70 S.E. 1064 | N.C. | 1911
Assault with intent, etc., heard on motion to discharge defendant from imprisonment. The statute upon which the motion was chiefly predicated, Revisal 1905, sec. 3155, is in terms as follows: "When any person who has been committed for treason or felony, plainly and specially expressed in the warrant of commitment, upon his prayer in open court to be brought to his trial, shall not be indicted some time in the next term of the Superior or criminal court ensuing such commitment, the judge of the court, upon notice in open court on the last day of the term, shall set at liberty such prisoner upon bail, unless it appear upon oath that the witnesses for the State could not be produced at the same term; and if such prisoner, upon his prayer as aforesaid, shall not be indicted and tried at the second term of the court, he shall be discharged from his imprisonment." On the hearing it was made to appear: "That the defendant was committed to jail of Durham County by a justice of the peace on 24 September, 1910; that on the last day of said December term of this court, which was 10 December, 1910, the *348
above-entitled action was continued on motion of the State on account of the absence of Mrs. Ella Newton, who at that time was pregnant and was about to be confined, and unable to attend court, which appeared from the certificate of a reputable physician, and because she was the only witness as to the facts of the assault. The defendant, on the last day of said term, having given notice in open court, appeared and demanded that a bill of indictment be found and the defendant tried at the next succeeding term, which is the present term, which began on 9 January, 1911; that if a bill of indictment was not found he would pray for his discharge at the said term. That at the second term, the defendant, in accordance with the said notice, moved the discharge of the defendant, no true bill having been found. The solicitor for the (429) State moved for a continuance on the ground that Mrs. Ella Newton has been confined and unable to leave her home and attend court. She was confined on the 13th day of December, as shown from the evidence herewith sent of her husband J. W. Newton. The court finding as a fact that she was confined on 13 December, 1910, and that she is not sufficiently recovered to be able to attend court at this term and to leave her home," the court entered judgment denying the motion, and defendant excepted and appealed.
The right of a person formally accused of crime to a speedy and impartial trial has been a right guaranteed to Englishmen since Magna Carta and to all peoples basing their system of jurisprudence on the principles of common law. The Charter of Henry III., proclaimed in further assurance of the former and to make it in some respects more specific on this especial subject, concludes as follows: "We will sell to no man; we will not deny or defer to any man either justice or right." Creasy on the English Constitution, 134, 135, and note. The principle is embodied in the Sixth Amendment to the Federal Constitution and in some form is contained in this and most of our State constitutions; all of them, so far as examined. The term "speedy," being a word of indeterminate meaning and permitting, therefore, to some extent, of legislative definition (Ferrallv. Ferrall,
While the ruling of the court below, on authority, would seem to be erroneous, the appeal of the defendant must be dismissed because, in this State, no appeal in ordinary form lies in a criminal prosecution except from a judgment on conviction or on plea of guilt duly entered. Revisal 1905, secs. 3274, 3275. It would lead to interminable delay and render the enforcement of the criminal law well-nigh impossible if an appeal were allowed from every interlocutory order made by a judge or court in the course of a criminal prosecution, or from any order except one in its nature final. Accordingly, it has been uniformly held with us, as stated, that an ordinary statutory appeal will not be entertained except from a judgment on conviction or some judgment in its nature final.S. v. Lyon,
It is suggested and urged that an appeal lies under and by virtue of the first clause of this section, "The Supreme Court shall have jurisdiction to hear, upon appeal, any decision of the court below, upon any matter of law or legal inference," etc.; but the clause in question is only designed and intended to confer general appellate power on the Court, to be exercised under recognized and established forms and writs, or according to methods provided by the Legislature. The statutory appeal, with us, takes the place of the old writ of error, which only issued in review of final judgments (Clark Criminal Procedure, p. 500; Rush v. Steamboat Co.,
Appeal dismissed.
Cited: S. v. Dunn,
(432)