relevant (under the principle of section 63 ante), there is no substantial reason against evidencing the character by particular instances of violent or quarrelsome conduct. Such instances may be very significant; their number can be controlled by the trial court’s discretion; * * * .”

The trial court admitted in evidence testimony of the accused, Rasnake, that he knew that the deceased was a quick, high-tempered, dangerous man, and had known and heard of his striking other people suddenly; that he had heard of his striking the accused, Bumgardner; that the deceased and Mr. Alfred Johnson had a fight once. The court admitted in evidence the testimony of the accused, Bumgardner, that the deceased knocked him “in the head once with a gun;” that the deceased had the general reputation of being a very dangerous man.' The court also admitted in evidence the testimony of A. L. Grizzle, a witness for the accused, that the deceased would “hit you all right” when one “didn’t know” he was going to do it, or “had never said a word” to justify it; that the witness knew of some people whom the deceased had done “that way;” stating that the [699]*699■deceased struck Mr. A. B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 S.E. 543, 135 Va. 677, 1923 Va. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rasnake-v-commonwealth-va-1923.