Gaines v. Commonwealth
Gaines v. Commonwealth
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.e
In this case the evidence is certified, and not the facts proved, “ because the evidence ivas conflicting.” A jury of his peers has found the plaintiff in error, George Gaines, guilty of murder in the first degree, and this court is required hv the statute (Code 1887, sec. 3484) to consider the refusal of the trial court (as set forth in the prisoners sixth bill of exceptions) to set aside the verdict upon the motion of the prisoner, because contrary to the evidence, as if the prisoner, George Gaines, had demurred to the commonwealth’s evidence, and must reject all the evidence for the prisoner which is in conflict therewith.
Upon the trial, the commonwealth introduced an eye witness to the shooting, H. U. Dyke, who said : “ I was at Percy Carlton’s store, at the shooting, between eight and nine o’clock at night, on the 7tli day of August, 1890, which store-house is in Essex county, Virginia, where the said Carlton was mortally wounded, and died September 21st, 1890, from said wound. Carlton slept in his store as his habitation. Julius Chamberlain and "William Corbin were there first, and James Gresham and John Gaines came in together, before George came. George Gaines came in and asked John Gaines how long before his brother, Tom Gaines, would be here. When George Gaines got there, Percy Carlton was waiting on William Corbin.
Thomas Parrón, a Avitness for the commonwealth, testified that Percy Carlton Avas not of age Avhen he was shot.
Before this dying declaration- of the murdered man was admitted as evidence and read to the jury, the justice of the peace of Essex county, G. H. Dillard, who took and certified it from the lips of the dying man, testified that he was, when he made it, under the sense and impression of impending death and immediate dissolution, without hope of recovery, that he so declared to him before he made it, and also at the time of making it; that he was very weak, and that he had to wait on him to give him time to make it; that the Rev. Hr. Scott had a short- time before prayed with him, and he expressed himself as pleased; that his mind was clear, and- was under a moral and religious sense of accountability to God : and that, under these circumstances, he swore to and signed his mark, X, to the declaration, the 19th day of August, 1890.
Clarence Bohannon, a witness for the commonwealth, testified : “ I saw prisoner Wednesday evening, August 6th, 1890 ; he asked for Percy Carlton — where he was; that he had important business with him, and said he meant to shoot him on sight; gave no reason for saying so. I was at the store fre
Jack Dunn, a witness for the commonwealth, testified: “ Was clerk for Carlton from 4th to 7th of August, 1890, while Carlton was at camp-meeting. The prisoner enquired Tuesday evening at the store for P. Carlton; and again Wednesday evening he came in the store and looked around and said nothing. Thursday morning, on his way to Shiloh, he came again and enquired for Carlton, and I told him I did not think he would be back before to-morrow. I informed Carlton of it.”
There were several other witnesses for the commonwealth, but the substance and the point of their testimony are unimportant to this review.
The following four colored witnesses, who were present at the shooting of the deceased by the prisoner, and who had been summoned by the defence, were, on the motion of the prisoner (the commonwealth having declined to examine them), put upon the stand by the court and examined. Julius Chamberlain testified: ££ Was sitting in the store, and Geore Gaines came in, and said, ‘ Good morning.’ Carlton said, £ George, I would like to see you in the counting-room.’ George Gaines said, £ FTo; see me here ! ’ Carlton never would tell what the note said. Finally George said, £ I would like to have some satisfaction’; and Percy said, £ Go out of here.’ Carlton
This witness denied that he had given an entirely different account of this transaction, shortly after the shooting, to Major "William A. Saunders, J. C. Eubank, George Taylor, and J. W. Young, and he also denied that he had told these gentlemen — some in half an hour after the shooting and others the next day — that the prisoner came in,.and abused Percy Carlton, and, when ordered to go out, drew his pistol and advanced on Carlton, and leaned over the counter, and shot him after he had dodged behind it. And witness denied that, after this statement, "Major Saunders told him to stick to what he had said — that he was a first-rate commonwealth’s witness.
