State v. Saunders

150 S.E. 519, 108 W. Va. 148, 1929 W. Va. LEXIS 193
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1929
Docket6418
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 150 S.E. 519 (State v. Saunders) 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. Saunders, 150 S.E. 519, 108 W. Va. 148, 1929 W. Va. LEXIS 193 (W. Va. 1929).

Opinion

Maxwell, Judge:

Tbe defendant was convicted in tbe circuit court of Logan county of tbe murder of Dennis Smith and was sentenced to be banged. He prosecutes this writ of error.

*149 Evidence introduced by the state warranted the jury m believing that about one o’clock in the morning of July 1, 1928, the defendant approached a group of some five or six young men who were standing near a railroad track in the town of Lundale in Logan county, and without provocation, fired three shots from a revolver, the second of which passed through the body of Dennis Smith and into the body of Gus Bloxton, each of whom died of his wound; that after the shooting, when his conduct was questioned by one of the group, he threatened to do further violence if he was bothered.

According to further evidence adduced by the state the defendant, at the time of the shooting, seemed to be imbued with the belief that some of the group had manifested an improper attitude of some sort toward Brooks Canaday with whom defendant had been walking a moment before. They say that immediately after firing the shots he declared that somebody had “mussed up Brooks”, or “messed Brooks Canaday up” and “when they mess with Brooks they are messing with me.” One of the witnesses says that defendant then said he “was going to mess up somebody”; a second witness quotes him as saying: “ I am going to mess everybody up tonight that I can.” Still another quotes him: “I am going to kill all I can.” 'While these witnesses do not repeat his words in the same manner it is evident that they were all impressed with the fact that he was verbally threatening to do violence.

The defendant, as to whose previous good reputation as a law-abiding citizen a number of substantial witnesses testify, says that he came into possession of the revolver just a few minutes prior to the shooting when he took it away from Katie 'Canaday who was threatening to shoot her husband with it. There is no evidence of intoxication of any of the persons to whom reference is made. Defendant says that he had no ill will toward either Smith of Bloxton or any of the others in the group where they were; that as he approached the group he fired one shot into the air merely because others in the group were shooting. He says that Curtis Hutchinson, Robert Moody and Walter Watson were all shooting. They deny this. Their evidence and the evidence of Mrs. Ethel *150 Adkins, wbo saw tbe shooting from the front porch of her home a short distance away, and of Henry Green, who, from his home nearby heard the shots bnt did not see the shooting, is that there were only three shots fired at that place.-

The contention of the defense that the evidence can in no aspect be deemed to be sufficient to sustain a verdict of first degree murder is not well taken. It is admitted that malice may be inferred from the use of a deadly weapon, but it is urged that the facts here involved do not come within the terms of the statute defining, first degree murder. Code, chapter 144, section 1. It is said that the state’s evidence does not establish "wilful, deliberate or premeditated killing” as required by the statute in order to raise murder from second degree to first degree. This position overlooks well settled law. "If a person maliciously and without provocation fires a gun charged with a deadly load into a crowd regardless of consequences and kill an innocent bystander, he is guilty of murder, and it is for the jury to say from the facts and circumstances whether such killing was wilful, deliberate and premeditated.” State v. Young, 50 W. Va. 96. As stated in the South Carolina case of State v. Smith, 2 Strobhart, 77, cited in the Young case, "* * * the law will imply that the prisoner intended the natural and probable consequences of his own act, as in the case of shooting a gun into a crowd, the law will imply, from the wantonness of the act, that he intended to kill some one, although it might have been in sport.”

A famous writer on criminal law has said: "It is sufficient if the circumstances were such as to show a heart regardless of social duty and fatally bent on mischief. Express malice appears when the circumstances show such a reckless disregard of human life as necessarily to include a formed design against the life of the person slain. * •* * So, if a man recklessly and maliciously throw from a roof into a crowded street, where persons are constantly passing and repassing, a heavy piece of timber, calculated to produce death to such as it might fall on, and death ensue, the offense is murder at common law. So, also, it is murder maliciously to fire into a crowd.” Warton on Homicide, sec. 90. See, also, 13 Ruling Case Law, *151 p. 740; Washington v. The State, 60 Alabama 10; People v. Stein, (Cal.) 137 Pac. 271. “Where tbe act of killing shows an abandoned and malignant heart, the defendant is guilty of murder in the first degree.” Michie on Homicide, Vol. 1, p. 143.

The denial of a continuance is assigned as error. The motion for a continuance was predicated mainly on the absence of Brooks Canaday and Katie Canaday for whom process had been issued and was returned “not found”. The defendant, in support of his motion for continuance, testified, in substance, that he desired to prove by them the nature of the revolver and its loads, other shooting at the time of the trouble, and that he did not kill Smith and Bloxton; that he had just been informed the preceding evening that they were in Raleigh county. While the defendant was under examination on. the motion for continuance his counsel stated to the Court: “Your Honor, I had been informed that the undertaker over here at Cherry. Tree Bottom had removed the bullet from the dead body, but he came to the court room this morning, and he informs me that was done at the Klingle Undertaking Parlors in Huntington, and that the man down there has it. I want time to get that undertaker. Of course, that will be a very material point.” On the motion for continuance or postponement it was not made to appear that Brooks Canaday or his wife would be in position to testify as to any material fact that was not within the knowledge of other witnesses who were -present at court. Nor was it made to appear to the court in what manner it would be material to the defense to cause to be produced at the trial the bullet which was taken from the dead body of Gus Bloxton. It is not evident that the refusal of a continuance involved either an abuse of judicial discretion or prejudice to the defendant. Therefore, the trial court committed no error in denying a continuance or postponement of the trial.

Now as to the alleged error in the court’s refusal to set aside the verdict and award a new trial. It appears in-the evidence at the trial that the revolver which the defendant used was found at about the place where he told the officers he had thrown it, and' that when found it contained three *152 empty cartridges and that the undischarged cartridges in the other chambers were loaded with lead bullets.

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Bluebook (online)
150 S.E. 519, 108 W. Va. 148, 1929 W. Va. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-saunders-wva-1929.