133 N.C. 769 | N.C. | 1903
The defendants were convicted of murder in the second degree and from a judgment upon the verdict appealed to this Court.
The testimony tended to show that the defendant Castle was in charge as local manager of a lumber camp constructed and operated by the William Eitter Lumber Company at the terminus of its railway at Camp Greek in Burke County; that he had charge of the railway and all of the incidental work, including a boarding-house, where the hands ate and slept and in which the homicide occurred. At the time of the homicide there were more than sixty or seventy men in the camp. Forty or fifty of them slept in the main building. They took their supper and breakfast in a hall called the dining-room. There was another room, called the lobby, which was used by the hands as a public sitting-room. The board of the hands was furnished by the lumber company under the supervision and direction of the defendant Castle. The deceased men, Dockery and Fortner, were employed by the lumber company.
John Roberts, a witness for the State, testified that they quit work in the evening a.t six o’clock; that Dockery stopped at twelve and went into camp. Supper was served about seven o’clock. The camp was in charge of the defendant Castle. Two colored men did the cooking. The sleeping apartments were upstairs. The lower part of the main building was used as a dining-room and a part of it as a lobby. There was a hall upstairs and bed-rooms on either side. The defendant Oastle discharged hands for disorder. Each “boss” was held responsible for his hands and had the power to discharge them. The witness had some talk with Castle about
C. IT. Buchanan testified that the deceased were drinking before and after supper; that he heard no hollering by them out on the porch, but could hear them cursing all over the lobby, and heard shooting once or twice upstairs. A day or two afterwards he saw where one ball went through the floor of Dockery and Fortner’s room into the lobby; heard them cursing about the time they came into supper, using profane and indecent language. They were making a noise, and Castle asked them several times to stop. Castle got the time of the deceased men from Roberts; said he did not see why the boys wanted to do that way; that they could get their money without doing that way; that when Garland came he asked Castle where the boys were and Castle said “upstairs.” Castle asked Garland what were Mortimer’s orders. Garland said Mortimer’s orders were to write out discharges and tell them'to go away; said send them away quietly, to deputize all of the men he wanted. Castle asked Garland who- would be good men, and he named several. Garland was in the employment of the lumber company. The defendants went to the room of the deceased. Castle had a lantern in his left
Stokes Pendland testified that be was commissary clerk and was at tbe camp on the night of tbe homicide; that Dock-ery came in about three o’clock and said be quit because they gave or sent out no dinner. Tbe witness asked him if be wanted him to go up to tbe lobby and have some dinner cooked, and he said be did not want any dinner at that time. He and Eiddle went out and took a drink of liquor. Dockery came back and asked tbe witness to show him a knife. Tbe witness went and got out knives, and be bought one. He said be bad not bad any dinner, and if Castle charged him with three meals be would kill him at supper. He repeatedly made those threats. In tbe evening, up to supper time, be was drinking considerably, and said be bad two kinds of liquor. He bought a hawk-bill knife and said that was tbe kind be wanted; that be bad used a knife like that before. That
J. W. Staney testified that he was at supper and heard the deceased use the language stated by other witnesses. He left because of the language they used. He heard a noise upstairs. They came downstairs. Their language was very vulgar.
Zeb Huskins testified that he saw the deceased in the hallway going towards their room. Dockery had a knife and Fortner had a pistol. Eortner said: “I thought you were
There was much other testimony of the same character. The testimony in regard to the homicide, as gathered from the several witnesses, is substantially as follows: The defendants, together with several others, went to the room of the deceased for the purpose of giving them their time and discharging them. Fortner, with a pistol in his right hand, started to raise up off the bed, and cursed them. Garland grabbed the pistol with his left hand. Fortner raised up straight, so did Dockery, with a knife in his hand, Fortner trying to shoot. Garland was holding the pistol. Castle pulled out his revolver. Dockery made a cut at Garland with his knife, and as he did so Castle shot Fortner. He shot him twice. As he .turned Dockery had bis knife drawn facing Castle, his arm drawn in a cutting position. Castle shot him twice.
