187 S.E. 802 | N.C. | 1936
This is a criminal action in which the defendant was tried on four indictments, which were consolidated by order of the trial court for purposes of trial. C. S., 4622.
The defendant was convicted of the crime charged in each indictment, and appealed from the judgments on three of said convictions to the Supreme Court, assigning errors on the trial. The defendant's motions that each of the indictments be quashed, and that judgment on each of the convictions be arrested, on the ground that the indictments were fatally defective, for that it did not appear by an endorsement of the foreman of the grand jury that any person whose name appeared on the back of the bill of indictment *585 as a witness for the State, had been sworn and had testified before the grand jury, were properly denied.
The absence of such endorsement was not sufficient to overcome the presumption of the validity of the indictment arising from its return by the grand jury as a "true bill." S. v. Lanier,
Defendant's assignments of error based upon exceptions to the charge of the court to the jury cannot be sustained. There was no error in the charge. See S. v. Lancaster,
No error.