187 S.E. 754 | N.C. | 1936
Criminal prosecution, tried upon indictment charging the defendant with the murder of one Hardie Coffey.
Verdict: Guilty of murder in the first degree.
Judgment: Death by asphyxiation.
Defendant appeals, assigning errors. On Sunday evening, 5 April, 1936, about the hour of 7:30 p.m., Hardie Coffey was shot and killed while sitting with his family in the front room of his home in Avery County, teaching his little girl her music lesson. The murderer stepped up on the front porch, shot through a glass window, and hit the deceased in the back just under the left shoulder. He died almost instantly without speaking.
The evidence which tends to connect the defendant with the killing is circumstantial. Nevertheless, it points unerringly to his guilt. S. v.Melton,
The defense interposed by the prisoner was, that he was elsewhere at the time of the homicide. S. v. Stamey,
On his appeal, the defendant relies chiefly upon his demurrer to the evidence or upon the insufficiency of the State's case to warrant a conviction. S. v. Carter,
Circumstantial evidence is not only a recognized and accepted instrumentality in the ascertainment of truth, but, in many instances, quite essential to its establishment. S. v. Plyler,
The defendant also complains at the manner in which a State's witness, Mrs. C. C. Franklin, was examined by the solicitor. She was asked about her testimony at the preliminary hearing, or coroner's inquest, and was allowed to read her evidence to refresh her recollection, *564
and the solicitor read portions of it to her. S. v. Lyon,
After giving the record that degree of care which a capital case imposes, it is not discovered wherein any error was committed on the trial. Apparently the prisoner has been tried in strict conformity to the established rules and sentenced as the law commands. Hence, the verdict and judgment will be upheld.
No error.