42 S.E.2d 465 | N.C. | 1947
Criminal prosecution under bill of indictment charging (1) a felonious assault (G.S.
The testimony, considered in the light most favorable to the State, tends to show the following facts. Defendant Roscoe Jones was employed by R. S. Britt to drive a truck to convey strawberries to market places. On 25 April 1946 he did not report for work and someone else was employed in his stead. That night Britt returned to Whiteville about 8:00 p.m. His driver got off the truck and Britt proceeded towards his home about seven miles in the country. A car followed him so closely its lights interfered with his driving. Some distance out of town the driver of the car blew his horn several times and Britt pulled to one side of the road. A young man came to the window of his truck and demanded his pocketbook. He denied having one. Thereupon he was struck on the head with a blackjack or pistol, and the first man and a companion "lit all over" him, felt his clothing, "and went all around under the seat." A car approached and the two men disappeared. Another car came along and carried Britt to the hospital.
When first assaulted, Britt tried to drive off, but his truck crossed the road ditch and hit a tree. At that time he managed to throw his pocketbook in the woods and so his assailants got nothing from him.
Britt recognized Roscoe Jones as one of his assailants but did not identify his companion. However, there was evidence defendants admitted to officers they were the ones who stopped him, claiming they did so to get Roscoe's coat off the truck, and then some argument developed between Britt and Cecil Jones relative to money Britt owed Roscoe, in the course of which Cecil struck Britt with his fist. There was other evidence relative to the conduct of the defendants that afternoon and night which tends to identify them as the parties who stopped Britt on the public highway.
The court, on the first count, submitted the cause to the jury on the lesser offense of assault with a deadly weapon and, on the second count, on the charge of an attempt to commit highway robbery. *404
By their verdict on the first count, the jury found each defendant guilty of a simple assault, and on the second count, guilty of an attempt to commit highway robbery.
The court pronounced judgment on the verdict on each count, the sentences to run consecutively, and defendant Clyde Roscoe Jones appealed. It may be conceded that the identification of defendants by the prosecuting witness was by no means convincing. Even so, there was other evidence tending to point to them as the parties who followed Britt and stopped him on the highway. Furthermore, there was uncontroverted evidence that they so admitted. The real controversy involved the conflicting versions of what happened after defendants stopped him. If the statements made by defendants are to be accepted, then Cecil Jones committed a simple assault and Roscoe Jones committed no offense. If Britt's version of the occurrence is true, then the defendants, acting in concert, assaulted Britt and attempted to rob him. They were defeated in this purpose only by the fact Britt had no money on his person when they searched him.
The conflicting contentions in respect thereto were submitted to the jury. It was their prerogative to sift the evidence and find the facts. This they have done. The testimony is amply sufficient to sustain their verdict.
The appellant excepts to that part of the charge in which the court outlined the verdicts the jury might return under the second count as submitted to them. Under this exception he, in his brief, insists that the court failed to comply with the provisions of G.S.
But an exception to a specific portion of the charge is not sufficient to present this question unless such portion is in itself fatally defective. There must be an assignment of error which points out specifically where in the court failed to charge the law arising on the evidence. S. v. Dilliard,
In this and one other excerpt to which exception is entered, the court prefaced its instruction by "If the State of North Carolina has satisfied *405 you from the evidence . . ." The court had theretofore instructed the jury that the burden was on the State to satisfy them of the defendants' guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, and if it had failed so to do they should return a verdict of not guilty. The instruction was repeated in connection with each statement to which exception is entered. Thus the charge, considered contextually, fails to disclose prejudicial error.
The second count in the bill of indictment charges that defendant, in or near a public highway, with the use or threatened use of firearms, did feloniously attempt to rob one R. S. Britt. G.S.
The primary purpose and intent of the Legislature in enacting Chap. 187, P. L. 1929, now G.S.
To sustain the charge alleged in the indictment it was necessary for the State to, and it did, offer evidence of every element necessary to be proven in order to convict of an attempt to commit highway robbery. On the other hand, evidence of the use of firearms as charged in the indictment was too vague and uncertain to justify the submission of the graver offense. This is evidenced by the verdict of the jury on the first count. Hence, the court properly followed the procedure authorized by G.S.,
The court, it is true, did not define and explain the meaning of "attempt." The word "attempt" is one of common usage and means "Act of attempting; an essay, trial, or endeavor; an undertaking; esp., an unsuccessful effort." Webster's New Int. Dic., 2d Ed.; "An endeavor to accomplish a crime carried beyond mere preparation for it, but falling short of the ultimate design. The elements are (1) intent to commit a crime; (2) affirmative action in pursuance of that intent, but falling short of the crime intended." Callaghan, Cyclopedic Law Dic.; S. v. Parker,
We have carefully examined the other exceptive assignments of error and find in them no cause for disturbing the verdict.
No error.