29 S.E.2d 449 | N.C. | 1944
The defendants were convicted of robbery of one Ardella Evans committed on the first day of October, 1943. With the appellants Ernest Evans was charged in the bill of indictment, but in the course of the trial the solicitor for the State took a nol. pros. as to him.
From judgment of imprisonment predicated upon a jury verdict of guilty of robbery the defendants William Davis (alias Jack) Ham, Thurman Hardy and Raymond Hardy appealed to the Supreme Court, assigning errors.
The first exceptive assignments of error set out in the appellants' brief are those numbered one and two and are to the court's refusal to allow the defendants' motion to dismiss the action or for judgment of nonsuit lodged when the State had produced its evidence and rested its case and renewed after all the evidence in the case was concluded (G.S.,
Assignments of error 5 and 6 are to certain testimony of the prosecuting witness Ardella Evans to the effect that she did "reckon" the defendants "were trying to borrow money" from her, and that they "were trying to borrow some" at the time they carried her to the show, and that she "thought" they tried to borrow $300.00 the first time, and she "reckoned" they wanted to borrow $750.00 the second time. The appellants contend that this testimony was incompetent for the reason that it was indefinite and not clear, and speculative, and against the interest of the appellants. With this contention we do not concur. How much weight should be given to the testimony was for the jury. The testimony was competent to show a motive in that it tended to show the defendants knew the prosecuting witness had the money and that the defendants were in need of money. S. v.Cain,
Assignments of error 7 and 8 are to certain evidence relative to the physical and mental condition of one Ernest Evans offered for the purpose of showing that the said Ernest Evans was unable to attend court and testify and thereby render competent in this trial his testimony theretofore taken in a habeas corpus proceeding instituted by the defendants in this case. The first evidence assailed being the testimony of Dr. E. N. Booker, an admitted medical expert, to the effect that Ernest Evans was not, in his opinion, able to attend court, and the second evidence assailed being the testimony of Lester Hales to the effect that Ernest Evans "lost his mind or something." We think both the testimony of Dr. Booker and of Lester Hales falls within the well recognized exceptions to the rule rendering opinion evidence incompetent. "To the general rule that the opinion evidence is incompetent there are three, at least, well recognized exceptions: First: opinions of experts; second, opinions on the question of identity; and third, opinions received from necessity, i.e., when from the nature of the subject under investigation, no better evidence can be obtained." S. v. Harris,
Assignment of error No. 13 relates to the introduction by the State of the testimony of Ernest Evans, taken at the habeas corpus proceeding before the trial of this case, over the objection of the defendants. *131
In speaking of the effect of our statutes (formerly C. S., 4560, 4563, and 4572, now G.S., 15-88, 15-91, and 15-100) making competent evidence of testimony reduced to writing by magistrates upon preliminary hearings upon the common law rule, Hoke, J., in S. v. Maynard,
Assignments of error 14 and 15 are to the admission in evidence of the testimony of Erwin Alexander over the objection of defendants and the refusal of the court to strike such testimony upon motion so to do. *132
The testimony involved was to the effect that the witness had heard Jack Ham, one of the defendants, some time before the alleged robbery was committed, say in a conversation relative to recent robberies in the community that the knew an old woman who had some money and was keeping it under her dress. This evidence was competent as tending to show that the defendant Ham knew the prosecutrix had money and kept it under her dress, of which money she was subsequently robbed. This was a circumstance, which standing alone may not have had any potency, but when considered in connection with all the other circumstances appearing in the evidence may not have been entirely feckless. In criminal cases every circumstance calculated to throw any light upon the supposed crime is permissible. S. v.Payne,
Assignment of error No. 18 is directed to the failure of the court to instruct the jury that certain testimony of Sheriff K. L. Rose was competent only for the purpose of corroborating the witness Ernest Evans. This assignment is untenable for the reason that the appellant did not ask, at the time of the admission of the evidence, that it be restricted to the purpose for which it was competent. Rule 21, Rules of Practice in the Supreme Court,
Assignment of error No. 19 is to an except from the charge reading: "In that connection I charge you that if you find beyond a reasonable doubt that two of the defendants went in the home of Miss Evans and seized her and held her by force and violence, one holding her while another feloniously took from her person a sum of money with intent to appropriate it to their own use, and while so doing another was out in an automobile parked near there for the purpose of aiding and abetting them in getting away and getting gone with the money, it would be your duty to return a verdict of guilty as to all, because in that instance all would be principals and all would be equally guilty." The appellants in their brief contend that the three "defendants would not be guilty as principals in equal degree of the crime" and "insist that to aid and abet in escaping from the commission of the crime would not constitute a person guilty of the original crime committed." We see no error in the charge as quoted, but if the objection of the appellants to the charge be limited to the defendant who is alleged to have remained in the automobile to carry his codefendants away after the robbery had been perpetrated, any error therein is rendered harmless since we have reversed the judgment of the trial court in so far as it related to this defendant, Raymond Hardy, whom the State contended was aiding and abetting by being present in a waiting automobile for the purpose of accomplishing an escape. *133
Assignments of error 3 and 4 are formal and relate to the court's refusal to set the verdict aside and for a new trial for errors committed in the course of the trial, and to the judgment. All of the assignments of errors have been discussed seriatim as they are set out in appellant's brief and in them we find no prejudicial error as to the defendants William Davis (alias Jack) Ham and Thurman Hardy.
Since we are of the opinion that the evidence was insufficient to carry the case to the jury as to the guilt of Raymond Hardy the judgment as to him is reversed.
As to defendant William Davis (alias Jack) Ham and defendant Thurman Hardy, no error.
As to defendant Raymond Hardy, reversed.