18 N.C. App. 321 | N.C. Ct. App. | 1973
Defendant was charged and convicted of (1) misdemeanor escape, and (2) felonious assault with a firearm upon a law-enforcement officer while such officer was in the performance of his duties.
Defendant and two others were locked in the jail .in Wayne County. The jailer and a deputy sheriff went to the cellbloek to carry one of the men back to court for trial. When the jailer opened the cell door, one of defendant’s cellmates hit the jailer twice with his fist, and one threw salt in the deputy sheriff’s eyes. One of the men than ran from the cell and the jailer pursued him, but the inmate succeeded in climbing out the kitchen window of the jail and getting away. The defendant jumped on the deputy sheriff and succeeded in taking his gun away from him. Later, he gave the gun back and surrendered without leaving the building.
The defendant seems to argue that the escape charge should have been nonsuited because there is no evidence that he actually escaped; and, that if he were convicted on the theory of aiding and abetting the other inmate to escape, that there was no 'showing that the other inmate was legally confined. The court instructed the jury that it could presume the lawful confinement of the other inmate from the fact of his presence in the jail cell. This, obviously, is error.
Nevertheless, there was sufficient evidence to justify submitting the case to the jury in the felony assault case. We hold that the court’s instructions to the jury in the felony assault
Therefore, in accordance with the holding of our Supreme Court, error in the court’s instructions to the jury in the escape case is rendered nonprejudicial because the two year sentence imposed in the escape case runs concurrently with the two year sentence imposed in the assault case. State v. Summrell, 282 N.C. 157, 192 S.E. 2d 569.
No error.