97 S.E. 496 | N.C. | 1918
A quantity of goods was stolen from the Gilmer Bros. Company, of Winston-Salem, during the early spring of this year. Among the porters who worked at the store were Jim Houser and Hurley Houser, who lived in Yadkinville. The stealing had been going on for some months. Mr. Gilmer, the secretary-treasurer of the company, went with the officers to Yadkinville a Sunday later, provided themselves with search warrants, and found goods of the value of $500 or $600 which Mr. Gilmer identified as the property of his company. Among other houses in which they found a quantity of goods was that of Sant Houser, the brother of Jim, the father of Hurley and the father-in-law of the defendant, Rude Wilson. The defendant himself lived in a small one-room house in the same yard and about 40 feet from the house of Sant. In the defendant's house they found $50 or $60 worth of goods which Mr. Gilmer identified as coming from the store of his company. Rube Wilson's defense was that these goods were given to his wife by her brother, Hurley Houser, in his absence, and he had no reason to suspect that they were stolen, or that they were given to her by her brother.
The following circumstances were relied upon by the State as showing the guilty knowledge of the defendant:
1. When told by the witness, Thompson, that if he knew of any of the *753 goods being in his house, he had better tell about it and not conceal it, he replied that he would not try to conceal any stolen goods, but if he knew of any, he would tell the officers at once. He then turned off and went in his house.
2. Some ten or fifteen minutes afterwards the officers found most of the goods he is charged with receiving in the attic of his house, while he had concealed upon his person a silk shirtwaist identified by Mr. Gilmer as the property of his company.
3. The defendant's admission that he placed the goods in the attic because he wanted to hide them and he did not want to get in trouble.
All these and other circumstances in the case were submitted to the jury, and they found the defendant guilty of receiving the stolen goods.
Verdict of guilty, and judgment thereon. Defendant appealed.
After stating the case: The defendant's counsel, in their brief, do not insist on their exception to the refusal of the court to nonsuit the State upon the evidence. This exception, then, will be taken as waived; but there being some evidence of guilt, the refusal to nonsuit was proper. S. v.Carlson,
We will now consider the assignments of error, in the order of their statement in the record:
1. The defendant objected to the following testimony of the witness, Thompson: "Rube denied any knowledge of this property until we caught the other parties, and Hurley Houser said he got the goods at Gilmer Bros. Company and turned over a good deal of it to his folks. It was in Winston that Hurley said that. Hurley said that he had given the coat to Rube's little boy and the waist to Rube's wife — that is the waist we got out from under Rube's jacket. Rube acknowledged that was the way it come. My recollection is that Rube said that he threw these articles up in the attic because he did not want to get in trouble, to hide them while we were searching Sant's house." The ground of objection was that this, though said in defendant's presence, did not call for a reply from defendant, and so could not be taken as an admission, he standing silent. This is a misapprehension of what occurred. The defendant did not remain silent, as the last clause quoted above shows: "Rube acknowledged that was the way it come." The latter part of the testimony was clearly competent, and even if the first part of it is incompetent, the objection must fail, as it was taken to the whole of it. S. v. Ledford,
2. The defendant's mother was called as a witness, after it appeared from the evidence that a quantity of the stolen goods were found in her house. She was asked by defendant's counsel:
"Q. Did you see him give his wife anything? Did you see him bring anything else there?" (Objection by the State; objection sustained; defendant excepts.)
The defendant offered to show that the goods found at his house were given to his wife by her brother, Hurley Houser, in his absence. The exclusion of this evidence were harmless. It was admitted by both sides that the stolen goods were carried to the defendant's house by Hurley Houser. It also was immaterial, because, though some of the goods may have been delivered to his wife in his absence, if he received them on his return, knowing them to have been stolen, it would have made him just as guilty as though he had received them originally, as there was evidence from which the jury could have found that defendant and his wife were acting together under a previous arrangement, although the goods were actually delivered to her in his absence. The evidence was that they were carried there for the family, defendant being the head of the household. The theory of the State was that he assumed control over the property, whether delivered to his wife in his absence or not, hid it, denied having it, and otherwise showed guilty knowledge. S. v. Stroud,
3. As to the Scienter. The charge of the court must be read as a whole (S. v. Exum,
The other exceptions are either formal or without any merit.
No error.