29 S.E.2d 751 | N.C. | 1944
Criminal prosecution upon a warrant charging defendants with fornication and adultery.
The evidence tends to show that Sam Miller is of Negro blood, that he and Josephine Shook, a woman of white blood, entered into a purported marriage and cohabited as man and wife in Catawba County, North Carolina.
There was a verdict of guilty as to the defendant Sam Miller. From judgment imposing prison sentence, which was suspended upon certain conditions, defendant Miller appeals.
Prior to the argument of this case, it was agreed by counsel for the appellant and the Attorney-General for the State that on this appeal the Court should consider the following question only, to wit: Was the evidence sufficient to take the case to the jury on the question as to whether or not Sam Miller is of Negro blood, within the prohibited degree as provided in the Constitution of North Carolina, Art. XIV, sec. 8, and the statute passed pursuant thereto, G.S.,
It was admitted at the outset of the trial below by counsel representing the defendants, that defendants entered into a marriage in South Carolina and returned to Catawba County, North Carolina, where they lived together and did bed and cohabit with one another as man and wife; and *229 it was further admitted that if the defendant Sam Miller is of Negro blood within the prohibited degree, that said marriage is null and void.
The section of the Constitution and the statute referred to above, provide in substance, that all marriages between a white person and a Negro or between a white person and a person of Negro descent to the third generation, inclusive, shall be void. Therefore, every person who has one-eighth Negro blood in his veins is within the prohibited degree within the meaning of the Constitution and the statute. Ferrall v. Ferrall,
There is some evidence tending to show that Henry Hewitt, a Negro, was the father of the defendant Sam Miller. There is also evidence tending to show that the defendant Sam Miller is a Negro within the prohibited degree, and the jury by its verdict so found.
Our Legislature has not prescribed an exclusive mode or manner in which, in cases of this character, the percentage of Negro blood must be ascertained. S. v. Watters,
In the case of S. v. Chavers,
Another method was approved in Hare v. Board of Education,
While in the case of Ferrall v. Ferrall, supra, where there was no question of admixture of white and Negro blood, save and except as to the one ancestor, the Court said: "Where all other persons whose race and blood affected the question were white, in order to bring a marriage within the prohibited degree, one of the ancestors of the generation stated must have been of pure Negro blood."
In the instant case there is expert testimony of Dr. Fred Long, who was the attending physician when the defendant Sam Miller was born. Dr. Long testified substantially as follows: He had known the defendant all his life, that when the defendant was born he had certain definite physical characteristics of the colored race. That in his opinion he was of mixed blood. His mother is of the whole white blood. "I knew these Negroes and I did not consider his grandmother a full Negro . . . . I think he is . . . about 3/8 Negro; I think his people on the other side had some white blood in them."
There was evidence by many witnesses for the State to the effect that the reputation of the defendant Sam Miller in the community in which he lives is that he is of the colored race. This evidence was competent. 20 Am. Jur., Evidence, sec. 475, p. 416. Medlin v. Board of Education,
We think the evidence offered by the State is sufficient to sustain the verdict of the jury, and we so hold.
In the trial below, there is
No error.