10 S.E. 1031 | N.C. | 1890
When the case was called for trial, the other defendant, Oxendine, moved for a separate trial, and, at any rate, to be tried with one of the other defendants (there being several indicted in the same bill) rather than with defendant, Jacobs. The court remarked that it intended to try defendant, Jacobs; that it had been informed by the jailer that he apprehended that Jacobs would escape if he had the opportunity. To this remark defendant, Jacobs, excepted. On motion of the solicitor, Jacobs and Oxendine were tried together.
At common law, though the judge, as is still the rule, could not direct a verdict in any criminal case, nor in a civil case, when there was a conflict of evidence, there was no inhibition upon his expressing (696) an opinion upon the facts. It was thought that such expression of opinion, while not governing the jury, would be of assistance to them, coming from an impartial man of much experience in weighing evidence and in drawing conclusions therefrom. Such is still the practice in England and her colonies, in our Federal Courts, and indeed, in most of the states of the Union. In North Carolina, in 1796, the statute was passed which changed the practice in this respect. It is now The Code, sec. 413, and reads as follows: "No judge, in giving a charge to the petit jury, either in a civil or criminal action, shall give an opinion, whether a fact is fully or sufficiently proven, such matter being the true office and province of the jury."
It is difficult to see how the remark of the judge violated any provision of this statute. No juror had been selected, the remark was not in the presence of the jury, nor did it contain any opinion that "a fact was fully or sufficiently proven." No facts had been shown in evidence. Indeed, had the jury been impaneled, the statute prohibited the judge "from expressing an opinion only upon those `facts' respecting which the parties take issue or dispute, and on which, as having occurred or not occurred, the imputed liability of the defendant depends." Ruffin,C. J., in S. v. Angel, 7 Ired., 27. To the same purport is the late case of DeBerry v. R. R.,
Second Exception. One of the jurors, being called, was tendered to defendant, Jacobs, and was accepted by him, and was then tendered to defendant, Oxendine, who challenged him peremptorily. The court stood the juror aside, and the prisoner, Jacobs, excepted. The prisoner, Jacobs, exhausted his twenty-three peremptory challenges before the jury was obtained.
The question is not an open one. It has often been adjudicated. "The right of peremptory challenge is a right to reject, and not a right to select. Hence, when the trial is joint, neither defendant has cause to complain of a challenge by the other." Gaston, J., in S. v. Smith, 2 Ired., 402; S. v. Bixby,
Third Exception. A witness, after testifying to matters not excepted to, deposed that he arrested Jacobs on this charge, and that, on the way to the guardhouse, and after Jacobs got into the guardhouse, when talking about the matter, Jacobs asked witness to shoot him, and seemed to become furious. The prisoner objected to this testimony, and excepted. We see no force in the objection. The conduct of a party when arrested — attempting flight, offering resistance, or otherwise — is competent evidence against him.
No error.
Cited: S. v. Jacobs,
(698)