55 S.E. 797 | N.C. | 1906
We have carefully examined the testimony in this case and find it sufficient to sustain the conviction of the defendant, though no objection was distinctly made that there was no evidence to warrant the verdict. There are seven errors assigned as having been committed in the rulings of the Court at the trial, and they will be considered in their order.
The defendant objected to C. C. Townsend as a juror, upon the ground that he had formed and expressed the opinion that the defendant is guilty. The Court, after hearing the evidence bearing upon this objection, found that the juror was indifferent, and overruled it. The juror was sworn and served. We do not see how this ruling can now be made the subject of an exception. The juror stated that notwithstanding he had formed and expressed an opinion that the defendant (697) is guilty, he was yet satisfied that he could decide fairly and impartially as between the State and the defendant, and the Court found upon the evidence that he was indifferent. The findings *545
of fact, as to indifferency, have been held not to be reviewable in this Court. S. v. Ellington,
The defendant next objected to the testimony of the witness W. T. Ausley, who stated that he was with Beacham after he was shot by the defendant, and that he told the witness that he was dying. There was other sufficient evidence tending to show that Beacham knew that he was in extremis. He died within two hours after the witness had the conversation with him to which the defendant objected. The Court permitted Ausley to testify that Beacham said to him: "I do not know what my wife and children will do. I begged Frank (Bohanon) to go along and let me along." This was competent as a dying declaration. It is evident that the deceased was referring to what had occurred at the time he was shot, so that what he told Ausley he had said to the defendant constituted a part of the res gestae and was not the narration of a past event. It identified the defendant as the one who had committed the homicide. S. v. Dixon,
The third, fourth and fifth assignments of error are based on the admission of the testimony of the State's witnesses, W. J. Weatherly, D. H. Collins and C. F. Neely. Weatherly testified that the defendant was arrested in Danville, Va., and that on his way to Greensboro he asked him why he had killed Beacham. He replied that he was working under Beacham, who discharged him and mistreated him by tearing *546
down his tent. The witness chided him for having resorted to violent and serious measures in resentment of such a grievance, whereupon the defendant said that he would not have killed him if the Crutchfields had not made him drunk and provoked him to it by telling him that he ought not to submit to such a wrong. Collins testified that the defendant told him he had gone to Greensboro and bought a gun, and then went to the railroad camp to look for Beacham. That when he found Beacham the latter cursed him and told him to go away or he would kill him, or something like that, and the defendant replied that he came there for trouble, and he then shot Beacham. After the shooting occurred, he went to Kiser Crutchfield's, and then he lay in the pines all day, where he saw the officers searching for him. Neely testified that the defendant admitted to him he had killed Beacham, and added that he would not have done it if the Crutchfields had not persuaded and helped him to do it. He said, in a second statement, that Beacham had a pistol, and "that he had to shoot him to keep (699) from being shot." There was evidence on the part of the State that Beacham did not have his pistol in his hands at the time he was shot, and that the act of the defendant was wilful and deliberate, and not done in self-defense. The testimony of the three witnesses, Weatherly, Collins and Neely, was competent and relevant. We have examined the preliminary proof taken by the Court to ascertain if the defendant's confessions were voluntary. There is nothing to be found there to indicate that they were not. No promise was made to induce him to make the confessions, nor was any threat used to extort them. So far as we are able to see, they were entirely voluntary. His Honor having so found, the testimony was admissible. S. v. Bishop,
The sixth exception is without any merit, and if it were not for the gravity of the charge we would pass it by without comment. The defendant in that exception complains that his Honor did not present to the jury the contentions of his counsel. The charge of the Court in this respect was very full and explicit, and so clear in statement that the jury could not have failed to understand the defendant's theory in all its phases. Besides, the defendant did not ask for any additional instructions, if those already given were, in his opinion, not sufficient to cover the case.Simmons v. Davenport,
The seventh and last exception is also untenable. It appears that the Court not only instructed the jury clearly and fully as to the doctrine *547 of reasonable doubt, but repeated its instructions, as to that matter, more than once, and cautioned the jury that the burden was on the State, at all stages of the prosecution, and that they should not convict of any degree of homicide without being fully satisfied of the defendant's guilt to the exclusion of every reasonable doubt.
Upon a review of the whole record, we conclude that no error was committed by the Court in the trial of the case. (700)
No Error.
Cited: S. v. Jones,