60 S.E. 986 | N.C. | 1908
Indictment for breaking into storehouse with intent to steal. Several exceptions were taken at the trial, but only two are relied on in defendants' brief. The others are taken to be abandoned. Rule 34,
The first exception is that it was error to permit the witness to state that "the dog carried us to the shoe," on the ground that it was making the act of the dog substantive testimony and not corroborative of any particular act, as the shoe was not upon any one. The same exception was taken to another witness, who said "the dog went to the shoe," referred to by the other witness. "She smelt the shoe and whined. She then turned to the defendant and scented him and started to go onto him, and I took her away." His Honor stated to the jury that the court allowed the foregoing evidence only as corroborative, and in his charge told them: "The evidence as to the dog is only admitted, and so explained, to the jury, to corroborate other evidence as to tracks offered by the State, and after the dog had been shown to have been trained to follow only the tracks of mankind."
If there was error it was against the State, for it is not correct to say that such evidence is admissible only in corroboration. In S. v.Moore,
Where the training, character, and conduct of the dog make his acts evidence, such acts may be either a circumstance or corroborating evidence. Their admission as evidence is not restricted to cases in which the dog's acts are corroborative only. It is sufficient if the evidence of the conduct of the dog, taken with other facts and circumstances in evidence, should be enough to authorize a verdict.
The other exception is to the refusal of the court to charge that there was no evidence. It was in evidence that the two defendants were at the store Saturday afternoon; the store was broken into that night; shoes and other goods stolen. Next day at noon the bloodhound was put on the tracks; the tracks were found at the store; the dog followed the tracks; empty shoe boxes were found along the track. Three-quarters of a mile off, they found where a cart had turned around; followed cart *452
tracks to within 100 yards of George Freeman's house, and the same men's tracks that had come from store, by side of cart track, and then followed the mule track quarter of a mile further, to Frank Freeman's house; followed the man's track 100 yards from cart track to George Freeman's house. On entering his house, the dog found a shoe on floor, whined and tried to attack George. This shoe fitted the track leading from store, and it had tacks on it corresponding to those (618) in the track of one of the men, and was run down in same manner. Had followed this shoe track by side of cart track within 100 yards of defendant's house; found a pair of shoes between mattress and bed at George Freeman's house — white, low-quarter women's shoes, of same stock of goods that had been stolen. The witness could not swear positively they were his shoes. Then there was above evidence of the dog following the track, whining when she found and smelt the shoe, the dog then trying to attack the defendant, and the shoe fitting the track and corresponding with it in other respects. Tracks are competent evidence. S.v. Morris,
No error.
Cited S. v. Spivey,