182 S.E. 338 | N.C. | 1935
The State's evidence tends to show that some of the defendants were engaged in a systematic looting of manufactured articles from one of the plants of the Cannon Mills Company at Kannapolis, N.C. and disposing of such stolen articles to the remaining defendants and others for gain.
The defendant John Allman was convicted on the first count of the larceny of said goods and chattels, while the defendants A. W. Whitley and R. M. Cook were convicted on the second count of receiving stolen goods knowing them to have been stolen. None of the remaining five defendants appealed. They were either acquitted, convicted, or entered pleas of guilty or nolo contendere.
Judgment as to A. W. Whitley: Imprisonment in the State's Prison for not less than 3 nor more than 5 years.
Judgment as to John Allman: Imprisonment in the State's Prison for not less than 5 nor more than 7 years.
Judgment as to R. M. Cook: Imprisonment in the State's Prison for not less than 2 nor more than 3 years.
The three named defendants filed separate appeals, though tried together, each assigning errors. Outside of the technical questions, presently to be considered, the case upon trial narrowed itself principally to issues of fact determinable alone by the jury.
Under the motion to nonsuit, the defendants say the record discloses a fatal variance between the indictment and the proof, in that the ownership of the property is laid in "Cannon Mills Company," whereas the State's evidence tends to show the stolen goods to be the property of "Cannon Mills." S. v. Harris,
The next position taken by the defendants is, that the second count in the bill of indictment is fatally defective, in that the names of the defendants are not repeated in charging the scienter. S. v. McCollum,
Speaking to the subject in S. v. Shade,
The point is also made by the defendant Cook that the evidence tends to show embezzlement, rather than larceny, on the part of John Allman, he being foreman of the waste-house of the Cannon Mills, and, therefore, it is contended, the charge of receiving must fail. In reply to this suggestion, it is sufficient to say the fact that Allman was employed by the Cannon Mills Company as foreman of the waste-house did not change his theft of the goods from larceny to embezzlement. The goods were not taken from the waste-house. They were sometimes concealed in the waste-house at night after they had been purloined elsewhere. But Allman at no time had lawful possession of the property.
The final objection taken by the defendants is to the order of the court, made out of term and out of the county and at the time the cases were settled on appeal, directing the clerk to correct his entry as to the verdict against the defendants Whitley and Cook. It seems that the entry *664
made at the trial was simply "guilty of receiving as to R. M. Cook, A. W. Whitley," whereas the verdict as returned by the jury was "guilty of receiving stolen goods knowing them to have been stolen as to R. M. Cook, A. W. Whitley." The objection is not to the substance of the change (S. v.Brown,
If the matter were material we would be disposed to sustain the objection, for it has been the uniform holding in this jurisdiction that, except by consent, or unless otherwise authorized, a judge of the Superior Court, even in his own district, has no authority to hear a cause, or to make an order substantially affecting the rights of the parties, outside the county in which the action is pending. Bisanar v. Suttlemyre,
It is the rule with us, both in civil and criminal actions, that a verdict may be given significance and correctly interpreted by reference to the pleadings, the facts in evidence, admissions of the parties, and the charge of the court. S. v. Snipes,
Nothing was said in S. v. Lassiter, ante, 251; S. v. Barbee,
The record is free from reversible error; hence the verdict and judgments must be upheld.
No error.