80 S.E. 1067 | N.C. | 1914
Criminal action tried on appeal from recorder's court. The facts and occurrences of the trial are sufficiently and fairly stated in the case on appeal as follows:
R. M. Saunders testified for the State: "I am chief of police of Henderson. On 23 August of this year I was at Cooper's Warehouse, between the hours of 2 and 5 o'clock, watching through a crack in the wall. I saw the defendant and Ivey together on the street. Harris handed Ivey a bottle of whiskey, and I think I saw something pass between them. I don't know what it was."
Cross-examination: "There was a crowd in the street. Harris and Ivey were on the opposite side of the street from me, and stopped just in the door of a stable. Not more than a step inside. I cannot say that there was any sale, and I don't know that anything was given for the whiskey. Ivey came to me at once, and I got the whiskey from him and then went and got a warrant for Harris and arrested him right off, and (245) I searched him. He had no whiskey or anything else in his pockets."
Dock Langston, for State, testified: "I was a police officer and at Cooper's Warehouse on the afternoon of 23 August. I was watching from a different place from witness Saunders. I saw Harris and Ivey in the street, some 50 yards from me, and I saw Ivey give Harris some money. Crowd in the street."
Cross-examination: "There was no whiskey passed between them at the time the money was handed Harris. I paid Ivey for the whiskey we took from him. I cannot say that there was any sale."
When the State had produced its evidence and rested, the defendant moved for judgment of nonsuit. The motion was refused, and the defendant excepted. Exception 1.
Defendant introduced no evidence. Upon the argument counsel for defendant urged that no relation was shown between the passing of the *226 whiskey and the giving of the money, and that the acts were not even concurrent, but were shown to have been at different times, between the hours of 2 and 5 in the afternoon, and that the State ought to produce the evidence of Ivey, who knew the facts of the relation if any existed, and who was not hostile to the State, as shown by his giving up the whiskey to the officer and receiving pay from him for same. At the close of the argument his Honor asked if Ivey was summoned as a witness, and was informed by counsel that he was bound over as a witness for the State and had not been called.
His Honor charged the jury that they ought not to consider the failure of the State to produce Ivey; that the defendant might have subpoenaed him if he had wished, and it was as much his duty to give the jury the benefit of this evidence as of the State. To this charge the defendant excepted. Exception 2.
His Honor further charged the jury: "If you shall find the facts that defendant delivered the whiskey to Ivey, and at the time or afterwards Ivey paid the defendant some money, and you shall draw the inference from that that the money was paid for the whiskey beyond a reasonable doubt, you will find the defendant guilty." To this charge the defendant excepted. Exception 3.
(246) There was a verdict of guilty. Motion for a new trial. Motion overruled. Exception. Judgment set out in record. Exception 4.
Defendant excepted and appealed to Supreme Court.
There were facts in evidence permitting an inference of guilt, and his Honor was correct in submitting the case to the jury. We must hold, however, that there was error in the charge of the court to the effect "That the jury ought not to consider the failure of the State to produce Ivey," etc. It has been held in several cases that a solicitor must be allowed the control and general management of the State's case in a criminal prosecution, and may examine such of the witnesses as he may deem necessary or desirable. S. v. Lucas,
"The solicitor is sole judge as to what witnesses shall be introduced on the part of the State; but it does not follow that the jury cannot consider the omission of the solicitor to introduce a witness, and draw from it any reasonable and natural inference. Therefore, it is error for a judge, on a trial in the Superior Court, to charge the jury that they cannot at all consider such omission."
Our North Carolina statute, Rev., sec. 535, forbidding the judge to express an opinion on the facts involved in a trial before him, applies not only to an opinion in the charge and on the ultimate fact of a defendant's guilt or innocence, but it extends to any expression of opinion by the judge in the hearing of the jury at any time during the trial (S. v. Cook,
The comments of his Honor, therefore, in reference to the failure of the State to examine the witness Ivey, were in contravention of our statute regulating jury trials, and constituted prejudicial error, entitling the defendant to have his cause tried before another jury.
Venire de novo.
Cited: S. v. Jones,