28 S.E.2d 232 | N.C. | 1943
Criminal prosecution tried upon indictment charging the defendant with the murder of Mrs. E. A. Bill.
The record discloses that on Thursday, 27 August, 1942, the defendant entered Bill's Service Station in Hoke County, which is about 2 1/2 miles from Raeford on the Fayetteville Highway, and shot three members of the Bill family, one after the other, in rapid succession, and killed them all. Those killed were Mrs. E. A. Bill, her son, Eugene Bill, and her married daughter, Mrs. Estelle Wilson.
Three separate indictments were returned against the defendant charging him with the several homicides. He was tried on the bill charging him with the murder of Mrs. E. A. Bill.
The defendant's plea was insanity or mental irresponsibility bottomed on the fact that his son, Johnny Harris, had been shot and killed by Eugene Bill at this same service station on the preceding Sunday, 23 August, which had caused the defendant great stress of mind, total loss of sleep, and in the meantime he had taken a number of B-C headache powders, all of which had dethroned his reason and rendered him incapable of knowing what he was doing.
During the examination of the State's first witness, who was describing the scene in the service station as he found it after the shooting, reference was made to the position of the body of Eugene Bill; whereupon the defendant moved that the three indictments be consolidated and tried together. Overruled; exception.
Following this determination, the court at first ruled that the State would not be permitted to show any homicide except the one for which the defendant was then on trial. Later, when it appeared that confessions or statements made by the defendant referred to all the homicides, the court permitted evidence of the other homicides as showing guilty knowledge on the part of the defendant. Exception.
The theory of the prosecution is, that the defendant wiped out the Bill family as a matter of revenge. He told Crawford Wright at Fairmont on the day before the homicides that Mrs. E. A. Bill ought to be *699 in jail along with her son Eugene for killing his boy; that he had heard she was the one really responsible for his boy's death. Eugene Bill was then out on bail, awaiting trial on a charge of killing Johnny Harris.
According to statements made by the defendant after the shooting, he went into the service station and said to Mrs. Bill, "I understand you had some trouble out here last Sunday." Mrs. Bill replied, "I don't care to discuss that now." About that time Eugene Bill came into the service station and went to the cash register to make some change. The defendant spoke to him and said, "I understand you shot a Harris boy out here Sunday." Eugene replied, "Well, he asked for it and I gave it to him." The defendant then said, "Yes, you asked for it and now I am going to give it to you." Whereupon the defendant shot Eugene and he fell. Mrs. Bill started around the end of the counter and he shot her one time and when she was falling he shot her again. About that time Mrs. Wilson came into the station from a back door and he shot her and she fell. It all happened within a space of a few minutes. The defendant told the sheriff that he had six bullets in his pistol and that he shot everything in sight. Continuing, the sheriff testified: "He said he reckoned he would be electrocuted for it, and he was sorry he had done it. He said the Bill boy had taken the law in his hand and he took the law in his hands, and he guessed they had all gone wrong about it." On the way to jail, he said "I am not drunk and I am not crazy. I didn't do that to try to be a hero or an outlaw, but I did it for love and blood."
Shortly after the homicides, Dr. Matheson examined the bodies and found that Mrs. Bill had been shot three times; Mrs. Wilson, twice, and Eugene Bill once. Death was practically instantaneous in each instance.
After the shooting, the defendant saw Philmore Carpenter, who was working on the highway. He called him and said, "I want you to take my gun and give it to one of my boys."
Verdict: Guilty of murder in the first degree.
Judgment: Death by asphyxiation.
The defendant appeals, assigning errors. We have here for determination, (1) the correctness of the refusal to consolidate the three indictments, (2) the competency of evidence of other crimes to show guilty knowledge, and (3) the adequacy or sufficiency of the charge. *700
First, in respect of the defendant's motion to consolidate the three indictments for trial, it is to be observed that this came during the progress of the hearing. Had the motion been made in limine, a different situation might have arisen, as the court observed at the time. C. S., 4622. However, after the jury had been impaneled and the prosecution had begun to offer its evidence, the court regarded the motion as too late and remarked that it could only be granted by ordering a mistrial and selecting another jury to try the three consolidated cases. The jury had been impaneled to try the issue between the State and the accused on the indictment charging the defendant with the murder of Mrs. E. A. Bill, and none other. No motion for a mistrial was lodged by the defendant.
