State v. Worley

96 S.E. 56, 82 W. Va. 350, 1918 W. Va. LEXIS 94
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 30, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 96 S.E. 56 (State v. Worley) 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. Worley, 96 S.E. 56, 82 W. Va. 350, 1918 W. Va. LEXIS 94 (W. Va. 1918).

Opinion

Williams, Judge:

Flynn Worley was convicted of first degree murder in the criminal court of Raleigh county and, on recommendation of the jury, was sentenced to confinement in the penitentiary for life. On writ of error to the circuit court the judgment was affirmed, and he now prosecutes this writ of error to that judgment.

James Griffith was lulled about 1:30 o'clock P. M. on the 22nd of June, 1916, in Flynn Worley’s house, not far from the town of Beckley, by a shot fired from a pistol belonging to defendant. The ball entered near the corner of his right eye and passed through his head at the base of the brain and lodged at the lower part of the left ear. The defense is that said Griffith accidentally shot himself with Worley’s pistol which, it is claimed, he was handling at the time, and there is testimony tending to support that theory. There were only two eye-witnesses, besides Worley, to the tragedy, a woman named May Meadows, who lived with him, and Mrs. Kessol, sometimes spoken of in the record as Mrs. Muncy, who lived about one-half mile away, and who came to Worley’s house at the solicitation of himself and May Meadows to meet Griffith, who had requested her to get a woman for him. After an inquest over the body of deceased was held, Worley and [352]*352the two women, above named were arrested and placed in separate cells in the jail. During their incarceration, and before any trial was had, May Meadows, who is the most important witness for the defense, made a voluntary statement to J. Q. Hutchinson, the prosecuting attorney, in the presence of G. W. Williams, as to the way in which deceased was killed and the circumstances surrounding the tragedy. She was sworn by the prosecuting attorney before making her statement, and then made it in the form of answer’s to questions propounded to her by that officer. The questions and answers were taken down, by a stenographer at the time and were afterwards transcribed into longhand by him, but they were not read over to the witness and were not signed by her. She was asked on cross-examination, if she did not, on that occasion, make. certain answers to certain questions, which questions and answers were read to her from that document, and her answers were that she did not recollect. The prosecuting attorney and G. W. Williams were then examined as witnesses by the state for the purpose of impeaching her testimony and they both testified that she did make the statements at the jail as to which she had said she did not recollect. These statements apparently contradict material portions of testimony before the jury. It is insisted that this impeaching testimony was improperly admitted, that a witness who simply answers that he does not recollect, cannot be thus impeached. This contention is not supported by the authorities, in fact it is contrary to the rule laid down by most of the text-writers on evidence and adopted by nearly all the courts of this country. 2 Elliott on Evi., See. 975; 5 Jones on Evi., Sec. 845; 5 Ghamberlayne on Evi., Sec. 3759; and 2 Wigmore on Evi., Sec. 1037. The author last cited says the answer of the witness to the question is wholly immaterial. The purpose in asking a witness whether, on a previous occasion, he„ did not make a certain contradictory statement, specifying the substance of it and the time and place and the person or persons to whom made with reasonable certainty, is to give the witness an opportunity to contradict or explain it by showing, if he can, that it is not in effect a contradiction of his testimony. The only material [353]*353point is whether he did, in fact, make the inconsistent statement. If he is given an opportunity to deny or explain, and does not remember, the foundation for impeachment is properly laid. The rationale of the rule is fairness and justice to the witness by giving him an opportunity to deny making the statement or explain apparent discrepancies before impeaching him, and when this opportunity has been afforded him the rule has been complied with. His failure to recollect does, not preclude the right of impeachment by proving prior inconsistent statements. For additional authority on this point, see Forde v. Commonwealth, 16 Grat. 547; and 40 Cyc. 2738,. citing numerous decisions from many states and from the-courts of the United States. Our own case of Robinson v. Pitzer, 3 W. Va. 335, would seem to be in conflict with our-present holding on this point. The impeaching testimony-was there held to be erroneously admitted because the proper-foundation therefor had not been laid. The witness had answered that he did not remember to have had a certain, conversation with certain parties named at a certain time and place, respecting the execution of a deed by himself to another party. We are inclined to think that was a sufficient foundation for impeaching testimony, and so far as that decision is inconsistent with the present holding it is disapproved.

The stenographer’s notes of the questions and answers-, were used at the trial by the attorney for the state both in, framing his questions on the cross-examination of May Meadows and in the examination of the impeaching witnesses-After the impeaching witnesses had been examined, counsel for the defendant asked permission of counsel for the state to-examine the stenographer’s notes before cross-examining said witnesses, which was refused. They then moved the court to require the state’s counsel to permit such examination, and the court overruled their motion. This was prejudicial error.

It appears that May Meadows’ statement was voluntarily made, no inducement in the way of threats, or offer of reward, or of her release from imprisonment was made by the prose-. cuting attorney. Although in the form of answers to ques-. tions propounded to her, it purports to be a complete history;[354]*354of the tragedy and surrounding circumstances attending it, yet the witness’ attention had been called to only certain parts of it. Counsel for the defense was entitled to see and examine it in order to determine whether, taken as a whole, her statement was inconsistent with her testimony, and if not, justice required that that fact be made known to the jury. It is possible that her -statement, taken altogether, is not inconsistent with her testimony on the witness stand, and defendant’s counsel were entitled to know all the paper contained before cross-examining the witness. The document is somewhat in the nature of an unsigned deposition, although of course not itself evidence. In Chicago & Alton R. Co. v. Robinson, 16 Ill. App. 299, a stenographer, who had.taken shorthand notes of the testimony of a 'witness at a former trial of the case, was offered as an impeaching, witness, and testified that he had no independent recollection of the evidence but that his notes were fully and correctly written at the time the testimony was given. The court there held the production of the waiting- itself was necessary in order that the opposite party might be able to cross-examine in reference to it. "Where a witness on cross-examination is asked if he did not write a statement shown him, contained in a letter, •which standing alone is inconsistent with his testimony in -chief, and admits haring -written it, it is the privilege of -counsel introducing the witness to inspect the entire letter for •other statements which may explain or qualify the expression admitted; and the denial of such inspection, where the testimony of the witness is material, is prejudicial error.” Wright v. Bragg, 96 Fed. 729.

In Dunbar v. McGill, 69 Mich.

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Bluebook (online)
96 S.E. 56, 82 W. Va. 350, 1918 W. Va. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-worley-wva-1918.