State v. Vineyard

93 S.E. 1034, 81 W. Va. 98, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 169
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 93 S.E. 1034 (State v. Vineyard) 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. Vineyard, 93 S.E. 1034, 81 W. Va. 98, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 169 (W. Va. 1917).

Opinion

MilleR, Judge:

Upon an indictment for the murder of Coy Gandee, a hoy between twelve and thirteen years of age, the defendant, Cully Vineyard, a boy eleven years one month and seven days old, was convicted by the jury of involuntary manslaughter, and thereon the judgment of the circuit court now complained of was that defendant be “committed to the West Virginia' Industrial School for boys, of this state, there to be received and treated and retained in all respects as other youths therein, and 'therein to remain until he shall have arrived at the age of twenty one years, unless sooner discharged by the State Board of Control.”

The evidence in the case, besides disclosing the ages of the tivo boys, shows that they were sons of near neighbors in the country, both families being on friendly and intimate terms, and that the boys played together, at home and at school; and that prior to the day of the homicide, there was little, if any, evidence of any ill feeling existing between these children, and none except such as would naturally occur between children of their ages at play. There is some evidence that a day or two before the homicide defendant.with other boys threw hickory nuts or other small objects at a pet crow owned by deceased, but that defendant at once ceased doing so when deceased objected, and no ill feeling between the boys appears to have been engendered thereby.

The only proof showing or tending to show deliberation or intent on the part of defendant to assault or injure deceased was that on the night before the homicide one witness, an employee of defendant’s father, swore that defendant asked [100]*100him for Ms knife, and-when asked what he wanted with it, said he was going to cut Coy Gandee’s guts out, and that he would show witness blood on it, and also asked him for a razor. Two witnesses for defense, including defendant's father, swore, however, that this witness had previously told them that all the defendant asked for was his knife, and that he made no mention of a razor, and this contradicted him on this point. On cross examination, moreover, he admitted that defendant exhibited no ill feeling,, and that as a matter of fact he appeared to be and he thought the boy was joking, and that he did not lend him his knife.

And on the next day, the day of the cutting, two of defendant’s schoolmates occupying seats near him swear that defendant requested one of them the loan of his knife, saying he was going to split or cut the bib of Gandee’s overalls to scare him, and one of these boys says he heard defendant call Gandee “sons of bitches”, and like names. One of them swears also that he saw defendant with a knife on the morning of the same day, but no one swears that he made any use of the knife except to whittle a stick, until the moment of the cutting, which occurred at the forenoon recess of the school they were attending in the country.

The particular occurrence in which defendant intentionally or by accident stabbed deceased, and from which he died a day or two later is described as follows: On the sanie or the previous day the Gandee boy was seen to grab the defendant by the collar and jerk him around vigorously; and ht the morning recess about ten o’clock defendant went out and was seen going away from the school house some-little distance, before the Gandee boy came out; when the latter emerged from the school house, he started in the direction of the defendant and on overtaking him ivas seen to grab him by the collar and to jerk him nearly down to the ground, and when the defendant was observed striking backwards two or three times. When deceased got up he complained that defendant had cut him and held his abdomen where a small puncture was found and through which the small intestine had begun to protrude, and, through which, by the time the doctor arrived, it had become 'extended some twelve or four-. [101]*101teen inches. This part was amputated by the surgeon and the end of the intestine spliced and then re-inserted in the abdomen. Peritonitis set in a couple of days afterwards and the •boy died.

Numerous' grounds are assigned for reversal of the judg--meat. First, the sufficiency of the indictment is challenged. It is in the form prescribed by the statute and many times approved on error to this court. But it is said that as the defendant is an infant under fourteen years, and presumptively incapacitated to commit the crime of murder, the indictment should have negatived this presumption of incapacity, and is bad for its omission to do so. The general rule is well settled that the indictment need not negative matters of defense, such as matter of excuse and justification which are to be set up by defendant. 12 Standard Eney. of Proe. 350.

But is this presumed incapacity on account of age matter of defense! We think it is, at least, the fact that the accused is within “the dubious age of discretion”, as some of the books describe it, is matter of defense, and when this fact is shown the burden is then east upon the state of showing that notwithstanding his age, the accused was doli capax, and criminally responsible for his crime. This proposition is supported by good authority. Commonwealth v. Scannel, 11 Cush. (Mass.) 547; People v. Wessel, 98 Cal. 352. The latter case was a rape ease, in which it was held that the averment that defendant Avilfully and feloniously committed rape upon the person of a female child under the age of fourteen years implied an averment that he was capable of committing the offense, and that it was unnecessary to aver that he was over the age of fourteen years. We think the indictment is not bad for tbe omitted defensive matter referred to. See Wharton on Hom., (3rd ed.) p. 12. See, also, the elaborate note to State v. Yeargan, (N. C.) 36 L. R. A. 196, and particularly paragraphs lia, 1 .and 2. We see no more reason for alleging the capacity of the accused in tbe case of infancy, than in the ease of insanity or of any other disability excusing the crime. Both are defensive in their nature and it would not be required in the case of insanity to aver the sanity of defendant. [102]*1021 Michie on Horn., 18. Moreover, between tbe ages of seven and fourteen the presumption that an infant is doli incapax is prima facie only and liable to be overcome by clear and convincing proof. Wherefore the matter must be regarded as defensive, the burden on showing infancy being shifted at once to the state. Angelo v. The People, 96 Ill. 200.

The only other grounds relied on for reversal, relate to the giving and refusal of instructions. At the instance of the Staté the court gave four instructions. We see nothing-wrong with the first. It is complained that it ignores the presumption of incapacity of the defendant to commit the crime. It simply told the jury what degrees of crime might be found under the indictment, provided the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt warranted it, that is, murder in the first or second degrees, voluntary or involuntary manslaughter, or assault or battery, or not guilty.

The second instruction we think was wrong, not perhaps in the abstract, but as applied to this case. It was approved in State v. Cain, 20 W. Va. 709; State v. Douglass, 28 W. Va. 299, and in State v. Stewart, 63 W. Va. 597.

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685 P.2d 557 (Washington Supreme Court, 1984)
State Ex Rel. M.C.H. v. Kinder
317 S.E.2d 150 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1984)
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State v. Watson
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State v. Vineyard
101 S.E. 440 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1919)
State v. Lutz
101 S.E. 434 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1919)

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Bluebook (online)
93 S.E. 1034, 81 W. Va. 98, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-vineyard-wva-1917.