56 S.E. 547 | N.C. | 1907
Indictment for feloniously burning a storehouse (608) in the night-time. There was evidence that the ground behind the storehouse was soft and had been freshly plowed, and witness testified that next morning the prisoner's tracks were found there, leading off from the storehouse; that he had known prisoner all his life, and that the prisoner made a peculiar track; that having had white swelling when a boy, the prisoner's left leg was two or three inches shorter than the other; that this made him walk on his left toes, the heel of that foot not touching the ground unless that foot went very deep into the ground; *453 that he knew prisoner's track well, and that these were his tracks; that no one else in that neighborhood made such tracks; that these tracks were plain and distinct; that they led up behind the gin-house so that the person making them was screened from the dwelling-house, and led again off to the road which went to the prisoner's house. Another witness testified that he carried his bloodhound there the afternoon succeeding the fire; that the tracks were peculiar (and such as were described by first witness); that his dog is a clear-blood English bloodhound, well trained to track human beings; he had often used him for that purpose, and that the dog will track nothing else; that he put the dog on these tracks; that the dog followed them through the field and across the road, when he seemed to catch the scent of something in the air, whereupon he broke off through the woods, and when witness got up with the dog he had treed prisoner up a dogwood tree. That the prisoner said to witness, "What does this mean? I didn't do it." That they took off prisoner's shoes, and they fitted the tracks exactly.
There was evidence for prisoner and by him and evidence that his character was bad; but it is unnecessary to state prisoner's evidence, as the jury found for the State, and the exceptions are (1) the admission of any evidence of the conduct of the dog; (2) the refusal of a mistrial and a continuance that the prisoner might obtain other (609) evidence; (3) the refusal to charge that there was no evidence to go to the jury; (4) that though the Court gave the prisoner's prayer that "the acts and doings of the dog are not evidence upon which you can rely as substantive evidence upon which you can convict the prisoner," the Court added, "but are circumstances in corroboration of the State's testimony as to tracks. S. v. Moore,
There was no error. 1. The conduct of the dog was competent evidence. Underhill Cr. Ev., p. 438, n. 5; 1 Wigmore Ev., sec. 177 (2); Hodges v.State,
2. The refusal of a mistrial and continuance after the evidence was all in rested in the sound discretion of his Honor, and is not reviewable.
3. His Honor properly refused to withdraw the case from the jury. Independent of the corroborative evidence from the trailing by the dog, the evidence as to the identity of the tracks was before the jury. Underhill Cr. Ev., sec. 374; S. v. Graham,
4. The amendment of the prayer by adding that the trailing of the dog, though not substantive evidence, was corroborative, was in accord with what was said in S. v. Moore,
No Error.
Cited: S. v. Spivey,
(611)