59 S.E. 74 | N.C. | 1907
At the hearing it was made to appear, on plea duly entered, that in proceedings instituted by the solicitor, under sections 3200, 3201, etc., of Revisal of 1905, and at his instance, the present defendant was summoned, sworn and examined by the State touching this alleged (453) lynching, which was then being investigated before his Honor, Walter H. Neal. Judge Peebles dismissed the case against defendant, holding that, on the facts, the legislation on the subject protected defendant from further prosecution by reason of this charge; and thereupon the solicitor for the State excepted and appealed.
After stating the case: Our statute on this subject (Revisal, secs. 3200, 3201 et seq.) directs that, whenever a solicitor is advised that a lynching has occurred in his judicial district, he shall at once institute proceedings before a coroner, justice of the peace or judge of the Superior Court for an investigation of the crime and the apprehension of the offenders; that on such investigation, or any other, into the crime, made pursuant to law, no person shall be excused from testifying on the ground that his evidence might subject him to prosecution or in any way tend to incriminate him, etc.; and the statute further provides as follows: "and such person, when so examined as a witness for the State, shall be altogether pardoned of any and all participation in any crime arising under the provisions of the preceding section or under existing law concerning which he is required to testify." On the facts, therefore, which were established at the hearing by the express provisions of the act, the defendant was fully pardoned of any and all participation in the crime charged, as well as any and every offense against existing law concerning which he was required to testify; and the judge below correctly held that the charge should be dismissed and the defendant protected from further prosecution concerning it. Legislation of this kind, acting in "abolition or oblivion of the offense," and applicable to all persons, or all persons in a given class, has been uniformly *329
upheld with us, and is sustained by well-considered decisions (454) in other jurisdictions. S. v. Blalock,
We are not inadvertent to the suggestion made by defendant's counsel that no appeal lies for the State in cases like the present. The right of the State to appeal only exists in the four cases specified in Revisal, sec. 3276; on special verdicts; upon demurrer; on motion to quash; upon arrest of judgment; and the Court has been very insistent in holding the State to the cases specified. S. v. Moore,
Without deciding the question, the Court is inclined to the opinion that this may, for the purpose of the appeal, be considered and treated as a motion to quash, and so brought within the direct provisions of the law. While it is held in many jurisdictions that a motion to quash can only be made for matter apparent in the record (Clerk's Criminal Procedure, 363), it is otherwise with us. S. v. Horton,
There is no error in the proceedings below, and the judgment dismissing the case is
Affirmed.
(456)