105 S.E. 322 | N.C. | 1920
The defendant and John H. Cooper were tried for murder of Dan Sprinkle. The solicitor at the beginning of the trial announced that he would not ask for a verdict of murder in the first degree, and at the close of the testimony for the State took a nol pros as to Cooper.
Canup was a policeman in the town of Andrews. The deceased (Sprinkle) was drinking that night, and was boisterous and profane in the presence of Cooper, who was also a policeman, and the defendant. *740 They attempted to arrest Sprinkle, who resisted. With the aid of the witness Will Cook, and a man named McAfee, they got him down and put handcuffs on one arm. He begged to go home, and said he would come back and pay his fine. Cooper said: "Let him up." The deceased got up, knife in hand, making two licks at Cook with his knife. He then started for Cooper, who backing said: "Dan, I hate to kill you, but I am going to do it if you don't stop," and fired his pistol into the ground. At this juncture the wife of the deceased ran up and got between Sprinkle and Cooper, whose connection with the matter there ended.
Will Cook testified: "Sprinkle wasn't doing anything when Canup fired his first shot. He was standing with his back to us. Me and Canup were behind Sprinkle. I was about as close to Sprinkle as the table. The first shot hit him in the back. It staggered Sprinkle, and he turned around and went to fighting like Canup, and then Canup kept shooting. I didn't see Sprinkle do anything up to the time Canup shot him in the back the first time. I was standing there all the time. I said to Canup, `Don't shoot him; don't shoot a drunk man; knock him down and put the handcuffs on him!'"
The shot that killed Sprinkle entered his back and came out at his collar bone. The defendant was found guilty of manslaughter, and appealed. Exceptions 1 and 2, to the exclusion of threats made by the deceased against the officers, Cooper and Canup. The judge excluded the evidence of these threats because not communicated to Canup.
In S. v. Blackwell,
The same rule applies to threats. S. v. Hines,
The doctrine, as laid down in S. v. Turpin,
Exception No. 3. It was not error to exclude evidence that the deceased was in the habit of drinking. The evidence was uncontradicted that he was drunk, boisterous, and profane that night. Exception No. 4. It was not error to admit the declaration of the defendant, made some weeks before the homicide as to his general attitude in regard to shooting, while on the police force, that "he would go ahead and the first thing he would do he would shoot somebody and learn them how it was." He said he would not take any chances himself. The jury was entitled to this evidence as showing that the defendant intended to be quick in using a deadly weapon in making arrests.
Exception No. 5. The witnesses for the State testified that the character of the deceased was good. The defense asked this witness, "Do you know how many men it took to arrest him at Sylva when he was drunk?" This question was properly excluded. It was competent in cross-examination to ask questions tending to impeach general character, but not as to particular matters as this would raise innumerable collateral issues. S. v.Holly,
The assignment of errors in the charge is upon the ground that the charge as a whole is argumentative and equivalent to the expression of opinion by the court, but we do not think this objection is sustained by a perusal of the charge.
No error.