The manner of selecting a jury in a capital case is quite different from that followed in other cases, and the considerations usually surrounding such a jury are also different. S. v. Ellis,
True it is provided by C. S., 4622, that where there are several charges against any person for the same act or for two or more transactions connected together, or for two or more transactions of the same class of offenses, which may be properly joined, the court will order them to be consolidated. S. v. Combs,
No harm has come to the defendant from the court's ruling on the consolidation of the indictments and apparently no benefit would be derived from a new trial on this account.
Second, as to the competency of the evidence of the other crimes to showscienter or guilty knowledge, it may be noted they are all parts of *701
one continuous transaction or the same res gestae. The defendant must have realized this when he interposed a motion to consolidate the three indictments. The homicides were so connected in time and place as to make the evidence of all competent upon the trial of any one. S. v. Adams,
The general rule undoubtedly is, as contended by the defendant, that evidence of a distinct, substantive offense is inadmissible to prove another and independent crime, the two being wholly disconnected and in no way related to each other. S. v. Adams, supra; S. v. McCall,
Speaking to the subject in S. v. Beam,
In the circumstances disclosed by the record, it would seem that there was no error in admitting the evidence of the other homicides. A new trial could not be predicated on assignments of error based on these exceptions.
Third, as bearing on the adequacy or sufficiency of the charge, the rule that what the court says to the jury must be considered in its entirety and contextually would seem to save it from successful attack. S. v. Smith,
The principal infirmity in the charge, so the defendant contends, is that the jury was instructed not to consider the defendant's plea of insanity unless and until they first found him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of one of the grades of an unlawful homicide, as contained in the bill of indictment, and then the burden would be on the defendant to satisfy the jury of his insanity or mental irresponsibility at the time of the killing in order to escape a conviction.
The court was here dealing with the intensity of proof required of the State to obtain a conviction, and with the quantum of proof required of the defendant on his plea of insanity. While somewhat out of the ordinary or usual form, the instruction will do. Its meaning is not difficult of discernment. It seems clear that the order in which the matter was considered had no material bearing on the outcome, since the jury was not satisfied of the defendant's insanity, and was convinced beyond a reasonable doubt of his guilt. S. v. Hancock,
The defendant entered upon the trial with his sanity taken for granted, with the presumption of innocence in his favor, and with the burden on the State to establish his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. S. v. Singleton,
The atrocity of the defendant's conduct, as disclosed by the State's evidence, was a circumstance from which opposite conclusions were sought to be drawn; the one that it exhibited a mind fatally bent on mischief; the other that it revealed a diseased mind. The jury seems to have attributed it to the former.
Of course, at the threshold of the case and throughout the hearing, the burden was on the State to establish the guilt of the accused beyond a reasonable doubt. S. v. DeGraffenreid, ante, 461; S. v. Schoolfield,
In this jurisdiction, as well as in many others, when insanity is interposed as a defense in a criminal prosecution, the burden rests with the defendant, who sets it up, to prove such insanity, not beyond a reasonable doubt, but to the satisfaction of the jury. S. v. Cureton,
It is quite correct to say the burden is on the State to prove beyond a reasonable doubt every essential element of the crime charged, including the necessary intent. S. v. Newsome,
With us the doctrine of reasonable doubt is applied in favor of the accused, but never against him. S. v. Payne,
The test of responsibility is the capacity to distinguish between right and wrong at the time and in respect of the matter under investigation. S.v. Potts,
On the whole, the case seems to have been tried in substantial conformity to the decisions on the subject. No reversible error has been made to appear. The verdict and judgment will be upheld.
No error.