22 S.E.2d 229 | N.C. | 1942
The defendant was charged with the capital felony of rape. The jury returned verdict of guilty. From judgment imposing sentence of death the defendant appealed. The evidence disclosed by the record was amply sufficient to support the verdict and judgment. Without undertaking to state the evidence in detail it may be said that there was testimony tending to show that on the occasion charged the State's witness, Mrs. Warren, the wife of a farmer, in the absence of her husband, was doing some work at a tobacco plant bed 200 yards from the house. The defendant, an employee of her husband, had been plowing in a field near-by. He came to the plant bed where she was and there criminally assaulted her, choking her into insensibility and fracturing her skull with a brick. There was evidence that the crime charged was completed. Every element necessary to constitute the felony of rape was made to appear. The defendant's motion for judgment as of nonsuit was properly denied. *159
The defendant's other assignments of error relate to the court's ruling on the admission of testimony. We will consider these in order.
The objection to the evidence that the State's witness' child had been burned, and that her husband had taken the child to the doctor is without merit. This was competent to account for the absence of her husband, and to show that she was alone at the time of the assault.
There was no error in permitting this witness to testify, in answer to a question, that the defendant had sexual relations with her, and the objection based upon the suggestion that she did not understand the meaning of the words used in the solicitor's questions, or that by reason of the injuries she received she was not competent to testify, cannot be sustained. There was no evidence that she was not mentally competent to testify. Lanier v. Bryan,
The fact that one of the solicitor's questions was leading affords no ground for complaint. Uniformly it has been held that this is a matter within the discretion of the trial judge, and no prejudice therefrom is discernible here. S. v. Hargrove,
The defendant's exception to the admission in evidence of his confession as to certain material facts cannot be sustained. The trial judge heard evidence as to the circumstance and character of the alleged confession, and found that the defendant's statement was voluntary and made without inducement, threat or hope of reward. This finding was supported by evidence which was not contradicted. S. v. Fain,
The testimony that at the tobacco plant bed, shortly after the alleged assault, near a puddle of blood, was found a brick with hairs clinging to it, was competent, as was also the admission of the brick as an exhibit.
The defendant in his testimony on the trial admitted assaulting Mrs. Warren and striking her, but denied the accomplishment of the crime, or that he struck her with a brick. The court's charge to the jury was free from error, and no exception thereto was noted.
The defendant has received a fair trial. The evidence was direct and positive, and he has no legal ground of complaint that the jury accepted the State's evidence and found him guilty of the crime charged in the bill of indictment.
The judgment is affirmed, and in the trial we find
No error. *160