34 S.E. 247 | N.C. | 1899
The prisoner, a child of about eleven years of age, was indicted for the murder of Annie Belle Justice, a child of about two years of age, by fatally burning her.
The evidence, the judge's charge, and the exceptions thereto, are sufficiently stated in the opinion.
There was a verdict of guilty of murder in the second degree. Judgment of imprisonment in the State Prison, for seven years.
(637) Appeal by the defendant to the Supreme Court. The defendant, a child of eleven years of age, according to the testimony of one witness, and of fourteen, according to the testimony of another, was convicted of murder in the second degree at the May Term, 1899, of Durham Superior Court. The deceased was an infant just beginning to walk, and was being nursed by the defendant. The principal evidence upon which the defendant was convicted was the testimony of Sally Leathers, as follows: "Was there when the body was burned; it was after 12 m.; Cora took body by the heels, and had her head between her legs holding it more on one side than the other, and sat it in some hot ashes where they had been cooking ash-cakes; baby screamed. She then smacked it on the jaws; laid baby on the foot of the bed; got some soda and rubbed it on. She said she did it to scare it, but didn't go to burn it. Baby had on a diaper when she came over that morning, but not when put on the ashes. Cora took it off just before burning baby. She pulled the clothes behind the baby, didn't let them burn." *451
The defendant, as a witness in her own behalf, denied that she burnt the child, and said she did not know how the burning occurred.
It is unnecessary to discuss the first exception further than to say that, even if his Honor was in error in refusing to charge the jury, at the request of defendant's counsel, that there was no evidence of murder in the first degree (which we do not pass upon), no harm was done, for the jury returned a verdict of murder in the second degree. There was no element of manslaughter in the case, and the court properly refused to submit a hypothetical view of manslaughter (638) to the consideration of the jury.
This view of the case disposes of all of the defendant's exceptions based upon his Honor's refusal to submit the question of manslaughter to the jury.
On the matter of the presumption of incapacity to commit crime, in favor of infants, the Court instructed the jury that an infant under seven years of age could not be shown, even upon the clearest evidence, to entertain a criminal intention; but that if the age of seven had been reached, the State could prove that such a person was of sufficient capacity to entertain a criminal intention. In the same connection, he further said: "This presumption of incapacity to commit crime may be rebutted by clear and strong evidence of a mischievous discretion, a discretion to discern between good and evil, or by proof that she (defendant) knew the act was wrong, and that she had knowledge of good and evil, and of the peril and danger of the offense, and the fact of guilty knowledge must be distinctly made out. If she understands the nature and consequences of her acts, and the act indicates intelligent design and malice, she may be convicted." It might have been better if his Honor had instructed the jury that they should be "fully satisfied" that the defendant was doli capax, or that they should be satisfied "beyond a reasonable doubt" of her capacity to entertain a criminal intention; but we are not prepared to say that his Honor's charge was erroneous.
In the case of State v. Sears,
The question as to whether the same degree of proof was necessary to the conviction of crime in both misdemeanors and felonies was debated in the argument here. The matter was decided in State v. Knox,
These instructions were perfectly fair to the defendant. As we have said, there was no element of manslaughter in the case, for the defendant denied that she burnt the child, and said that she did not know how the burning occurred; and the testimony of Sally Leathers (640) showed that there was no provocation for the act, even if a child two years old could give provocation, to reduce a killing from the grade of murder to that of manslaughter.
Before the passage of the act of 1893, chapter 85, when the killing was proved to have been done with a deadly weapon, the law presumed malice, and that made the killing murder in the first degree. Since the act of 1893, the killing being proved, and nothing else appearing, the law presumes malice but not premeditation and deliberation, and the killing is murder in the second degree. State v. Gadberry,
It is a sad spectacle, that of the incarceration of a child eleven years of age in the State Prison for the crime of murder, but the trial was had by a judge who saw it properly and humanely conducted, and she has been convicted under the law of the land.
Affirmed.
Cited: S. v. Utey,
(641)