The first exception relates to the testimony of John Roberts that sufficient dinner was not sent to his hands on the day of the homicide. This testimony was clearly irrelevant and was calculated to prejudice the defendant Castle, it being his duty to have dinner sent to the hands, for which, under his direction, they were to be charged on the books of the company, to be deducted from their wages. To charge that he did not send proper dinner or a sufficient quantity of dinner
Tbe second exception is directed to tbe testimony that Oas-tle drank liquor. It is not suggested that be was drunk on tbe nigbt of tbe homicide. If the purpose of tbe testimony was to attack bis character, and we do not see bow it could have been admitted for any other purpose, it was incompetent. He did not put bis character in evidence, and certainly tbe State could not introduce evidence for that purpose upon tbe question of bis guilt. When be went upon tbe stand be put bis general character in issue as a witness, and tbe State might have proved that such character was not good. It could not, however, introduce evidence of particular facts or conduct on bis part. It is well settled that for the purpose of attacking general character tbe party seeking to do so can only prove common report or reputation. State v. Laxton, 16 N. C., 216; State v. Boswell, 13 N. C., 209; State v. Bullard, 100 N. C., 486; State v. Horne, 107 N. C., 810.
“The defendants asked tbe Oburt to charge tbe jury that if when Oastle approached tbe deceased and banded one of them bis time and gave notice of discharge they immediately drew deadly weapons and used threatening language or attempted to make a deadly assault on C&stle or Garland, who accompanied bim, Oastle was justified in meeting force with force necessary to protect himself and companion from bodily barm; that if Oastle was where be bad a right to- be, or it was bis duty to be, be was not required by the law to retreat to- tbe wall from a deadly assault, though be stepped back when Dockery bad drawn a knife within reach of bim, and was impeded so be could not get out of Dockery’s reach by John Lunsford, be did retreat to tbe wall.”
The Court gave these instructions, adding to each of them tbe words: “But you are to judge of tbe force necessary, and not tbe prisoner,” to which the defendants excepted.
The Court charged the jury: “Yet it was incumbent upon him to use first gentle and mild means, and if he and those with him used more force than was necessary, or unreasonable or violent force, such as deadly weapons, and you find they
His Honor further instructed the jury: “If the provocation be great it will be but manslaughter, but if the provocation be but slight and the killing be done out of all proportion to the provocation it will be murder in the second degree.” The error in this instruction consists in assuming that the jury could find that there was slight provocation. If the jury found that there was any provocation it consisted in a deadly assault by the deceased upon the defendants, and it would be difficult to conceive how the jury, in the light of all the evidence, could find that the means used by the defendants was “out of all proportion to the provocation.”
He again charged the jury: “If the defendants went to the room of the deceased for the purpose of discharging them, and
Of course if the jury should find that the defendants Castle and Garland went there for the purpose of provoking a difficulty, and not for the bona fide, purpose of discharging their duty, and in the prosecution of such purpose they killed the deceased, they would be guilty of manslaughter at least, and if the jury should further find that the deceased made no assault upon them they would be guilty of murder at least in the second degree.
The defendants further except to his Honor’s charge for
His Honor said to the jury in conclusion: “Put it is incumbent upon the defendants to satisfy you that these circumstances and state of facts have been shown to your satisfaction.” We think that this was calculated to leave the impression upon the minds of the jury that the defendants were required to introduce independent evidence to mitigate or excuse the homicide. As we have seen, if there was any evidence in the State’s testimony which tended to establish the defense it was the duty of the jury to consider it as tending to sustain the plea of self-defense.
The testimony in this case shows a course of conduct on the part of the deceased which placed the defendant Castle, with the responsibilities resting upon him and his duties not only to his employer but to the large number of men under his charge, in an exceedingly embarrassing position. He was in charge of a lumber camp of some fifty or sixty men. It was absolutely necessary to a discharge of his duty both to his employer and the men that such conduct, as is testified to by the State’s witnesses, on the part of the deceased should be suppressed, and that persons conducting themselves as did the deceased should be discharged, and if the jury found, and we think they would have been fully justified in finding, that he was endeavoring to discharge his duty, and in doing
New trial.