11 S.E. 475 | N.C. | 1890
The defendant was convicted, and appealed.
The facts are sufficiently stated in the opinion. The counsel for defendant asked the court to charge the jury that there was no evidence against him, and to return a verdict of not guilty. The refusal of the court to so charge presents the only question for review. *605
"If the evidence merely raised a suspicion or conjecture of guilt, it was not legal evidence, and the court should have directed a verdict of not guilty; but if the evidence, considered as a whole, could, in any just and reasonable view of it, warrant a verdict, it should (793) have been left to the jury as the proper triers of the fact." S. v.Eller,
The principles applicable are as above stated. The difficulty lies in the application of them to the evidence in any given case.
In the present case it was in evidence for the State that defendant and one John Dryman (who was also convicted on this indictment, but who has not appealed) were in and about the warehouse, in the city of Asheville, together with several others, from which the prosecutor was carried to the "camp-house" while intoxicated, and while in that condition he fell asleep, and when he woke up his pocketbook was gone, and with it a $20 bill, a $10 bill, a $5 bill and $3.50 in silver, which were in it; that both defendants were seen with prosecutor while drunk in the camp-house. The defendants were indicted for larceny of the pocketbook and money, and receiving the same knowing them to have been stolen. The pocketbook taken from Bruce's person, the prosecutor testified, resembled the one he had lost, except that the catches, or clasps, were broken off; he would not swear positively that it was his pocketbook, but thought it was his. It was also in evidence that the prosecutor lost his pocket-book about 5 P. M., and the same evening about from 8 to 9 P. M., defendant deposited $8.50 with the clerk at a barroom (794) for safe-keeping; that two or three days before defendant had been fined $5 in the mayor's court for violation of a city ordinance, and said clerk had stood his surety for its payment; that in the interval thereafter, and before the larceny, the defendant had worked one day on the streets at $1 per day; that the evening after the larceny, the defendant treated a friend to whiskey at a bar-room, and to breakfast next morning at a restaurant, and bought two quarts of whiskey; the defendant swapped pocketbooks next day with witness, and that the pocketbook shown to witness was the one then received from the defendant, and *606 that the catches were then freshly broken off; that defendant had been seen after the larceny with a pocketbook resembling the one shown on trial, and that the catches were not broken off; that he took a dollar out of it and asked some one to change it; that on the night of the larceny, the codefendant Dryman (as to whom there was other evidence) had a $20 bill, which he offered for change in payment for goods, and that defendant stated in jail that the money he had let Dryman have he worked for. This, without reiterating the testimony of the different witnesses, is the testimony for the State. If believed, it shows: 1. Opportunity. 2. Circumstances tending to show that defendant was without money two or three days before the larceny, and that immediately after the larceny, though he had worked only one day (at $1 per day), he was suddenly flush of money, depositing $8.50 for safe-keeping, besides being free with money and treating his friends. 3. His being in possession of a pocketbook, just such as prosecutor lost, though he could not swear positively to its identity. 4. Circumstances tending to show that defendant endeavored to destroy evidence of his guilt by breaking the clasps on the pocketbook, and then exchanging it with a friend for another. 5. That his companion, the codefendant Dryman, had a (795) $20 bill that night, and defendant stated to the officer after being arrested that the money he (defendant) had let Dryman have he had worked for.
S. v. Wilson,
S. v. Christmas,
Per Curiam. No error.
Cited: S. v. Brabham,
(796)