State v. Hively

150 S.E. 729, 108 W. Va. 230, 1929 W. Va. LEXIS 210
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1929
Docket6456
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 150 S.E. 729 (State v. Hively) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Hively, 150 S.E. 729, 108 W. Va. 230, 1929 W. Va. LEXIS 210 (W. Va. 1929).

Opinion

Maxwell, Judge:

Defendant prosecutes this writ of error to a conviction of grand larceny and a sentence of two and one-half years confinement in the state penitentiary.

The defendant and Alva Jones were jointly indicted. They were first tried together and convicted, but on writ of error, the judgment was reversed, the verdict set aside and a new trial awarded. State v. Hively et al., 103 W. Va. 237. Thereafter the defendants severed and each was separately convicted. The separate records are now before this Court for review. The Court’s decision in the Jones case appears contemporaneously herewith in an opinion by Judge Litz.

The indictment charges the defendant and Jones with the theft of $30.00 from Susan Walker. Nobody saw them take the money. The evidence is wholly circumstantial. The boys lived at least three miles from the home of Mrs. Walker, an aged woman who seems to have been living alone at the time of the alleged theft. In the latter part of a rainy afternoon in October they walked to her home for the purpose, they say, of gathering chestnuts. After their arrival at her home, they brought into the house for her, at her request, a small amount of firewood and then, with her permission, went to see about chestnuts. She says they asked permission to stay all night at her home, which she refused; they deny this. At any rate, they left her home a short time before dark, after having gathered a few pockets full of chestnuts, not exceeding, according to the highest estimate of either of them, a total of one-half gallon, and proceeded down the road a distance estimated to be about a quarter of a mile to the store of George Taylor. He had left the store and repaired to his home nearby, but responded to their call and returned to the store and sold them a few articles of merchandise, including a flashlight, some 32 caliber cartridges, cigarettes, and three- loaves of bread. Mr. Taylor says that in response to his inquiry as to what they were doing abroad on such a bad night, they told *232 him they had been at Cy Carpenter’s home and were on their way to their homes, but the boys say that Mr. Taylor misunderstood them, that they told him they were thinking of going to Cy Carpenter’s. They left the store after a little while, and, they say, slept in a barn that night. The next mozming' they again appeared at the home of Mrs. Walker and delivered to her two of the three loaves of bread which they had purchased the night before. It seems that she had requested them to bring her some bread. She says she gave them their breakfast and that immediately upon finishing the meal they both hastened out of the house and hurriedly left the premises. The boys deny that she gave them their breakfast and insist that they were not in her house that morning at all. About the time the boys left her premises Mrs. Walker’s hog-pen was found to be on fire, and she says that immediately after they left her home she heard several shots fired. They deny any knowledge of the fire and of having fired the shots. One of the neighbors who came to Mrs. Walker’s home while the out building was burning says he noticed a fresh bread wrapper near the scene of the fire, and Mrs. Walker says that the loaves which the boys gave her that morning did not have any wrappers on them. Later that day the boys appeared at the town of Walton, and the defendant went to the Poca Valley Bank and obtained change for a ten dollar bill. Later the same day the -defendant ehazzged a ten dollar bill for Fi’ank Reynolds, a garage man, at Walton. The boys were seen together on the street and the defendant at that time had paper money in his hand. The thirty dollars which was taken from the home of Mrs. Walker consisted of two ten dollar bills, a five and five ones. It was her pension money which had been brought to her within a day or two preceding by the mail carrier who had taken her pension check to be cashed for her. At the time of this occurrence in October, 1925, the defendant was about- seventeen years of age and the Jones boy about fifteen. The defendant says that he had his own money on his person throughout the period covered by this recital. But it is significant that he makes not the slightest effort to account for how or where *233 be acquired tbe money. Tbe circumstances warranted tbe jury in convicting tbe defendant'of tbe tbeft charged in tbe indictment.

Though, tbe indictment charges only the theft of money, there was much said in tbe evidence about a revolver which Mrs. Walker says disappeared from her home at tbe same time the money was taken, and this is relied on as error. We do not perceive the error. Evidence with reference to the revolver was proper as part of tbe res gestae. On cross-examination the witness Jones admitted that be bad mad'e a certain untrue statement to the grand jury about this matter but said be bad done so because he had been told by the prosecuting attorney to make that statement. In rebuttal, tbe prosecuting attorney took the witness stand for the purpose of denying the accusation which had been made against him by Jones, and in bis testimony tbe prosecuting attorney said that “Jones lias gone on the witness stand and told a number of things which are positively untrue.” Then, upon objection by defendant’s counsel and upon suggestion by tbe latter that tbe prosecuting attorney and court should refresh their recollection by reading the opinion of this Court on tbe former writ of error involving tbe joint conviction of tbe two boys, tbe prosecuting attorney said: “ I just got through telling you I know what the Supreme Court said about it, but I am not going to sit here and let the witness go on the witness stand and swear a positive lie on me without letting the jury know the other side of it.” It is a safe, conservative and general rule that lawyers should not go on the witness stand in cases in which they are counsel, and the highest standards of the profession dictate that this restraint should not be lightly discarded, but instances arise in which such course cannot be criticised nor condemned. In the instant case we perceive no impropriety on the part of the prosecuting attorney in going on the witness stand to refute the serious charge of official misconduct which had been laid at his door by the witness Jones, but in making such refutation attorney should have used more moderate language. “Lie” and “liar” are strong words that have no place in a judicial trial. But the fact that *234 the language used by the prosecuting attorney was unduly emphatic does not of itself constitute prejudicial error.

In the argument of the case before the jury the prosecuting attorney’s assistant indulged in some very intemperate language, and this is assigned as error. It appears from bill of exception No. 3 that in the course of the closing argument for the state counsel used this language: “We are closing the argument on behalf of every citizen in the county. I represent you — each of you. I represent your wives, I represent your mothers and your children. And I represent every school house and I represent every church in Roane county. You listen and see if I am not going to be fair about the case. I am going to do my duty although God Almighty interfere, and if he does hé knows the truth about it.

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Related

State v. Guthrie
461 S.E.2d 163 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1995)
State v. Summerville
164 S.E. 508 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
150 S.E. 729, 108 W. Va. 230, 1929 W. Va. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hively-wva-1929.