29 S.E.2d 458 | N.C. | 1944
Criminal prosecution upon indictment charging defendant with feloniously assaulting a female person "with the intent, forcibly and against her will . . . to rape and carnally know" her. G.S., 14-22, formerly C. S., 4205. *142
In the trial court the named female person, testifying as a witness for the State, narrated these facts: On 17 November, 1943, she, a married woman, was residing in the city of Goldsboro, North Carolina. About ten minutes before eleven o'clock on the night of that date while en route from a near-by military camp where her husband was stationed, she alighted from a bus about four city blocks from, and started walking to her place of abode. As she was walking alone along a public street about one hundred and fifty feet from her destination, a man, whom she identified as the defendant, came from the middle of the street, where she first saw him, alongside of her, and, exposing his person by the light of a flashlight, accosted her with an indecent question, prefaced with the words, "Pardon me, Miss, may I . . ." She testified further: "If he had started towards me he would have had to take three or four steps to get to me. I screamed and ran. He chased me. He must have run about 10 or 11 steps . . . I ran home . . . The man never put his hands on me, never touched me . . . He never attempted to put his hands on me, because I turned and ran . . ." The State offered evidence in corroboration of her testimony, and as to her identification of defendant.
On the other hand, defendant, as witness for himself, denied that he was the man to whom the State's witness referred, and testified, and offered testimony of others that he was elsewhere at the time of the alleged offense as described in the State's evidence.
Verdict: Guilty as charged in the bill of indictment.
Judgment: That the defendant be confined in the State's Prison for a term of not less than three nor more than five years.
Defendant appeals therefrom to Supreme Court and assigns error.
At the close of the State's evidence and again at the close of all the evidence defendant demurred thereto and moved for judgment of dismissal or nonsuit, G.S.,
The statute, G.S.,
Applying these principles, the evidence presented in the record on this appeal, taken in the light most favorable to the State, is insufficient to support a verdict of guilty of an assault with intent to commit rape. While the evidence shows defendant solicitous to gratify his passion on the person of the woman, it is wholly lacking in the intention "to do so, at all events, notwithstanding any resistance on her part." Yet the evidence in the record would warrant the finding of a verdict of guilty of an assault upon a female person, G.S.,
Therefore, concededly, even though the evidence is insufficient to support a verdict of guilty of an assault with intent to commit a rape, the motions for judgment of dismissal or nonsuit could not be granted as the defendant could have been convicted of an assault. G.S.,
However, in the Jones case, supra, while holding that upon the evidence appearing in the record nonsuit, for which alone motions were made, could not be granted, it is stated: "If there had been a request for instruction to limit the verdict to a less degree of the same crime, C. S., 4640, we are of opinion that upon the evidence appearing in the record, the court would have erred in refusing to give the instruction in the light of the principles enunciated in S. v. Massey,
In the light of this intimation it is contended for defendant in the present appeal that he having moved in trial court not only for a judgment of dismissal or nonsuit, but for a directed verdict, the motion for directed verdict when so coupled with the motion for dismissal or nonsuit, is tantamount to a request for instruction that there is no evidence to support a verdict of guilty of an assault with intent to commit a rape — the offense charged. In support of this contention it is pointed out that after verdict defendant moved (1) in arrest of judgment "for the reason that the evidence does not justify the verdict of the jury and does not *144 show that the crime for which defendant was convicted has been committed," and (2) for a new trial "for the reason that the evidence did not justify a conviction for assault with intent to commit rape." From this it is argued with force and conviction that it is apparent that the purpose of the motion for directed verdict was to request an instruction which would limit at most the verdict to an assault upon a female person. This argument carries conviction.
However, it is contended for the State that the motion for a directed verdict is general, and has no more force and effect than a general motion for dismissal or nonsuit — that the effect is the same and the terms are used interchangeably. This contention might hold good if the motion had been only for a directed verdict. The State relies upon the decision in S.v. Hill, supra. That decision is not in conflict with, but rather supports decision here reached. There motion for nonsuit was not allowed, but a new trial was granted for error in the trial court refusing to give an instruction, requested by defendant, that there was no evidence that would justify the jury, beyond a reasonable doubt, to convict of the offense charged, the same as in the present case.
For error shown let there be a
New trial.