Byrd v. Commonwealth
Byrd v. Commonwealth
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Adolphus Byrd complains of a verdict and judgment by which he was sentenced to jail for two months and to pay a fine of $100 for violating the prohibition law.
Bill of exceptions No. 2 states that the Commonwealth and the defendant, to sustain the issues on their part, “produced the evidence from pages one to ............ inclusive, hereafter denoted ‘evidence’ and asked to be read as a part of the record.” But the statement which purports to contain the “evidence” is not copied into the bill of exceptions, nor in any way identified or certified by the trial judge as the evidence in the ease. Besides, highly incriminating evidence, admitted in the petition to have been before the jury, does not appear elsewhere in the record, which makes it certain that the evidence referred to in the skeleton bill of exceptions was not all the evidence in the ease.
If the evidence referred to in the petition and that contained in the statement of the evidence were a part of the record, we would be forced to hold that it was sufficient to support the verdict of the jury.
The evidence not appearing in the record, we must dismiss the writ as improvidently awarded.
Writ dismissed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Adolphus Byrd v. Commonwealth
- Status
- Published