25 S.E. 819 | N.C. | 1896
At the trial, after the solicitor had rested his case and the defendant demurred to the evidence as being insufficient to go to the jury on a certain point, the State was allowed to recall a witness on such point, and defendants excepted. The defendants then offered to introduce testimony, but the court refused to permit them to do so, and charged the jury on the facts testified to by the State's witnesses. (823) The defendants were convicted and appealed.
The court in its discretion promptly permitted the witness to be recalled, and indeed might have done so even after the evidence had closed.Olive v. Olive,
In the Scriptures the word "cattle" ordinarily and usually embraces goats, notably in the contract between Laban and Jacob. Genesis, ch. 30, v. 32.
In Bank v. Bank, 21 Wall., 294, the word "cattle" is held to be broad enough to include even swine. In England the Stat. 9 Geo. II, ch. 22 (commonly called the Black Act), made it punishable with death without benefit of clergy "to maliciously and unlawfully kill any cattle." Under this is was held that the statute embraced domestic animals other than *515 the bovine species, as a mare, 2 East Pl. of Crown, 1074; King (824)v. Paty, 2 W. Bl., 721, and "pigs" in Rex v. Chapple, 1 Crown Cases, 77.
The demurrer to the indictment therefore on the ground that "other cattle" did not include goats was properly overruled.
The defendant demurred to the evidence, and the court, after overruling such demurrer, properly refused to allow the defendant to introduce further evidence, and charged the jury upon the state of facts admitted by the demurrer. S. v. Adams,
There is nothing to show that the court was prayed and refused to charge that if the defendants killed the goats by mistake they would not be guilty. A mere omission to charge on a particular aspect of the case is not ground of exception, unless an instruction is asked and refused. S. v.Varner,
NO ERROR.
Cited: S. v. Harris,
(825)