Shifflet v. Commonwealth

14 Va. 652
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 9, 1858
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Va. 652 (Shifflet 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
Shifflet v. Commonwealth, 14 Va. 652 (Va. 1858).

Opinion

Moncure, J.

This is a writ of error to a judgment of the Circuit court of Monroe, convicting Zepheniah Shifflet of felony in burning a mill in Greenbrier; the venue having been changed from Greenbrier to Monroe. There are six assignments of error. Five of them were made in the petition for the writ — the sixth, for the first time, in the course of the argument. Why the last was not sooner made, will hereafter appear. I will notice them in the order in which they were made.

The first is founded on the first and second bills of exception; which raise very similar questions. On the trial of the case, the commonwealth having introduced the prosecutor I). C. B. Caldwell as a witness, who, amongst other things, proved, that previous'to the burning of the mill the prisoner and himself had had quarrels on different questions, and that the prisoner had made use of threats and abusive language to him, from which he had been induced to apprehend [655]*655violence both to his person and property; thereupon, on the cross-examination of said Caldvveli, the prisoner asked the witness if he was not at that time on bad ■ terms with several other of his neighbors besides the prisoner? The court, on the motion of the attorney for the commonwealth, excluded the question, and the prisoner excepted. Afterwards, the commonwealth having introduced another witness, Ii. F. Hunter, whose evidence tended to show that the prisoner burnt the mill which he is charged with having burnt (other evidence having also been previously introduced by the commonwealth, of a quarrel between the prisoner and prosecutor, and threats used by the former against the latter); thereupon the prisoner asked the witness if he did not know of any other neighbor or neighbors of the prosecutor who had a falling out with him shortly before the mill was burnt, and who had made use of threats of violence against him also. The court, on the motion of the attorney for the commonwealth, excluded this question also; but the prisoner was permitted, without objection, to ask the witness if particular persons had not before that time threatened to burn said mill. The prisoner again excepted.. The evidence introduced by the commonwealth to prove the previous quarrels and threats of the prisoner, as mentioned in these bills of exception, was clearly admissible, to connect the prisoner with the offence charged against him, and to show the motive and intention with which it was committed. The questions asked by the prisoner were, I think, as clearly inadmissible, and were therefore properly excluded by the court. To have admitted them, would have been a violation of what is laid down as the first rule governing the introduction of evidence, .that it must correspond with the allegations, and be confined to the point in issue. “ This rule (as has been well said) excludes all evidence of collateral facts, or those which are inca[656]*656pable of affording any reasonable presumption or inference as the principal fact or matter in dispute; the reason is, that such evidence tends to draw away the minds of the jurors from the point in issue, and to excite prejudice, and mislead them ; and moreover, the adverse party, having had no notice of such, a course of evidence, is not prepared to rebut it.” 1 Greenl. Evi. § 52. These observations plainly apply to this case. It does not appear that there was (and must therefore be presumed that there was not) a particle of evidence connecting any other person than the prisoner .with the criminal act charged against him. Mere evidence of the quarrels or threats of any other person, certainly would not-have tended to establish such a connection, but would only have tended to excite prejudice in the minds of the jury, and mislead them, and also to take the prosecutor by surprise, who might otherwise have been able to prove that such other person had no connection whatever with the burning of his mill. There is nothing in the case of Rowt’s adm’r v. Kiles’ adm’r, Gilm. 202, which can give any sanction to the admissibility of such evidence. The issue there was on the plea of non est factum. The defendant, in aid of other evidence tending to prove the paper a forgery, offered testimony to show that a son of the obligee had said he could counterfeit the handwriting of the obligor and imitate it well. This testimony was received without objection. .The defendant then offered evidence of the infamous character of the son, which was objected to and excluded; and the defendant excepted, and appealed from the judgment which was rendered against him. His counsel in this court, Mr. Stanard, maintained that the declarations of the son having been received without objection, all accessory evidence should have been admitted;’and testimony as to his character was therefore admissible. Upon this ground, it would seem, the [657]*657judgment was reversed. Judge Coalter in his opinion, says, “As the first branch of the evidence was not objected to by the plaintiff, we must at present, perhaps, take it to be legally received, and that consequently the other part was improperly rejected.” Id. 206. See also what he says at the conclusion of the same paragraph on p. 207. That this was the ground of reversal is, I think, confirmed by the same case reported in 1 Leigh 216, which is also an authority to sustain the propriety of the exclusion of the evidence offered and excluded in this case.

The second assignment of error is founded on the third bill of exceptions, which was taken to the opinion of the court overruling the prisoner’s motion to exclude Joseph Crane’s evidence of the prisoner’s confession, on the ground that the witness had not heard the whole but only detached parts of it; and permitting the said evidence to go to the jury in connection with the testimony of other witnesses who were present during the whole of the conversation, and whom the commonwealth’s attorney proposed to introduce, and did introduce to prove the same conversation and confession. I think this evidence was clearly admissible ; and as the counsel for the prisoner, in the argument before this court, did not rely upon this assignment of error, and indeed waived it, I deem it unnecessary to say any thing more on the subject.

The third assignment of error is founded on the fourth bill of exceptions. The prosecutor Caldwell, after testifying that a few nights before the burning of his mill, the prisoner came to his house, and abused him, saying just as he left, “D — n you, I will pay you,” or “You shall suffer for what you have done;” stated further, that a few days after the mill was burned, the prisoner approached him, cocked his rifle, changed his pistol from one pocket to the other, commenced abusing witness as he approached him, and [658]*658continued to do so in a very violent manner, and said just as he left, “ You have not yet got what I intend to give you.” The prisoner moved the court to exclude so much of said evidence as related to a conversation subsequent to the burning of the mill. But the court overruled the motion, and the prisoner excepted. The evidence was relevant to the issue and plainly admissible. It tended to prove an admission of the prisoner, made a few days after the burning of the mill, that he had executed, but in part only, the threat of revenge which he had made against the prosecutor a few days before. Its competency rests on the same principle which sustains the competency of the evidence of that threat. Both tend strongly to connect the prisoner with the criminal act. The previous threat indicated a general purpose of revenge.

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Related

Rowt's adm'x. v. Kile's adm'r.
1 Va. 216 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1829)
Rand v. Commonwealth
9 Gratt. 738 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1852)

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Bluebook (online)
14 Va. 652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shifflet-v-commonwealth-va-1858.