63 S.E. 76 | N.C. | 1908
Jesse Fairchild, a witness for the State, testifying to the occurrence, said: "On the night of 13 November, 1907, between 11 and 12 o'clock, I was waked up by the roar of guns; shots were being rapidly *386 fired into the house. There were some forty or fifty shots fired. They were shooting through the window toward the bed occupied by W. A. Fairchild. The room was occupied by W. A. Fairchild, Mrs. Fairchild, Mrs. Walker, grandmother of the defendant, and Jesse Fairchild.
"I got up, crawled to the bureau in the room; just as I put my hand in the drawer to get some shells to load my gun I was shot through the arm by a pistol ball. (Witness produced the ball, No. 38.) While the shooting was going on Mrs. Walker says `Grover, get away from here.' The firing up to that time had been through the window toward the bed occupied by W. A. Fairchild, the shots taking effect in the foot and head of the bed. After Mrs. Walker spoke to them they began firing toward the bed occupied by Mrs. Walker. The shots were all fired very rapidly and too fast, in my opinion, to have been fired by one person. The firing continued for something like 15 minutes. The pistol was fired 4 or 5 times. The gun fired about 50 times; shots taking effect in the house and the windows. I saw some one walk up to the window whom I took to be Grover Walker. I raised my gun to fire; he saw me and raised his. I fired just a little first, then his gun fired; he dropped his head and walked around the chimney. Another shot was fired from the outside, then the firing ceased. I do not know whether that shot hit the house or not; I did not hear it hit. Next morning I went out; I traced blood from the window around the chimney to a pile of rock. There I found that the man had fallen over the rock pile. From the rock pile I traced (529) blood to a pile of sticks; there was blood on the sticks and every evidence that indicated that he had fallen there. I traced blood on to a thorn bush; evidence that he had run into the bush. From the bush I traced him to the fence, where the path crosses leading to the home of Jim Walker, father of the defendant. I saw no traces of blood beyond the fence."
W. A. Fairchild, for the State, gave substantially the same account; stating, further, that about a month before the occurrence, in hunting the woods for bees, he had found defendant, Grover Walker, working in a blockade distillery, and reported it; and three or four days before, said defendant passed witness's home, cursed witness and said he would kill him. He further testified that some forty or fifty shots were fired in rapid succession from a shotgun and pistol, and too close together to have been fired by one person; and further, that next morning they found in the yard two piles of empty shotgun shells No. 12, about two feet apart, and also four or five empty pistol shells near the same place.
Jimmie Poach, for the State, testified: "On the night of 13 November, I was at the house of Jim Walker. Jim Walker came into the room where I was sleeping, waked me up, told me that Grover Walker was very badly shot, between 12 and 1 o'clock. I went into the room, found *387 Grover there with one eye shot out, several shots in his face and in his shoulder."
John Palier testified: "I am a merchant living in Caldwell County. On the evening of 13 November, Lone Walker came to my store and bought 4 boxes of shotgun shells; two No. 12 and two No. 16. He asked me to go down to his home. He lived about one-fourth of a mile from my store and about six or seven miles from W. A. Fairchild. I went down to his home, found Grover Walker there, saw Grover have pistol No. 38. I left them both there together between 8 and 9 o'clock. Lone Walker, a short time before this, had been suffering with a carbuncle on his neck and had had a doctor with him." (530)
The doctor testified, that on the following day he was called in to see defendant, Grover Walker, and found one eye shot out. It further appeared that defendants were brothers.
Grover Walker did not resist verdict. The defendant, Lone Walker, requested the court to charge that there was not sufficient evidence to warrant a verdict against him. Declined, and defendant, Lone Walker, excepted. Verdict of guilty against both defendants. Judgment, and defendant Lone Walker excepted and appealed.
The controlling principle on a question of this character is very well stated by Merrimon, J., in S. v. White,
"It is well settled law, that the court must decide what is evidence, and whether there is any evidence to be submitted to the jury pertinent to an issue submitted to them. It is as well settled that if there is evidence to be submitted the jury must determine its weight and effect. This, however, does not imply that the court must submit a scintilla — very slight evidence; on the contrary, it must be such as, in the judgment of the court, would reasonably warrant the jury finding a verdict upon the issue submitted, affirmatively or negatively, accordingly as they might view it in one light or another, and give it more or less weight, or none at all. In a case like the present one, the evidence ought to be such as if the whole were taken together and substantially as true, the jury might reasonably find the defendant guilty.
"A single isolated fact or circumstance might be no evidence, not even a scintilla; two, three or more, taken together, might not make evidence in the eye of the law, but a multitude of slight facts and circumstances, taken together as true, might become (make) evidence that would warrant a jury in finding a verdict of guilty in (531) *388 cases of the most serious moment. The court will be the judge as to when such a combination of facts and circumstances reveal the dignity of evidence, and it must judge of the pertinency and relevancy of the facts and circumstances going to make up such evidence. The court cannot, however, decide that they are true or false; this is for the jury; but it must decide that, all together, they make some evidence to be submitted to the jury; and they must be such, in a case like the present, as would, if the jury believed the same, reasonably warrant them in finding a verdict of guilty."
Substantially the same statement has been announced and upheld in other decisions of this Court. S. v. Carmon,
Under the decisions referred to, and others of like import, these facts, we think, rise to the dignity of evidence, justifying the conclusion that Lone Walker was the person who assisted his brother on the occasion in question, and upholding the ruling of the court in submitting the question of his guilt or innocence to the jury. The testimony tending to support the position is stronger than in many of the cases where a verdict of guilty has been upheld.
No error.
Cited: Cabe v. R. R.,
(533)