16 S.E.2d 399 | N.C. | 1941
The defendant was charged with the murder of one Will Matthews. The jury returned verdict of guilty of murder in second degree, and from judgment imposing prison sentence, defendant appealed. The evidence for the State tended to show that the defendant shot and killed the deceased without provocation. Defendant's evidence tended to show some elements of self-defense, or, at least, mitigation. He testified that the deceased began the shooting, and that he thereupon fired three shots with fatal result.
Under a charge free from error the jury rejected the defendant's plea of self-defense, and convicted him of murder in the second degree. The evidence fully warranted the verdict.
Defendant's assignments of error relate to the rulings of the court on the admission of testimony. We have examined each of the defendant's exceptions with care, and reach the conclusion that none of them can be sustained. While some of the testimony was elicited in response to leading questions, the evidence was competent and the ruling of the trial judge was a matter of discretion. S. v. Buck,
Exception to the ruling of the court in sustaining proffered testimony of defendant as to his conversations with others relating to the deceased prior to the homicide is without substantial merit.
The dying declaration of the deceased was properly admitted in evidence.S. v. Whitson,
In the trial we find
No error.