State v. Whitt

122 S.E. 742, 96 W. Va. 268, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 93
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 122 S.E. 742 (State v. Whitt) 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. Whitt, 122 S.E. 742, 96 W. Va. 268, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 93 (W. Va. 1924).

Opinion

MEREDITH, PRESIDENT :

Defendant obtained a writ of error to a judgment of the circuit court of Wyoming County wherein he was sentenced to seven years’ imprisonment upon the verdict of a jury finding him guilty of murder in the second degree.

We will make no comment upon the evidence further than is necessary to discuss the errors assigned. It appears that defendant and his son, Alva Whitt, were deputy sheriffs of the county, and lived at Bud, a station on the line of the Virginian Railway. The deceased,. John Bishop, a nephew of defendant, lived there, as did also one Dominick Chrisen-della, a railroad section foreman. Chrisendella had been in the habit of taking his coal supply from the coal trains as they passed there. On January 7, 1922, defendant saw him throwing coal from one of the passing railway cars and arrested him for larceny. Defendant had no warrant. About this time, deceased, John Bishop, came along and made some objection to Chrisendella’s arrest and search without a warrant. Defendant told Bishop that if he did not desist he would arrest him and take 'him along to Mullens, where he was intending to take Chrisendella. Defendant claims that Bishop made some threat to the effect' that defendant could not take Chrisendella, and to prevent him', Bishop started to his home after his revolver; whereupon defendant called to his son Alva, to stop or catch Bishop. Alva ran after Bishop and caught him as he was about to enter his yardgate. A scuffle ensued between them, Bishop finally working his way to his porch, where he caught hold of one of the porch pillars. About this time some one called to defendant to hurry. Some witnesses say *271 it was Bishop’s wife, but this she denies; at any rate, it appears that some one called from the direction of Bishop’s home, and that it was. a woman’s voice, asking the defendant to hurry there. He ran to where the two were scuffling, and caught hold of Bishop. He had his revolver in one hand. He says that in the scuffle Bishop made a lurch or jerk and caused the revolver to discharge. Bishop was hit in a vital spot and died from the wound some seven hours later. Defendant claims the killing was accidental.

The first error assigned is that the state, over the objection of defendant, was allowed to prove in chief the general reputation of the deceased as that of a quiet, peaceable and law-abiding citizen when his reputation therefor had not been assailed. This was error. State v. Arrington, 88 W. Va. 152, 106 S. E. 445; Dock v. Commonwealth, 21 Gratt. (Va.) 909. It is conceded by the Attorney General that this was error, but it is urged that under the circumstances the defendant was not prejudiced and that we should not reverse the case on that ground. We can not accede to that view. This is not such a clear ease that we can say that defendant ought to have been convicted, regardless of error. Upon the evidence the jury could have acquitted him. Reasonable minds might have come to entirely different conclusions upon the evidence adduced. We can not say what influence this improper evidence had upon the jury nor need we speculate upon that question. It is sufficient to say that the defendant is entitled to a trial according to the rules of law.

The remaining assignments of error relate to the instructions.

At the instance of the state, the court instructed the jury that, under the indictment, if warranted by the facts and cii'cumstances in the case, they might return any one of five verdicts: (1) murder; in the first degree; (2) murder in the second degree; (3) voluntary manslaughter; (4) involuntary manslaughter; and (5) not guilty; and then told the jury what punishment, under the several verdicts, might be inflicted. As 'this instruction did not tell the jury the constituent elements of the several offenses, defendant offered his instruction No. 1, which in addition to stating the same *272 matters as were embodied in the instruction given for the state, defined the constituent elements of each of the four several offenses. The court refused to give defendant’s instruction on the ground that it was covered by that given for the state. NO' instruction was given defining the elements of the several offenses. The jurors were not presumed to know, but they had a right to know and the defendant had a right to have them know, what the constituent elements of the several offenses were. Unless they did know, they could not intelligently determine what their verdict should be. State v. Turner, 29 S. C. 34, 13 A. S. R. 706; 13 R. C. L. p. 706. Defendant’s instruction No. 1 should have been given.

The court also gave state’s instruction No. 4 which told the jury that “to convict one of murder it is not necessary that malice should exist in the heart of the accused against the deceased. If the deceased was guilty of shooting with a pistol loaded with powder and leaden ball or some other hard and explosive substance, another, and of killing him, the intent, the malice and wilfulness, deliberation and premeditation may be inferred from the act; and such malice may not be directed against any particular person, but such as shows a heart regardless of social duty and fatally bent on mischief.” This instruction is taken from State v. Welch, 36 W. Va. 690, 15 S. E. 419. It was criticised in that case by Judge BRANNON, but not held reversible error. In State v. Best, 91 W. Va. 559, 113 S .E. 919, upon an indictment for malicious shooting, an instruction telling the jury that to convict one of malicious shooting it is not necessary that malice should exist in the heart of the accused against the wounded person, but that if the accused was guilty of shooting another with a deadly weapon, the intent and malice might be inferred from the act, was held to be • error because it ignored facts and circumstances shown in the evidence, which tended to rebut any presumption that might be inferred from the bare fact of the shooting with a deadly weapon. We think the criticism of the instruction in that case is applicable to the one given here. It wholly ignores the facts and circumstances shown in this ease; it is abstract; it ought not to have been given.

*273 While) no point is made on state’s instruction No. 5, since the case must be tried again, we think it proper to say that this instruction is incorrect as applied to the facts in this case. We find no evidence in the record of “lying in wait, previous threats, formed enmity and menaces” of the defendant against the deceased that would warrant the inclusion of these terms in the instruction. An instruction should have reference to the facts showp in the case on trial. For this reason it is as a general rule bad practice to lift bodily from another case an instruction probably applicable to the facts shown there and use it in a case) where the facts shown are totally different.

The court refused defendant’s instructions numbered 4 and 5. No. 4 appears to be substantially covered by other instructions which were given.

Instruction No. 5 reads as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
122 S.E. 742, 96 W. Va. 268, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-whitt-wva-1924.