State v. Male

137 S.E. 751, 103 W. Va. 355, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 67
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1927
Docket5775
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 137 S.E. 751 (State v. Male) 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. Male, 137 S.E. 751, 103 W. Va. 355, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 67 (W. Va. 1927).

Opinion

Woods, Judge:

The’ defendant, Homer Male, was tried in the circuit court of Barbour county on an indictment charging that he “unlawfully, feloniously and maliciously, did shoot, stab and wound with intent, him, the said Melker Male, then and there to maim, disfigure, disable and kill”, etc. He comes here on writ of error, complaining of a judgment of said circuit court, rendered on a verdict of the jury finding him guilty as charged.

The record is a long one, but the pertinent facts may be briefly stated. On the 8th day of November, 1925, the union miners in Barbour county, a strike then existing, held an open mass meeting in the school house on Chestnut Ridge, Barbour county,- a few hundred yards from the store of Jess Male. Melker Male, the man who was shot three times, and the party named in this indictment as the person upon whom the felonious assault was made by the defendant, lived on Chestnut Ridge, near the store of Jess Male, but on the side away from the school house. John T. Male and his son, Harold, lived at Morgantown, and had come to the home of the said Melker Male, on Saturday, the day before, on a visit. Harold Male attended the Sunday meeting. Melker Male and John T. Male did not. While at Melker Male’s home, *357 word came to Melker Male and John T. Male that Harold Male was having some trouble out at the school house at the meeting, and the lather and grandfather of Harold started out the road to see about the boy and to ascertain the nature of the trouble. When within one hundred and fifty yards of the school house, they met the boy, Harold, coming in the direction of the Melker Male home, and a great crowd following along a short distance behind him, many of whom were cursing and swearing at Harold, whereupon the grandfather, according to a number of witnesses, said to his grandson: “Get out on the road and go home. You can’t fight a whole regiment.” Jess Male, thereupon called Melker Male a vile name and threw a stone at him, but missed him. Thereupon, defendant, according to seven witnesses, drew a revolver and shot three times at Melker Male, two shots taking effect in his body, thereby wounding him. The trouble grew out of a fight between Harold Male and another boy on the outside of the school house about the time of the close of the meeting. The cause of the altercation does not clearly appear from the record. James Croston says he was in a position to see if Homer Male had a gun, but did not see any,- Nason Male says that defendant did no shooting; Ula Male says he had no revolver, and Elmer Croston testifies to like effect ; Bill Norris did not see defendant have a pistol; and five others testify that defendant did no shooting. These witnesses testified that John T. Male, the son of the prosecuting witness, did have a gun — some say he had two guns in his hand— and was shooting into the crowd in the direction of Homer Male; that he shot many times and that his father was the victim of his son’s shooting. John T. Male admits that he had a pistol, but that what shooting he did was in defense of his father and son. Homer Male, the defendant, claims he did not have a revolver on that day; that he shot no revolver ; that some one shot him in the forehead, and that he was knocked down from the effect of this shot. Thus is seen a great conflict in the evidence.

The errors complained of in this case, as enumerated in the ■comprehensive brief of able counsel, are confined to the ad *358 mission and rejection of certain testimony-; tbe instructions to the jury; and that the verdict was. not warranted by the evidence.

As to the first error, the admission and rejection of evidence is waived because the same has not been made a special ground for setting aside the verdict, or incorporated in special bills of exceptions showing the evidence and the rulings of the court thereon. A general reference to errors in the introduction of evidence as a ground for setting aside the verdict will not suffice. The court’s attention must be specifically called to the errors on such motion, or they must be carried into the record by proper bills of exception. Roberts v. Lykins, 102 W. Va. 409; Dransfield v. Motor Co., 102 W. Va. 370; Treadway v. Coal Co., 102 W. Va. 135 ; Proudfoot v. Transportation Co., 100 W. Va. 733; Trippett v. Public Service Co., 100 W. Va. 319; Guyandotte Coal Co. v. Elec. & Mach. Works, 94 W. Va. 300; Moorefield v. Lewis, 96 W. Va. 112; State v. Jones, 77 W. Va. 636. To the same effect, State v. Henderson, 103 W. Va. 361 (decided contemporaneously herewith).

The next point of error relates to the instructions. The defendant requested seventeen instructions clearly presenting his theory of the case, all of which the court gave to the jury. His first complaint stressed as to the instructions given at the instance of the State goes to the one relating to the jury as being the sole judges of the weight of the testimony of the witnesses, and their right to take into consideration the credibility of such witnesses as disclosed by their evidence, their manner of testifying and their apparent interest, if any, in the result of the case. It is strongly criticized as singling out the defendant. The case of State v. Vest, 98 W. Va. 138, is cited by counsel for defendant to sustain their contention. The instruction under review here is general in its nature and the reference to the prisoner is incident to a general statement of the court as to the weight of evidence, and, as we view it, is not open to the criticism of -the instruction in the Vest Case, which singled out the prisoner’s testimony. There the jury were told that they should take into consideration the defendant’s interest in the result of the case and how *359 far it might bias or prejudice his testimony, in determining the weight and credibility to be given to his evidence. As we said there, it was plainly intended to apply alone to the evidence of the prisoner. The instruction here only refers to the defendant in common with all other witnesses. But, if prejudicial at all, the damage to the defendant’s cause by its giving is overborne and removed by an instruction given at his instance to the jury to the effect that as a matter of law, they had no right to disregard the testimony of the defendant, on the ground alone that he was the accused and stood charged with the commission of the crime; but that the law allowed him to testify in his own behalf and it was the duty of the-jury to fairly and impartially consider his testimony. Such, a curative instruction was not given in the Vest Case. As we have shown, the instruction here does not contain the vice; of the instruction there given for which that case was reversed.

The other instruction, urged as a cause for reversal, is one wherein the court attempted to define reasonable doubt.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 S.E. 751, 103 W. Va. 355, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-male-wva-1927.