Major Saunders was called by the commonwealth in rebuttal, and testified that he met Julius Chamberlain on Friday evening, after the shooting, at Colonel Farinholt’s store, where he made the statement. George Gaines came into Mr. Carlton’s store on night of the 7th of August, cursing and abusing Carlton, the deceased. As he came in he drew his pistol, advanced. on Carlton, and Carlton took a weight off the counter, and threw it at him, and George Gaines reached over the counter, and shot him after he had dodged down; said he took a note of this statement, and told Chamberlain he would make a good witness for the commonwealth; stick to what you have said to me.
The. other three witnesses — John Gaines, a brother of the prisoner, William Corbin, and James Gresham — who were put upon the stand by the court, on the motion of the prisoner, testified to substantially the same particulars of the interview and shooting of the deceased, in the store, on the night of the 7th of August, 1890, by the prisoner, as detailed by the witness Chamberlain, except that they do not say — as Chamberlain does expressly — that “ Carlton .hadn’t drawn any pistol. George did try to shoot him again.”
The prisoner testified in his own behalf, and details the circumstances of the shooting. So far as his statements are contradictory of or in conflict with the evidence for the appellee, we cannot consider it upon this review; and it would extend this opinion beyond all bounds to set it out at length.
Upon this evidence the jury found the prisoner guilty of murder in the first degree, and the trial court overruled the motion of the prisoner to set aside the verdict and to grant a new trial, on the ground that it was contrary to the evidence, which action of the county court was affirmed by the circuit court of Essex county.
We are of opinion that the evidence plainly and fully proves a case of deliberate murder — -if not, indeed, a systematic assassination — of young Percy Carlton, in his own castle, by the prisoner, George Gaines, who, nursing his' wrath from the 4th till the night of the 7th of August, and seeking for his victim in all that interval, deliberately went to his place of business and his habitation, armed for the purpose, and provoked and necessitated a conflict, by refusing to be satisfied with a full and ample explanation and apology for a supposed wrong, and obstinately and defiantly refusing to leave the house of an unprotected youth, whom he continued violently
There were various exceptions taken by the prisoner to the rulings of the trial court, as set forth in sundry bills of exceptions.
The first bill of exceptions assigns as error that the prisoner’s counsel moved the court to direct the attorney for the commonwealth to call, as his witnesses, Julius Chamberlain, William Corbin, James Gresham and John Gaines, who were present at the scene of the shooting, and who were in attendance upon the court, having been summoned by the prisoner; which motion the court overruled.
These four witnesses were, however, called, and put upon the stand by the court, on the motion of the prisoner, who had the full benefit of their testimony, which went to the jury for all it was worth. The commonwealth’s attorney declined to call them, and thus make them witnesses for the commonwealth, both because he deemed the evidence for the prosecution full enough without them and because one of them was prisoner’s brother and another of them, if not an actual confederate, was heard to say to the prisoner, on the spot and instantly before the prisoner did the shooting, and responsive to what the prisoner said to him, “ I don’t blame you; I would do the same thing.”
The prosecuting officer of the law was content to rest his case for the state upon the proof adduced; and the trial court, in its sound discretion, granted the request of the prisoner, and put the said four eye-witnesses of the shooting upon the stand, who testified in behalf of the prisoner.
