117 S.E. 803 | N.C. | 1923
The defendant was convicted at March Term, 1923, of Forsyth (766) upon an indictment charging him with carrying a concealed weapon, and upon the charge of having in his possession intoxicating liquors for the purpose of sale. He was convicted of both charges and was sentenced to a term of two years on the public roads on the charge of violating the prohibition law and ninety days on the public roads on the conviction of carrying a concealed weapon, the sentence in the latter case to be concurrent with that in the other. In each case the defendant was not to wear a felons stripes. The defendant made no motion for nonsuit. Appeal. The defendant's exceptions 1 and 2 are to the admission of testimony that one night about 11 o'clock the defendant came to the store of the witness to get something to eat, and while there smelled strongly of whiskey, seemed nervous, and asked how far it was to Walkertown. The defendant's counsel in his brief claimed this evidence was not admissible. It was, however, merely a circumstance in the chain of evidence which was that the next morning after this visit to the store the witness found the car broken down right below the store, and by the time he got close to it he could smell whiskey round there. He found in the car tow sacks soaked with whiskey, and noticed tracks leading from the car around the edge of a tobacco patch. There had been apparently two or more trips going and coming. He traced these tracks *805 about 75 yards from the broken-down car, and there he found 79 half-gallon fruit jars filled with whiskey.
Exceptions 3 and 4 are that the defendant, in his cross-examination, testified that he carried his pistol in a holster near his codefendant Martin's house, and he left it there the morning he was arrested. The solicitor then asked this question: "You went up there Saturday and carried your pistol in a holster under your arm?" Defendant objected. Defendant's objection overruled, and he answered, "Yes." There is nothing in this exception, because when he put himself on the witness stand he was subject to cross-examination. The pistol was discovered covered up with pine leaves about 50 or 75 yards up the road from the liquor. The weapon was not found upon Spencer, and no liquor was found upon him. The provision in the Constitution that no one shall be compelled to give evidence against himself does not apply when the defendant voluntarily puts himself on the stand. Neither was it error for the court to recite that the State contended that according to the defendant's own admission on the stand he went to the house and carried his pistol with him in his holster under his arm. (767)
The defendant excepted because the court charged that if the jury found "beyond a reasonable doubt from the testimony that the defendant had concealed that pistol with the intent to conceal it," he would be guilty. The State is not confined to any one time, but could show that the offense was committed at any time prior to 26 February, the time alleged in the bill, for the State can allege one time and prove another. C.S. 4625, provides that in cases like this where time is not an essence of defense it is not error to omit to state the time in the indictment, or to state it imperfectly, or to state the occurrence as having happened on an impossible day, or a day subsequent to filing the indictment. The evidence as to carrying the pistol at the time the car broke down was very strong evidence that the defendant had it at that time.
In S. v. Lawhorn,
The last assignment of error in that the court inflicted cruel and undue punishment upon this defendant in sentencing him to two years imprisonment for violation of the prohibition law, but it has always been held that when there is no limitation to the punishment for misdemeanor, *806
this matter is in the sound discretion of the court, and two years for this offense is not excessive nor unusual. S. v. Farrington,
No error.
Cited: S. v. Maslin,