130 S.E. 848 | N.C. | 1925
The indictment was as follows:
The jurors for the State, upon their oath, present: That C. L. Sauls, late of the county of Wilson, on the _______ day of October, in the year of our Lord 1923, with force and arms at and in the county aforesaid, feloniously and incestuously did have intercourse with Hattie Sauls, said C. L. Sauls being the father of said Hattie Sauls, against the form of the statute in such case made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the State.
The defendant was convicted and from the judgment pronounced he appealed, assigning errors which are set out in the opinion.
Though punishable by the ecclesiastical courts of England as an offense against good morals, incest was not indictable at common law. It was made a felony in this State by the act of 1879. C. S., 4337, 4338; S. v. Keesler,
In our criminal procedure it is provided that every indictment shall be sufficient in form for all intents and purpose if it express the charge against the defendant in a plain, intelligible, and explicit manner, and that it shall not be quashed by reason of any informality or refinement if sufficient matter appear therein to enable the court to proceed to judgment. C. S., 4623. The indictment, construed in the light of this statute, need not charge carnal intercourse in express words; it is sufficient if other language of equivalent import is used. In preparing the bill the draftsman used equivalent language. Webster defines incest as "the crime of cohabitation or sexual commerce between persons related within the degrees wherein marriage is prohibited by law," and "incestuous" as "guilty of incest." Worcester and The Century Dictionary give substantially the same definition. Incestuous intercourse is *812
essentially carnal intercourse. While the precise question has not been decided here, indictments charging "incestuous intercourse" have been sustained in other states. S. v. Learned, 85 Pac. (Kan.), 293; Hintz v.State, 17 N.W. (Wis.), 639; Mercer v. State, 92 So. (Fla.), 535; S. v.Morgan, 176 N.W. (S. D.), 35; S. v. Dana, 10 At. (Vt.), 727; Baker v.State,
The jury were instructed to "scrutinize the evidence of the defendant and that of all his close relatives before accepting it as true," and the defendant excepted because the instruction was not extended and applied to all interested witnesses. The exception must be overruled. In S. v. O'Neal,
There is another exception which demands consideration. The defendant was arrested on 15 May, 1925, at 9:30 a. m., on a warrant charging him with an assault on a female person (C. S., 4215); and at one o'clock on the same day the grand jury returned three indictments against him, two of them charging an assault, the other charging incest. The defendant, having been brought into court, stated that he had not been able to secure and confer with counsel and was not ready for trial; and the judge said he would continue the case either to the night session or until the next morning. The defendant replied that he would try to get ready for trial at the night session. The court convened at 7:30 p. m. and the defendant filed an affidavit and made a motion for continuance, alleging that immediately upon his arrest in the morning he had been confined in jail, had not been informed of the nature of the charge against him until one o'clock, had not been able to confer with counsel at all until 4:30 p. m. and then not satisfactorily, and that certain witnesses were necessary for his defense. The motion was denied and an exception was duly entered.
It is earnestly insisted by the defendant that he was denied his constitutional rights (Art. I, secs. 11, 17) and in any event that the refusal to grant his motion was such an abuse of discretion as entitles him to a new trial.
We are unable to see in what respect the defendant's constitutional rights were denied him unless by the judge's refusal to grant the continuance. The exception, then, finally depends on the question whether *813 there was an abuse of discretion, and that is really the position that was taken on the argument.
In Armstrong v. Wright,
It was subsequently held in a number of decisions that the refusal to continue a case rests in the judge's discretion upon matters of fact which this Court has no power to review. S. v. Duncan,
In other cases it is held that while the exercise of discretion must be judicial and not arbitrary it is not subject to review unless "the circumstances prove beyond doubt hardship and injustice" (Moore v. Dickson,supra); or "palpable abuse" (McCurry v. McCurry,
One reason for Mr. Justice Walker's statement that the trial judge's discretion is "practically unlimited" may be found in the following language of Chief Justice Ruffin: "It is the province of the court in which the trial takes place to judge of the truth or sufficiency of the causes assigned for a motion for a continuance or removal of a trial. It must be so; else it would be in the power of a prisoner to postpone a conviction indefinitely, however clear his guilt, by making affidavits with the requisite matter on the face of them."
The modern application of the rule has thus been summarized: When the discretion of the trial judge is exercised with a reasonable degree of judicial acumen and fairness, it is one which the higher courts are loth to review or to disturb. The mere fact that the case was disposed of with unusual dispatch is not an ear mark of error. The presiding judge must be to a certain extent free to secure a speedy and expeditions trial, when such speed and expedition are not inconsistent with fairness. While it is not necessary, to constitute abuse, that the court shall act wickedly or with intentional unfairness, it is essential to show the commission of a clear or palpable error, without the correction of which manifest injustice will be done. Familiar with all the attendant circumstances the judge has the best opportunity of forming a correct opinion upon the case presented and has the benefit of a presumption in favor of his action. 16 C. J., 452, sec. 822 (2).
So far as we may determine from the record an order of continuance would not have been subject to legitimate criticism, but we have not discovered such an abuse of discretion as results in a denial of the due process of law.
No error. *815