The defendant makes these assertions by his assignments of error:
1. That the trial judge erred in denying the motion of the defendant for a compulsory nonsuit.
2. That the trial judge erred in refusing to grant the defendant a continuance.
3. That the trial judge erred in admitting certain testimony.
4. That the trial judge erred in failing to give the petit jury an instruction on circumstantial evidence.
When the testimony at the trial is interpreted in the light most favorable to the State, it makes out this case :
The Thomasson Plywood Corporation manufactured doors at its plant in the City of Fayetteville. Rogers was foreman of its night shift. On 1 August, 1951, the defendant and Rogers entered into an arrangement whereby Rogers agreed to steal doors from the Thomasson Plywood Corporation and place them upon the premises of the defendant on the Lum-berton Road, and whereby the defendant agreed to pay Rogers $3.00 for each stolen door left by him at such place. Between 1 August, 1951, and 29 January, 1952, Rogers stole some 700 doors worth from “$7.00 to $11.00” apiece from the Thomasson Plywood Corporation, and caused Reaves, Smiley and Smith, who were his subordinates, to remove them by motor truck under the cover of darkness from the plant of the Thomasson Plywood Corporation in the City of Fayetteville to the premises of the defendant on the Lumberton Road. The defendant accepted these stolen doors, and paid Rogers the stipulated price for them in cash. On 29 January, 1952, peace officers of Cumberland County found 182 of the stolen doors on the defendant’s premises.
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Since the State’s evidence suffices to show an agreement between the defendant and Rogers to take by larceny doors belonging to the Thomas-son Plywood Corporation, it is ample to withstand an involuntary nonsuit on the first count of the indictment.
S. v. Dean,
Under G.S. 14-72 as amended, the larceny of property of the value of more than one hundred dollars is a felony.
S. v. Weinstein,
The distinction between principals and accessories is made only in felonies. All persons who participate in treason or in misdemeanors, whether present or absent, are indictable and punishable as principals. 22 O.J.S., Criminal Law, section 81. The rule governing treason and misdemeanors was also applied to petit larceny at common law, although it was a felony. Blackstone: Commentaries on the Laws of England, Book 4, 36; Brill: Cyclopedia of Criminal Law, section 219. In North Carolina all simple larceny, whether felonious or nonfelonious, has been made petit larceny by the ancient statute now codified as G.S. 14-70. As a consequence of this enactment, there can be no accessories to larceny in North Carolina, and the common law rule that all persons who participate in a petit larceny, whether present or absent, are indictable and punishable as principals is established law in North Carolina.
S. v. Whitehurst,
The motion of the defendant for a continuance because of the absence of one of his attorneys was addressed to the sound discretion of the trial judge. There is no basis for any contention that the trial judge abused his discretion or jeopardized any right of the defendant in denying the motion.
S. v. Birchfield,
The defendant, Reaves and Smith were jointly tried. The trial judge allowed the State to present in evidence as against Reeves and Smith extrajudicial confessions made by them. The receipt of these confessions cannot be held for error as to the defendant. This is true because the trial judge instructed, the jury with particularity both at the time of their admission and during the course of the charge that the confessions were not evidence against the defendant, and that they were not to be considered by the jury in any way in determining the charges against him.
S. v. Flynn,
Since the State’s case was based for the most part on direct evidence sufficient in itself to warrant conviction, the trial judge did not err in failing to give the jury specific instructions on circumstantial evidence.
S. v. Hicks,
For the reasons given, the trial and judgment will be upheld.
No error.
