23 S.E. 163 | N.C. | 1895
The defendant owed J. A. Smith $45 by note, and in July, 1894, executed to him a chattel mortgage upon a bicycle, a horse and wagon. On 1 October of the same year he pledged the bicycle to one Morris, in Greensboro, to secure the repayment of $8 which he had borrowed from him at that time. In March, 1895 (five months after he had pledged the bicycle), the defendant offered to sell the wagon to one Hodgin. The defendant was indicted, under section 1089 of The Code, for disposing of the bicycle with intent to hinder, delay and defeat the rights of the mortgagee, Smith, and on the trial the State was allowed, after objection made (728) and overruled, to introduce testimony concerning the defendant's offer to sell the wagon, for the purpose of proving his unlawful and corrupt intent in pledging the bicycle.
The court committed error in permitting the introduction of this testimony for that purpose. There are some few exceptions to the almost universal rule of law that evidence of a distinct substantive offense cannot be admitted in support of another offense. One of these exceptions is when the quo animo enters into and forms a *498 necessary part of the imputed offense, and proof of a corrupt and unlawful intention is indispensable to establish the guilt of the person charged, testimony of another offense committed by that person, provided it tends to establish such intent, is admissible. When these exceptions are brought into practical operation in criminal trials, however intelligently they may be administered, they are liable to be attended with great injustice to the defendant. It is very difficult for juries to understand clearly the precise purpose for which such testimony is allowed, and more difficult still for them not to be influenced in making up their verdict by the general impression of the testimony, rather than by the particular effect intended for it to have. On this account, in many of the States, there are respectable authorities which do not recognize these exceptions.
This Court has, however, decided that such testimony is admissible; but we are not in the least disposed to extend the practice beyond that settled in the decisions. In S. v. Murphy,
In the case before us the transaction about which the witness was allowed to testify took place five months after the offense with which the defendant is charge was alleged to have been committed. We think *499 that, after the lapse of so considerable a time, no presumption of the defendant's unlawful and corrupt intent in disposing of the bicycle can be raised. Such testimony about a transaction so far removed in point of time from the date of the alleged offense for which the defendant is indicted has no tendency to prove his guilt. If such testimony be admissible to prove such intent, the "collateral (730) offense" sought to be proved must be confined to a time before or just about the time the offense charged against the defendant is alleged to have been committed.
We have considered this case as if the defendant had sold and disposed of the wagon. Such is not the fact. The case shows that the sale was not consummated, and the wagon was afterwards delivered to the mortgagee, who sold it and applied the proceeds as a credit on his debt against the defendant. There is error.
New trial.
Cited: S. v. Frazier,