24 S.E. 536 | N.C. | 1896
The indictment is for murder. A special venire was ordered and return thereof made. The defendants challenged the array, on the grounds, first, that the sheriff had failed to summon several of the special venire drawn from the jury box; second, that *752
the jury boxes had not been revised by the county commissioners. The court properly declined to hear either one of the grounds of objection. There was no allegation that the sheriff acted corruptly or with partiality in summoning the venire, or that anything had been done affecting the "integrity and fairness of the entire panel." InS. v. Whitt,
The first special venire having been exhausted before the jury had been completed, the court made an order that another special venire of thirty, returnable at once, should be summoned. Upon the return of this venire the defendants objected, on the ground that "as the first venire had been drawn from the jury box, the court did not have the power to order a secondvenire to be summoned by the sheriff from the bystanders." The objection was overruled, and his Honor was right in so doing. The statute (section 1739 of The Code) provides that the judge, in his discretion, has the power, the first venire proving insufficient, to order a further venire to be drawn from the box or summoned by the sheriff. S. v. Brogden,
Exceptions were made by the defendants to the ruling of his Honor admitting the testimony of Jamison Chandley, George Franklin, Hattie Franklin and Baxter Shelton, witnesses for the State. Chandley had testified at considerable length when the defendant's (1185) counsel objected, without specifying what part of the evidence he objected to. He was informed by the solicitor that the object of the testimony was to show a conspiracy between the defendants to assault and beat deceased or to kill him. The witness then *753
continued his testimony at great length, when objection was again made, "because there was no conspiracy charged in the indictment, and the conspiracy ought to be shown first before any circumstances were admissible, and the defendants objected to this whole evidence on that line, as given so far." The witness still proceeded at length, when "defendants objected to all this testimony, if made to show a conspiracy." The witness, in the beginning of his testimony leading up to the meeting of the parties an hour or so before the homicide occurred, stated some immaterial things, of no harm to the defendants, without objection. As he proceeded, he narrated facts and circumstances strongly going to show a conspiracy between the defendants to assault and beat the deceased. The witness was also an eye-witness to the killing, and gave the details with clearness and in an intelligent manner. We have read his testimony, and we fail to see that it was objectionable. If, however, it had contained objectionable matter, the defendants ought to have pointed out from the general mass of the whole evidence the parts that were alleged to be obnoxious. In Barnhardt v. Smith,
Of course, in a large volume of testimony, like that which was brought out in this case, there must creep in some tautology and prolixity about immaterial and irrelevant matters.
The State also introduced one Blankenship as a witness, for the purpose of proving the conspiracy between the defendants, who testified as follows: "He (that is, Rod Shelton, the defendant) did not tell what he did. Rod and I were in jail together, and Rod told me that *754 they had been his destruction and ruin forever. * * * He said that he met Bev Stanton, Jim Stanton and Boss Stanton in the road, somewhere near the church, and he had been up the creek and had started home, and they begged him to come back up the creek and go with them to hunt these boys, Baxter and Everett Shelton, to get into an affray with them, and he said that he turned and went back with them, and that was his destruction and ruin." James Stanton, the other defendant, was not present when this conversation took place. His Honor received this testimony as against both defendants and against their objection. Of course, the testimony was competent (1187) against the defendant Shelton for all purposes. It was not competent against Stanton, the other defendant, it being a declaration made after the homicide, and if the jury had convicted him of murder in the first degree he would be entitled to a new trial. The testimony was harmless, however, because they were convicted of murder in the second degree and by this verdict the jury declared that the conspiracy had not been proved, and there was not more than a scintilla of evidence in favor of Stanton going to show excusable homicide, Stanton himself in his testimony making statements which alone would have justified the jury in convicting him of murder in the second degree, and no witness who saw the killing had a favorable word for him.
Six special instructions were prayed by the defendant. There appear in the case no exceptions to the charge of the judge, nor does it appear that ruling was made on the request for special instructions. The fourth prayer, requesting the court to withdraw the testimony of Blankenship from the jury, was not granted, as we notice it in the recapitulation of the evidence by his Honor to the jury; but, as we have before remarked, the error in admitting that testimony was harmless. On all the other questions involved in the prayer for instructions his Honor's charge was full and in accordance with the law. He submitted the question of excusable homicide to the jury, which we doubt if the prisoner Stanton was entitled to. There is
No Error.
Cited: S. v. Smarr,
(1188)