30 N.C. 324 | N.C. | 1848
The prisoner was indicted in Granville for the murder of James Meadows, and upon his affidavit his cause was removed to Person, where it was tried on the last circuit.
After introducing testimony to show that the dead body of James Meadows was found at the drawbars, about eighty yards from his dwelling-house, on a certain morning in September, 1846, much cut, bruised and lacerated, the solicitor (325) for the State called as a witness Seth Meadows, a son of the deceased. He stated that he was about nine years old when his father was killed; that his father, his sister Susannah, who was about fifteen years of age, several other children, and himself, lived in a small log house, containing but one room with two doors, one facing the north and the other the south, and no window; that on a certain Sunday night in September, 1846, his father and himself were sleeping in a bed near the north door, while his sister Susannah and the other children slept in another bed near the opposite door; that about two hours before daybreak he was awakened by the struggles of his father, when he saw three men drag him out of the bed, and take him out of the house through the northern door, one having hold of his head and the other two of his legs, and he thought that one of the men who had hold of his father's legs was the prisoner, because he was yellow, was built like him and was about his size. The witness stated further that as soon as they got out of the door he, being much alarmed, went to the *238 bed where his sister Susannah was sleeping and waked her up, and told her that some persons had carried their father out of the house, when she made one of the other children get up and shut the door, which they had left open. He stated further that it was a bright moonlight night, and that he was well acquainted with the prisoner, who was a low, thick-set bright mulatto. The solicitor then asked the witness if he told his sister, when he went to her bed and waked her up, who he thought it was that had carried his father out of the house. This question was objected to by the prisoner's counsel, but the court permitted the witness to answer, when he said that he told his sister that some men did it, but did not tell that he thought the prisoner was one of them. The solicitor then asked the witness whether he told his sister next morning who (326) he thought one of them was. This question was also objected to by the prisoner's counsel. The solicitor then remarked that he was aware that the prisoner's counsel expected to prove that the witness, although several times interrogated upon the subject before the jury of inquest, did not state, until after the prisoner had been arrested, that he thought, from the color or other description, that either of the persons was the prisoner; but, on the contrary, had stated that he did not know who the persons were. The prisoner's counsel admitted that they expected to make the proof as suggested by the solicitor, but they contended that although they had the right to impeach the witness by proving that, when on oath or not on oath, he had made statements different from those made on the trial, yet that it was not competent for the State to sustain him by proving that when not on oath he had made the same statement as he had made on the trial. The court permitted the question to be asked, and the witness answered that about daybreak in the morning, some two hours after his father had been taken out of the house, he told his sister that two of the men were black like negroes, and the other was a yellow man like George, the prisoner. A similar question was permitted to be asked, after objection, whether the witness had told one William Philpot, the next morning, who he thought it was; and Philpot was then introduced and permitted to state, after objection, that the witness Seth Meadows had told him, on the morning the dead body was found, that one of the persons who committed the act was yellow like George, the prisoner.
The prisoner's counsel then introduced witnesses who stated that when the witness Seth Meadows was under examination before the jury of inquest he was asked several times whether he knew who took his father out of the house, to which he replied *239 that he did not. They stated further that he persisted in this answer until after the prisoner was arrested the next day, and that he then stated to the jury, on oath, that one of the persons was yellow, and that from his color, build and (327) height he took him to be George, the prisoner.
The jury returned a verdict of guilty. A motion for a new trial was made upon the ground that the court had received improper testimony, but it was overruled by the court. A motion in arrest of judgment was then made "because the certificate of the Clerk of the Superior Court of Law in and for the county of Granville, after the transcript had been sent to this (Person) Court, and during the term of this court, and after verdict, was altered by the Clerk of the Superior Court of Law in and for the county of Granville, under his hand and seal of said court, at the courthouse in Roxboro, in Person County, so as to make it read `Clerk of the Superior Court of Law,' instead of `Clerk of the Superior Court, etc.'" This motion was also overruled, and sentence of death pronounced, from which the prisoner appealed.
The objections to the admission of testimony, made by the prisoner on the trial, raise two questions for our consideration, of which one is subordinate to the other. The first and main question is whether, when a witness is sought to be impeached by proof of former statements, inconsistent with his testimony on the trial, it is competent for the party or prosecutor who has introduced him to prove other consistent statements for the purpose of corroborating him. Upon this question the English authorities are conflicting, and it is very difficult, if not impossible, to reconcile them. 2 Hawk. R. C., ch. 46, sec. 46, and Gilbert Evidence, 150 (4 Ed.), followed by 1 MacNally, 378, and the case of Luttrell v. Regnell, 1 Mod., 284, support the affirmative, while Judge Buller in his NisiPrius, 294, doubts of, and in Parker's case, 3 Doug., 242 (328) (20 Eng. C. L., 95), dissents from the position, and declares for the negative; in which it is said that he has the sanction of the great names of Lords Redesdale and Eldon. The modern writers on the subject of evidence, in this conflict of authorities, have endeavored to effect a compromise by laying it down as a rule that, when the counsel of the opposite party imputes a design in the witness to misrepresent, from some motive of interest or friendship, it may, in order to repel such *240
imputation, be proper to show that the witness made a similar statement at a time when the supposed motive did not exist, or when motives of interest would have prompted him to make a different statement of facts. 1 Phil. Ev., 293; Roscoe Crim. Ev., 142. But however it may be in England, we consider it settled in this State that such confirmatory testimony is admissible. In Johnson v. Patterson,
The subordinate question is whether such confirmatory testimony can be given by the impeached witness himself, that is, can he testify to his own former declaration, consistent with his testimony given on the trial? The majority of us (Nash, J., dissent.) hold that he can, and we so hold because we are unable to discover any principle by which the testimony can be excluded. We have all just agreed that the question is a proper one to be asked of some witness, and why may it not be answered by any witness, who is not forbidden to answer it on any one or more of the grounds of objection to the competency of witnesses? These grounds — and they are said by the highest authority to be the only grounds — are want of reason, defect of religious belief, infamy, and interest. Lawrence, J., in Jordaine v. Lashbrook, 7 Term, 610; 1 Phill. Ev., 18. The witness here is obnoxious to none of these objections. The testimony, *241 it is true, is obviously of so weak and unsatisfactory a character that we are surprised it was offered; but having been offered, and being of a kind proper in itself, and sworn to by a witness competent to testify in the cause, we can perceive no reason why it should have been excluded.
There is certainly no pretense for arresting the judgment for the cause assigned. The transcript of the record is duly certified to us, and it is now perfect, and we cannot inquire how it became so. S. v. King,
PER CURIAM. No error.
Cited: S. v. Dove,