92 S.E. 499 | N.C. | 1917
The prisoner was indicted with one Andy Bates for the murder of George Bates, and was convicted of manslaughter, the other defendant being acquitted. The prisoner, John Killian, appealed. When the State closed its testimony and rested its case, the prisoner, John Killian, moved that a nonsuit be entered under the statute, Gregory's Supplement, sec. 3265a. This the court refused to do, and the prisoner excepted. It is contended that when this motion was made there was no evidence against the prisoner, John Killian, and if this be correct, and he had rested his case there, we would have sustained his motion and reversed the lower court. He was not content to stop and risk his case upon the State's testimony, but himself introduced *852 witnesses, and from their testimony and other testimony in the case we are of the opinion that there was some evidence of his guilty. It is perfectly clear that the deceased was killed either by Andy Bates, his father, or the prisoner, John Killian. The former testified that he did not cut his son, and there was some evidence tending to show that a knife was found near or at the place where the homicide was committed which corresponded somewhat with one that John Killian had. There was other evidence tending to connect him with the act of killing, but it is needless to review all of it, as, if there was any at all, the motion was properly denied.
But the prisoner does not rely so much upon the absence of proof as to his guilt as he does upon the position taken by him in argument and his brief, that notwithstanding the fact that he introduced evidence after moving for a nonsuit when the State rested, he is entitled to have his motion considered upon the evidence as it was at that time, and that he did not waive his motion, or the exception to its denial by the court, by introducing evidence in his own behalf, even if the latter does tend to establish his guilt. We cannot accept this construction of the statute. The latter provides that the prisoner, at the close of the State's evidence, when it has rested its case, may move to dismiss or for judgment of nonsuit, and if the motion is allowed it shall have the force and effect of an acquittal, but if it is refused, the prisoner may except, and if he introduces no evidence, the case shall be submitted on the evidence introduced by the State, and he shall have the benefit of his exception on appeal to this Court. But he shall not be prevented from introducing evidence after his motion has been overruled, and may again move for judgment of nonsuit after all the evidence has been concluded, and if this motion is also refused, upon consideration of all the evidence, he may except, and if convicted, he shall have the benefit of his exception on appeal, and the motion, if allowed at the time, or in this Court on appeal, shall in all cases have the force and effect of a verdict of (794) "Not guilty." There would seem to be no doubt as to the meaning of this statute. The prisoner's counsel argued that it was not like the "Hinsdale Act" (Laws 1897, ch. 109; Laws 1899, ch. 131; Laws, 1901, ch. 594; Revisal of 1905, sec. 539), because that act provides expressly that if the defendant introduces evidence, he waives any previous exception to the refusal of his motion to nonsuit upon the plaintiff's evidence; but while the phraseology is different, the meaning of the two acts is substantially the same. It will be noted that the second motion, or renewal of the first, must rest upon a consideration of all the evidence in the case. This plainly excludes the idea that the State's evidence first introduced may be considered alone or separate from the entire mass. The object of the statute in permitting the prisoner to *853
introduce evidence after moving for a nonsuit was to preserve to him a right which did not exist before the statute was passed. The presentChief Justice said in Prevatt v. Harrelson, quoting from Means v. R. R.,
The objection to the charge is without real merit. The judge, in opening his charge, told the jury that the burden of proof was upon the State, and that they must be satisfied of the guilt of the prisoner beyond a reasonable doubt before they could convict him. It was not necessary that he should repeat this rule of law every time he referred to any finding from the evidence, as he had sufficiently instructed them as to the burden and the quantum of proof, and this applied to his charge throughout. We should construe the charge as a whole. McCurry v. Purgason, *854
There are some objections to evidence, but they are not at all tenable. It is competent, of course, to impeach one witness by another if evidence is confined to his general character, but you cannot descend into particulars or show specific acts of wrong doing. S. v. Holly,
Chief Justice Person said in S. v. Perkins, supra: "It is settled that a witness who swears to the general bad character of another witness on the other side may, upon cross-examination, be asked to name the individuals whom he heard speak disparagingly of the witness, and what was said. This is everyday practice, and the exception was taken under a misapprehension as to the difference between an examination in Chief and a cross-examination, when the party endeavoring to sustain the witness, whose general character is attacked, may go into particulars as to persons and what they said".
But if there was any error committed in respect to evidence, it was harmless, as the bad character of the participants in this tragedy was more than fairly well established. It was a "sorry lot" and their debauchery and nocturnal orgies culminated, as might have been expected, in this midnight tragedy, the perpetrator being, no doubt, inflamed by jealousy, of which there was some evidence. The father may have slain his son, but the jury might well have inferred from the circumstances, apart from the father's positive denial of his guilt, that the prisoners, under the guise of a peace-maker, had taken advantage of the situation and dealt the fatal stab. But in any view it was for the jury to say what was the truth of the matter.
The prisoner complaints that the sentence is illegal and excessive. The court entered the following judgment: "It appearing to the satisfaction of the court that there is good reason to believe that the safe custody of the defendant will be imperiled by working him on the roads, and good reason to fear that a sentence to the roads will possibly (797) lead to his escape, it is adjudged that the defendant, John Killian, be imprisoned in the State Prison for a term of three years, to wear a felon's stripes," the prisoner excepted.
Revisal, sec. 3632, provides: "If any person shall commit the crime of manslaughter, he shall be punished by imprisonment in the county jail or State's Prison not less than four months nor more than twenty years." Public Laws 1909, ch. 80, sec. 6, declares: "That all male persons confined in the county jail, either under a final sentence of the courts of the State of North Carolina or the police or city court of the city of Asheville, for crime or imprisonment or nonpayment of fines and costs, or under final judgment in cases of bastardy or under the vagrant *856
acts, and all persons sentenced from said county to prison for a term of less than ten years, shall be worked upon said public roads under the provisions of this act." But the later act was not intended to take away the discretion of the judge, under section 3632 of the Revisal, to sentence to the State's Prison instead of the jail of the county. It will be noted that the act of 1909, ch. 80, sec. 6, refers to persons imprisoned in the county jail for certain offenses, and in order to enlarge the number of cases where the prisoners might be worked on the roads, the operation of the act in this respect was extended to all crimes where the persons convicted were sentenced to a term of less than ten years in prison, meaning the county jail. It surely was not the purpose to repeal the general law allowing the judge to impose alternative punishment by confinement at hard labor in the penitentiary. In order to reach the conclusion that such was the intention, the language should be clear and explicit to that effect. The judge might have sentenced the convict to the county jail, and in that event the local statute would have applied, but he elected to imprison him in the State's penitentiary for the reason assigned by him, and this was a proper and legal sentence. We must ascertain the legislative intent from a consideration of both statutes and the inherent nature of the subject deal with, including the mischief proposed to be remedied or the new remedy to be applied. Abernethy v. Comrs,
We find no error in the record, after a careful examination of it.
No error.
Cited: S. v. Orr,