Upon principle, authority and precedent it is the discretion of the prosecuting attorney for the state to determine who and what witnesses to examine for the state. State v. Smallwood, 75 N. C.; State of West Va. v. Cain, 20 W. Va. Reports; Mor
The second assignment of error, is the giving by the court of the following instruction,' coupled with the refusal of the court to supplement the same by an addendum offered by the prisoner, viz : “ If the jury believe from the evidence that the prisoner went to the store of the deceased for the purpose of killing him, and was abusive and denunciatory towards the deceased in his own store, and that deceased ordered him out and he refused to go, whereupon deceased, to compel him to go, used only the necessary force^ against the prisoner, who thereupon fatally shot deceased, the conduct of the prisoner made him a trespasser, and the fact that the deceased, thus provoked by the prisoner, did use such force, did not justify or excuse the prisoner in killing him, as it ivas the duty of the prisoner to leave the store when so ordered by the deceased, and he was bound to submit to such force as was necessary .to make him go; and if, while such force was being applied, he killed the deceased with a deadly weapon, it was murder.” To which the prisoner moved the court to give the following addition: “ But if the jury believe from the evidence that when the prisoner recovered from the shock of the blow inflicted by the weight, he found the deceased drawing a pistol from his pocket to shoot him, he had a right to defend himself, in any way', to preserve his life, or to prevent great bodily harm.” Which motion tbe court overruled, and properly refused to impair and emasculate the single and clear-cut proposition of the instruction which it had given, as to Carlton’s rights in his castle, against a violent, menacing, and aggressive trespasser, and his right and power to expel him, by just so much and whatever force was made necessary by the contumacy, resistance, and refusal of the wrong-doer, by adding thereto an inccfngruous,
“ A man has not, as is properly said by JBreese, C. J., the right to provoke a quarrel, and take advantage of it to justify the homicide.” (Idem; “ Vaiden's Case," 12 Gratt.; “Dock's Case," 21 Gratt.)
“ This right of self-defence does not imply a right of attacking; for, instead of attacking one another for injuries, past or impending, men need only have recourse to the proper tribunals of justice. Neither does it imply the right to take the life of an antagonist on every casual rencontre ; for this would place human life too much at the mercy of those disposed to destroy it. * * * For which reason the law requires .that the person who kills another in his own defence, should have retreated, as far as he conveniently or safely can, to avoid the violence of the assault; and that not fictitiously, or in order to watch his opportunity, or to gain breath, but from a real tenderness of shedding his brother’s blood.” (Davis’ Crim. Law, 76, 77, 78.)
The foregoing principles of law and authorities cited are applicable to and dispose of the errors assigned as to the fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, and ninth instructions, which were (with modificatians to the seventh and eighth) granted by the court. They simply state axioms of criminal jurisprudence strictly applicable to the evidence in the case, and they need not be extended at length in this opinion already too long.
Upon a careful review of the whole case — law and fact — we are concluded in the opinion that the plaintiff in error, George Gaines, with malice in his heart, and armed with a loaded pistol, having nursed his purpose and brooded over a supposed insult to his wife from the 4th till the night of 7th of August, 1890, entered, at 9 o’clock that night, the house of Percy Carl
There is no error in the judgments of the county and circuit courts of Essex county under review, and our judgment is to affirm them.
Richardson, J., and Hinton, J., dissented.
Judgment affirmed.
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- 1. Criminal Proceedings — Witnesses for Commotwealth— The prosecutor is not bound to call every witness present at the transaction which is the subject of the indictment. Hill’s Case, ante p. 633. 2. Idem — Trespasser—Force to expel. — In trial of an indictment for murder, after the court had given for the commonwealth, without objection, the instruction following: “ If the jury believe from the evidence that prisoner went to the store of deceased for the purpose of killing him, and was there abusive of him, and that deceased ordered him out and he refused to go, whereupon deceased, in order to compel him to go, used only the necessary force against prisoner, who thereupon fatally shot deceased, the conduct of the prisoner made him a trespasser; and the fact that deceased, thus provoked by prisoner, did use such force, did not justify or excuse prisoner in killing him, as it was prisoner’s duty to leave the store when so ordered by deceased, and he was bound to submit to such force as was necessaiy to make him go ; and if, while such force was being applied, he killed, deceased with a deadly weapon, it was murder,” prisoner moved the court to add the following: “ But if the jury believe from the evidence that when prisoner recovering from the shock of the blow inflicted with the weight, he found deceased drawing a pistol from his pocket to shoot him, he had the right to defend himself in any way to preserve his life, or to prevent great bodily harm ”; Held : Refusal to give the addendum, no error. 3. Idem — Evidence certified — Section 3484 — Case at bar. — Upon the certificate of the evidence in the case here, the verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree should not be disturbed.