97 S.E. 32 | N.C. | 1918
The defendant was convicted as an accessory before the fact to the murder of her husband, Robert Jones, by one Lonnie Council. Council had been convicted, at a previous term, of murder in the first degree, and was in the State's Prison at Raleigh, awaiting execution, at the time of the trial of the defendant herein.
Defendant, at the close of State's evidence, moved for judgment as of nonsuit under the statute, and the motion being overruled, defendant expected.
Lonnie Council testified, among other things: "She (the defendant) spoke that day something about what I and her had been talking about and what she asked me to do. She wanted me to kill him; said he was no account to her — couldn't do any work for her. She said she didn't want him." . . .
Q. "Did you agree to kill him for her?" A. "I didn't exactly agree to do that until the night we come back from the burial, and she told me what time he would come down to this short-dog train. He was working for the railroad. She told me he would come in on the 6:30 train, going towards Raleigh, eastbound. Where he got off would be at the coal chute, and right there was where I would meet him, and I could do what she asked me to do." *703
This conversation occurred on the day before Lonnie Council killed Robert Jones at the coal chute, the killing occurring on 8 February, 1918. Soon after his arrest, and while in jail, he made a similar statement to J. W. Stone and to E. G. Belvin.
It appeared that the time fixed for the execution of Council in the sentence of death pronounced at the time of his trial had expired at the time of the trial of this action, and the defendant objected to his examination as a witness because the time for his execution having passed, he was dead, in the eyes of the law, and, further, if not dead, he was under sentence of death and could not be brought to the trial to testify.
Objections overruled, and the defendant excepted.
There was a verdict of guilty and a judgment of imprisonment for life, from which defendant appealed. The statute (Rev., sec. 3287) defines an accessory before the fact as one who "shall counsel, procure, or command any other person to commit any felony," and the testimony of Council clearly comes within the statute, as it shows that the defendant counseled and procured the commission of the crime.
The credibility of the witness for the jury, as it is established by a long line of authorities in this State that while the evidence of an accomplice ought to be received with caution, and that the court in its discretion may so instruct the jury, it is sufficient, uncorroborated, to support a verdict of guilty. S. v. Honey,
The motion for judgment of nonsuit was therefore properly overruled.
The objection that Council was disqualified because, being under sentence of death, a writ of habeas corpus ad testificandum could not issue to compel his attendance, under Revisal, sec. 1855, is met by the decisions in S. v. Adair,
No error. *704