4 S.E.2d 319 | N.C. | 1939
Criminal prosecution tried upon indictment charging the defendant with burglary in the first degree, and with rape.
Verdict: Guilty of burglary in the first degree as charged in the first count, and guilty of rape as charged in the second count in the bill of indictment.
Judgment: Death by asphyxiation.
The defendant appeals, assign errors. The scene of the crimes of which the defendant has been convicted was a hospital in Murphy, Cherokee County; the time before dawn or about 3:30 a.m., 29 January, 1939.
The first count in the indictment is directed to the time, manner and intent with which the defendant entered the hospital; the second is addressed to his attack upon a nurse employed therein. S. v. Allen,
The defendant offered no evidence before the jury. His only challenges are: First, to the competency of his written confession as evidence; second, to the court's comment upon its voluntariness; and, third, to the court's instruction to the jury not to consider a verdict of burglary in the second degree.
It is the established procedure with us that the competency of a confession is a preliminary question for the trial court, S. v. Andrew,
The second exception is directed to the court's comment upon the defendant's confession as evidence, namely, "which the court has held to be competent in this case because it appears that the confession was taken without hope of reward or without any extortion or fear, and that it was fairly taken after the prisoner had been duly warned of his rights." This did not constitute an expression of opinion, such as is prohibited by C. S., 564, for the judge said no more than that the confession had been duly admitted in evidence, and he gave the reasons for admitting it. In this respect, the case of S. v. Davis,
The third exception is to the court's instruction to the jury that "there is no evidence in this case of burglary in the second degree and you need not consider that offense in your deliberations." It is provided by C. S., 4641, that upon an indictment for burglary in the first degree, the jury may render a verdict of burglary in the second degree, "if they deem it proper so to do." The pertinent decisions are to the effect that this statute does not, as a matter of law, require or authorize the trial court to instruct the jury that such a verdict may be rendered independently *159
of all the evidence. S. v. Morris,
Our conclusion is, that the record contains no exceptive assignment of error which should be sustained. The verdict and judgment will be upheld.
No error.