174 S.E. 411 | N.C. | 1934
Criminal prosecution tried upon indictment charging the defendants, Mike Stefanoff and R. E. Black, and two others, in one count, with conspiracy to rob the Merchants and Farmers Bank of Taylorsville, and, in a second count, with the murder of T. C. Barnes committed in the attempted perpetration of said robbery.
Verdict as to the two defendants on trial: Guilty of murder in the first degree (as shown by return to writ of certiorari).
Judgment as to each defendant on trial: Death by electrocution.
The prisoners appeal, assigning errors. *444 The record discloses that on Thursday, 27 July, 1933, the defendants, Mike Stefanoff and R. E. Black, and two others not yet taken, planned to rob the Merchants and Farmers Bank of Taylorsville. The conspiracy took place at the home of Mike Stefanoff in North Wilkesboro. The four conspirators drove to Taylorsville the next day, Friday, in a Chevrolet sedan, looked over the situation, but presently desisted from their purpose upon seeing a number of policemen on the street. They returned again the following morning, Saturday, in the same automobile, and entered the bank, not together but one at a time, so as to give the appearance that they were strangers. Stefanoff asked the cashier, T. C. Barnes, to change a quarter, and as the latter turned to get the change, two of the bandits presented their guns, and, in the melee and firing which ensued, they shot the cashier to death.
Both of the defendants, after apprehension and incarceration, confessed their part in the attempted robbery and homicide. The admission of these confessions, made, as they were, while the defendants were under arrest, forms the basis of a number of exceptions. It is elementary that a voluntary confession is admissible in evidence against the one making it; an involuntary confession is not. A confession is voluntary in law when — and only when — it was in fact voluntarily made. S. v. Jones,
Where there is no duress, threat or inducement, and the court found there was none here, the fact that the defendants were under arrest at the time the confessions were made, does not ipso facto render them incompetent. S. v. Newsome,
The competency of the confessions was a matter for the judge. S. v.Whitener,
The defendant, Mike Stefanoff, interposed the further defense of mental irresponsibility or insanity. S. v. Keaton,
The case was tried upon the theory that if a conspiracy were formed to rob the bank, and a murder committed by any one or more of the conspirators in the attempted perpetration of the robbery, each and all of them would be guilty of the murder. This is a correct principle of law. S. v. Bell,
A searching investigation of the record leaves us with the impression that it is free from reversible error. The verdict and judgment will be upheld.
No error.