State v. Weisengoff

101 S.E. 450, 85 W. Va. 271, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 140
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 101 S.E. 450 (State v. Weisengoff) 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. Weisengoff, 101 S.E. 450, 85 W. Va. 271, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 140 (W. Va. 1919).

Opinion

Williams, Judge :

Defendant was indicted and tried for the murder of Donald P. Davis, late sheriff of Mineral county, convicted of mtirder in the second degree and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary for ten years. lie brings error, assigning numerous grounds for reversal of the judgment.

He petitioned for a change of venue, on the alleged ground that a strong feeling of prejudice existed in the minds of the citizens of Mineral county against him, both on account of the business conducted by him in Westernport, Maryland, just across the line from the Town of Piedmont, where the homicide occurred, his business being that of a saloonkeeper and he having been accused of selling intoxicating liquors in West Virginia in violation of law, and because of the great popularity of the deceased officer, claiming that it was not possible for him to obtain a fair and impartial trial in that county, and filed his own and the affidavits of four others in support thereof setting forth substantially the following facts: That, in a general way, affiants knew the circumstances surrounding the death of the late sheriff; that they had heard the case discussed by numerous persons from different parts of the county and, basing their opinion on such comments made in their presence and on the fact that defendant had been actively engaged in the saloon business in Westernport and had been charged with numerous violations of the prohibition statute of West Virginia; that by-reason of the further fact that deceased was reported to havt met his death while attempting to arrest defendant in connection with some alleged violation of the liquor laws, and for other causes, there exists a' prejudice against defendant in Mineral [275]*275county, on account of which affiants do not believe defendant can obtain a fair and.impartial trial.

Petitioner also exhibited three newspaper articles, one published in the “Mineral Daily News” on the 28th of June and another m “The Mountain Echo” on June 30th, 1917, newspapers -published in the Town of Keyser, and alleged to have wide circulation in the county, the first of which gives a detailed account of the manner in which Sheriff Davis was killed, refers to defendant asa “cowardly brute”, states that' “It is said that the bulk of his fortune has been made and is being made by violating the West Virginia prohibition laws, and that over '50 per cent of the violations in Tucker and Mineral counties come out of Weisengoff’s saloon in Westernport,” that he is doing a “large bootlegging business in West Virginia,” that he utterly disregards the law and sells to boys at all times; and the latter characterizes him as “a Westernport outlaw saloonkeeper,” a “crime-soaked foreigner,” and says: “Those who are acquainted with the detail of the efforts of Sheriff Davis to force Weisengoff out of the West Virginia field with his unlawful confederacy for violation of the prohibition laws, and the' defiant threats of the outlaw, coupled with his known hatred of the fearless officer, believe that after the sheriff stepped on the car and the brutal foreigner actually had him in his power through the speed he was able to secure by manipulating the accelerator, his purpose was to dash the machine against the great steel frame work of the bridge, kill or maim the officer and take his own chances of escape through his ability to handle the car. Results practically bear out this assumption.”

Also another article appearing in the Baltimore Sun, a newspaper alleged to be generally circulated in Mineral county, under the date of ICeyser, W. Va., July 26th, in which it is stated that a change of venue will probably be asked for in the Weisengoff case, that “the feeling is ugly at Keyser against Weisengoff, and it was impossible to get a local attorney to defend him.”

The State answered his petition and filed the affidavits of one hundred and seventy-seven residents of the county to the effect that affiaints were familiar with the sentiment existing in their respective communities relative to the homicide and knew of no bias, prejudice or personal feeling then existing among [276]*276the citizens thereof against the defendant because of the homicide, and knew of no threats having been made against him, nor of the existence of any ill will that would prevent him from having a fair trial; that no excitement existed in the community and that affiants knew of no desire to convict the defendant, “contrary to what the facts may show in said matter.”

These numerous affidavits are purely negative and merely state the conclusions of the affiants, not facts from which the court could draw its own conclusion, as the law in. such case requires. State v. Sheppard, 49 W. Va. 582-593; and State v. Douglass, 41 W. Va. 537-539. It further appears that T. A. Dixon, a deputy of the deceased sheriff, assisted in procuring a number of these affidavits.

On the 30th. of duly, 1917, the court overruled defendant’s motion and he excepted, and the case was then set for trial on the 27th day of the following August. On the day set for trial, defendant renewed his motion for a change of venue, and in support thereof filed his supplemental affidavit and the affidavit of Taylor Morrison, of counsel for defendant, who had resided in Keyser for nine years next priot to that time, and asked permission to examine, at the bar of the court, thirty-nine of the af-fiants for the State, who were then present in the court room. Counsel stated that, if said witnesses were permitted to testify, they would say, “That they knew of no facts upon which they based thp affidavits which they formerly made herein, and that a large number of said witnesses would say under oath, that in their opinion, there is now such deep seated and abiding prejudice in said county against the defendant that he cannot obtain a fair trial herein.” The court ruled that he would not hear iwo motions for a change of venue at the same term, unless it could be shown that there had been a change of sentiment among the people of the county against the prisoner since the last motion was decided, and said he “would not accept the statements -of counsel as to what the said witnesses would testify to,” and that if such evidence was proper to be considered it could be done only on affidavits, and again overruled defendant’s motion, to which he again excepted.

It appears from Morrison’s affidavit that the deceased sheriff had been a resident of Keyser, the county seat of Mineral county, [277]*277that he left a young widow, a little child, a widowed mother and two brothers, all of whom lived in Keyser and were prominent socially and in business, and had a large circle of friends and relations; that deceased was deputy sheriff under his father in Mineral county, from 1908 to 1912, and was elected sheriff himself in 1916; that public opinion and feeling ran so high against accused, on account of the killing of the sheriff, that, according to his information and belief, threats to lynch him were made, and, to protect him from violence, a guard was placed at the jail; “that there exists in said county today, and especially in Piedmont and Keyser, a deep and abiding animosity ágainst the defendant and the community generally regards him guilty and demands his punishment;” that a number of those who made affidavits stated at the time that “people generally thought the defendant guilty;” that many prominent people, who knew defendant, refused to make affidavit to the fact for the reason, “as they claimed,” it would result in their “personal loss; that W. T. Knott, a prominent merchant of Keyser at whose house M. M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 S.E. 450, 85 W. Va. 271, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-weisengoff-wva-1919.