50 S.E.2d 37 | N.C. | 1948
STACY, C. J., dissenting.
WINBORNE and DENNY, JJ., concur in dissent.
The defendant Davis and Lola Mae Reeves were indicted for fornication and adultery under the statute G.S.
Lola Mae Reeves testified for the State, over objection of the defendant, that while she was living in the Free Will Baptist Orphanage at Dunn, of which defendant Davis was superintendent, and occupying a room near the bedroom of the defendant, she had sexual relations with him as many as six times during a period of three months, beginning March 1, 1947. Defendant used contraceptives. At that time she was fourteen years of age. Without objection she testified she had never had sexual intercourse with any person other than defendant.
The State offered, over objection, the testimony of the matron, Miss Wooten, that Lola Mae Reeves told her when questioned that she had had intercourse with defendant six times. This was admitted only for purpose of corroborating Lola Mae Reeves.
Martha Raines, another girl in the orphanage, aged fifteen years, testified she was asked by defendant to come to his bedroom at night, and that she refused. Over objection she testified also he came to her room and got in bed with her, and she resisted his advances.
C. A. Jackson, Chairman Board of Trustees of the Orphanage, testified that the defendant, in a conversation about his conduct and his relations with Lola Mae Reeves, admitted it. "He said he was guilty." To this defendant excepted. However Adams testified without objection that defendant told him he was guilty of having sexual relations with Lola Mae Reeves. A letter written by defendant to Lola Mae Reeves, expressing *388 regret for what had taken place, was also offered in evidence, over defendant's objection.
There was verdict of guilty as charged, and from judgment imposing sentence the defendant appealed.
The defendant noted numerous exceptions to the rulings of the trial court, but the principal attack made on the validity of the verdict and judgment below was on the ground that Lola Mae Reeves and Miss Wooten were rendered incompetent to testify against the defendant by the proviso in the statute defining the criminal offense of fornication and adultery that "the admissions or confessions of one shall not be received in evidence against the other." G.S.
The words "admissions or confessions" may not here be regarded as synonymous with testimony. These terms usually refer to extra-judicial declarations made to others and which subsequently are offered in evidence against the party who made them. An admission or confession is not testimony but a fact to be proven by testimony. The prohibition of the statute is directed not to the person testifying but against the use in evidence of his previous admissions or confessions. S. v. Rinehart,
The offense of fornication and adultery came under the ban in North Carolina as early as 1741. Potter's Laws, 144. In 1805 the amended statute denouncing such conduct concluded with the proviso "that the evidence of the person who may be particeps criminis shall not be *389
admitted to charge any defendant under this Act." This language was retained in the Revised Statutes of 1836, but in the Revised Code of 1854 the qualifying clause was modified to provide "that the admissions or confessions of one shall not be received in evidence against the other." This form of expression has been retained unchanged in all subsequent codifications. G.S.
With this decision indicating the Court's interpretation of the effect of the language of the statute on the reception of the evidence of a codefendant, announced in 1877, the statute has remained unchanged through subsequent re-codifications. We think the question should be regarded as definitely settled against the defendant's contention. In S. v. Guest,
When the legislative prohibition is against the person testifying appropriate language to that effect is used. In G.S.
The trend of the development of the rules of evidence has been to open rather than close the avenues to legal proof of facts in issue, and to remove personal disqualification to testify. G.S.
It follows, if Lola Mae Reeves was competent to testify as a witness in the trial, it was also competent for the State to support her testimony by corroborating evidence, offered after she had gone upon the stand, that she had made substantially the same statement to Miss Wooten at the inception of the investigation, and Miss Wooten's testimony was by the court carefully restricted to this purpose. S. v. Williams, supra, 140 A.L.R. 169; S. v. McKeithan,
The defendant's exception to the testimony of Martha Raines, another young girl who was living in the orphanage at the time, that defendant made improper advances to her, cannot be sustained. This evidence was competent as showing the attitude, animus and purpose of the defendant, and as corroborative of the State's case. In S. v. Edwards,
The defendant noted exception to certain portions of the judge's instructions to the jury, but upon examination of the entire charge, and considering it contextually, we observe no prejudicial error. The court properly instructed the jury that if they found beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant Davis and Lola Mae Reeves, not being married to each *391
other, engaged in sexual intercourse with each other with such frequency during the period to which the testimony related, that these illicit relations were habitual, they should return verdict of guilty. S. v.Davenport,
The burden was on the defendant to show prejudicial error. To warrant a new trial it must be made to appear that the rulings of the court below, now complained of, were material and prejudicial to his rights, and that but for such rulings a different result probably would have ensued. S. v.King,
The evidence was sufficient to warrant submission of the case to the jury, and defendant's motion for judgment of nonsuit was properly overruled. The defendant offered no evidence, and the jury accepted the State's evidence and found the defendant guilty as charged. We discern no sufficient reason for disturbing the result. The verdict and judgment will be upheld.
No error.