Reid v. Commonwealth

195 S.E.2d 866, 213 Va. 790, 1973 Va. LEXIS 233
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 23, 1973
DocketRecord 8115,
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 195 S.E.2d 866 (Reid 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
Reid v. Commonwealth, 195 S.E.2d 866, 213 Va. 790, 1973 Va. LEXIS 233 (Va. 1973).

Opinion

Harrison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

James Horace Reid was convicted by a jury of first-degree murder and sentenced by the trial court to serve 75 years in the penitentiary. It is contended that questions and comments by the Commonwealth’s Attorney at the trial relative to Reid’s failure to make certain assertions while in custody, which he later advanced at his trial, violated his constitutionally protected right to remain silent.-

Reid was arrested in the Massad House Hotel in Richmond on October 30, 1971 and charged with the murder of William E. Padgette. Thomas Orth, the hotel’s night clerk, testified that about 2:50 A. M. on October 30th Reid entered the hotel lobby and asked to see Padgette. Reid talked to Padgette on a lobby phone and then went up to Padgette’s room. A few minutes later Orth, while making a routine hourly check of the hotel, heard a disturbance in Padgette’s *791 room. He knocked on the door and, upon receiving no response, called out that he was going downstairs to call the police. Thereupon Reid opened the door, knocked Orth back and cut him on the wrist and elbow with a knife. Orth could see Padgette sitting in a chair gasping for breath. Reid held Orth at knife point while he rummaged through the drawers in a bureau and a desk in Padgette’s room. Th'en Reid marched Orth down to the hotel lobby, where he cut the telephone line and pulled a Burns camera detection apparatus off the wall. Unknown to Reid, Orth triggered an alarm in the Richmond police station by removing a $5 bill from the hotel cash register. Within 1-2 minutes the police arrived. A chase ensued through and around the hotel and an adjoining building before Reid was apprehended in the hotel. At one time during the chase Reid leaped from a second-floor window to a concrete sidewalk.

The officers found Padgette’s body upright in a chair in his room, clothed only in his pajama bottoms. Resting in his left hand and between his legs was a 4-foot cane or stick. He had been stabbed three times in the left chest, twice in the right chest, once in the mid-upper back and had bled profusely. The medical examiner testified that Padgette died as the result of a stab wound of the chest which penetrated the heart. He was dead at the time of the doctor’s examination at 4:17 A. M. Padgette was 65 years old at the time of his death and suffered from gout and high blood pressure—he used a cane to assist him in walking. He had been residing in the hotel since August 18, 1971.

At Reid’s trial the following exchange occurred during the direct examination of one of the investigating officers, Detective Harry W. Duke:

“Q. Detective Duke, at first when you saw Mr. Reid, did he complain to you?
“A. At that time? No, sir, he did not.
“Q. Complain of any injury, I’m talking about?
“A. No, sir, not at that time.
“Q. When you say ‘Not at that time,’ did he ever complain to you
about any injury? ”

To the last question Duke responded that Reid never complained to him; that he talked to Reid the morning of the murder and advised him of his constitutional rights; that Reid said he understood his rights *792 and did not care to make a statement other than to request the detective to go by the Eggleston Hotel and pick up his clothes. Two days later, when Reid was brought up to receive the clothes, Duke noticed that he was limping and asked why. Reid said only that he had hurt his foot. Duke had Reid sent to the hospital to have the foot examined.

The Commonwealth called as witnesses six other police officers who had investigated the murder, seen the decedent’s body, observed the scene and participated in the chase resulting in apprehension of the defendant.

Reid was the only witness for the defense. He testified that he was 31 years old and admitted to previous convictions of a felony and a misdemeanor involving moral turpitude. Reid had lived at th’e Massad Hotel from September 28 to October 21, 1971. He said that during that time he and Padgette became good friends, “socialized together” and “used to do a little Indian wrestling”.

On the night of the murder he had been to a night club and decided that he would “go down . . . and see Padge and see what he’s gonna do”. Reid’s account of the visit was that after they talked awhile Padgette said to him “Lemme see how good you are at this Indian wrestling”; that Padgette was on the bed and when he tried to brace himself to wrestle, Reid inadvertently hit him in the nose causing it to bleed; and that Padgette started cursing and went to the bathroom, returning within a few minutes still cursing and exclaiming that he was going to kill Reid. He said that Padgette came at him swinging “a club or something” and hit him in the ribs and on the legs five times, although aiming for his head; Reid became scared, pulled out his knife and started stabbing; after he had stabbed him he helped Padgette to the chair and sat him in it. Reid said he cut his hand fumbling to get his knife out. He also testified that after his alleged altercation with Padgette he was “hurting, iii pain” from “wherever he hit me with that stick”. When asked, without objection, “Why didn’t you tell the police officer you were hurt?” he responded: “Because they had warned me of my right and I didn’t know what I might tell them and how they might interpret it. So I didn’t say anything to the police officers.” It was suggested to Reid that he got hurt when he jumped off the building, to which he replied: “No, sir, I did . not get hurt falling off the building----I got hurt—see, when he hit me in the ribs he also hit me on the leg down here.”

Subsequently, and again on cross-examination, Reid was asked: “Did you tell Detective Duke or anybody about this self-defense of *793 Mr. Padgette hitting you with that stick?” He said no. At this point counsel for the defense objected and moved for a mistrial on the ground that Reid was under no duty to tell Mr. Duke anything and that any comment thereon was “unlawful comment on the man’s insistence that he stand upon his Constitutional right not to testify against himself”. The motion was denied.

During his closing argument the Commonwealth’s Attorney made these statements:

“. . . The only—first time We ever heard anything about self-defense was today. Sure, the defendant has the absolute right to remain silent and his silence will be guarded by the police, which they were. But today when he took that witness stand, under oath, he becomes exactly, exactly the same type witness as all the police officers and everybody else takes. Once he gets on that stand and takes the stand and testifies under oath, we treat him just like anybody else. Today’s the first time self-defense has ever been brought up. If it were self-defense then, why couldn’t he tell Detective Duke? Why didn’t he tell—why did he flee? Why did he run across all these buddings, jumping off the buildings?”

Counsel for the defendant objected and the court instructed the jury as follows:

“Gentlemen, there has been a discussion at the bench.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 S.E.2d 866, 213 Va. 790, 1973 Va. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reid-v-commonwealth-va-1973.