The defendant assigns as error the sustaining of challenges for cause by the State to nine prospective jurors. Each of the prospective jurors so excused stated on voir dire that he or she would not, under any circumstances, regardless of the evidence, consider joining in a verdict as a result of which the death penalty would be imposed, but would vote automatically against such a verdict. In these rulings by the trial court, there was no error. They were not in violation of the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in
Witherspoon v. Illinois,
The defendant next assigns as error the refusal of the trial judge to rule, prior to trial, upon the defendant’s motion that, if he should elect to take the witness stand and testify, the State be denied the right to cross-examine him concerning his prior convictions for other sex crimes. The defendant’s motion recited, “that among the charges and convictions appearing on the defendant’s record are charges and convictions involving sex crimes similar in nature to the crime with which *647 the defendant is charged in this action.” His contention is that to permit the State, on cross-examination, to inquire into these offenses for the purpose of impeaching his credibility as a witness would be highly prejudicial and so, impermissible. The trial judge stated that he would not pass on the motion at that time; i.e., prior to trial. The defendant did not take the stand and, consequently, no evidence of his prior convictions on these or other offenses was introduced.
It is well established in this State that when the defendant in a criminal action becomes a witness in his own behalf, he is subject to cross-examination like any other witness and, for the purpose of impeachment, may be asked about his prior convictions, including those for offenses similar to that for which he is presently on trial.
State v. Brown,
The defendant next assigns as error the ruling by the trial court, following an examination of Tanya Denise Jeffries, that the child was competent to testify, notwithstanding her tender age. Here, too, the law of this State is well settled contrary to the defendant’s position. The determination of the competency of a child to testify is a matter resting in the sound discretion of the trial judge.
State v. Turner,
“There was no error in holding that the little girl who was the alleged victim of these offenses was a competent witness. Artesani v. Gritton,252 N.C. 463 ,113 S.E. 2d 895 ; State v. Merritt,236 N.C. 363 ,72 S.E. 2d 754 ; State v. Gibson,221 N.C. 252 ,20 S.E. 2d 51 ; Wigmore on Evidence, 3d Ed., § 505. There is no age below which one is incompetent, as a matter of law, to testify. The test of competency is the capacity of the proposed witness to understand and to relate under the obligation of an oath *648 facts which will assist the jury in determining the truth of the matters as to which it is called upon to decide. This is a matter which rests in the sound discretion of the trial judge in the light of his examination and observation of the particular witness. In the present case, the child was examined with reference to her intelligence, understanding and religious beliefs concerning the telling of a falsehood, all of which took place out of the presence of the jury. The record indicates that she was alert, intelligent and fully aware of the necessity for telling the truth.”
In the present case, as in State v. Turner, supra, there is nothing in the record to indicate an abuse of discretion in permitting the child to testify.
Likewise, there was no error in granting the defendant’s motion that the witnesses for the State be sequestered, with the exception of permitting the child’s mother to remain in the courtroom while the child testified. The sequestration of witnesses is not a matter of right but is discretionary with the trial judge.
State v. Yoes
and
Hale v. State,
There is likewise no merit in the contention that permitting the in-court identification of the defendant by the child was error. There was nothing improper in permitting the little witness to step down from the witness chair and walk over to the defendant and, by placing her hand on his shoulder, identify him positively as her assailant. The child had previously testified that the defendant, whom she thereupon indicated in a manner not disclosed by the record, looked just like her assailant. To this testimony there was no objection. The touching of the defendant by the witness simply removed any possibility of doubt as to the man she was identifying as the assailant.
There was no reference to the little girl’s pretrial selection of a photograph of the defendant from amongst five pictures, exhibited to her by the investigating officer, until the defend *649 ant brought this out on cross-examination of the child. There is nothing whatever in the record to show that this pretrial procedure was conducted in an impermissibly suggestive manner. At no time did the defendant move to suppress evidence of an in-court identification of the defendant by this witness, and there was never a request by him that a voir dire be held to determine whether there had been an impermissible pretrial identification. The defendant was never placed in a lineup.
In
State v. Accor
and
State v. Moore,
There was no error in the admission of evidence of pretrial statements by the child to her mother, to the investigating officer and as a witness at the defendant’s preliminary hearing. Stansbury, North Carolina Evidence, 2d Ed., §§ 50 and 51. The jury was instructed that this evidence was admitted for the sole purpose of corroborating the little girl if the jury found it did so. Nor was it error for the court, at the time of admitting such evidence, to instruct the jury that such evidence, competent for corroborative purposes only, might be considered by the jury “as going to what weight and credit” the jury would give to the testimony of the child. The defendant’s Assignments of Error 6, 8 and 10 are overruled.
On cross-examination, the child testified that when the investigating officers came to see her at the hospital, she answered their questions, including their question as to what her assailant “looked like.” Police Sergeant Letterman testified *650 that he talked to the little girl and “she described the man as being an old fellow, small, getting gray and said he had on dark pants or light or white shirt and said his hair was down on his forehead.” He then continued to testify as to his and his associate’s actions in the investigation, including his discovery of and first visit to the tent where the alleged offense occurred. The solicitor then asked: “All right. Now after you made the first visit to this lean-to what did you do ?” The witness replied: “Let’s back up just a little.” Thereupon, over objection on the ground that “he ought to respond to the question as it’s- asked,” the witness testified further concerning what he did when he first reached the amusement area where the child was first accosted by her assailant. In this testimony he related that he then talked to the defendant at this area and instructed him not to leave town as the officer might want to talk to him later. He testified that the defendant “seemed quite nervous.” The defendant assigns the overruling of his objection as error on the ground that this testimony was not responsive to the question. While it was not responsive to the question above quoted, we are unable to determine from the record whether it was responsive to a previous question since the previous questions are not set forth. A witness is entitled to give a full answer to a question propounded to him, subject to the right of the court in its discretion, to cut off an unnecessarily detailed or repetitious answer. Stansbury, North Carolina Evidence, 2d Ed., § 25. There is nothing in connection with this testimony to indicate an abuse of discretion by the trial court.
Officer Letterman then identified the photograph of the defendant selected by the little girl from the five pictures handed to her for inspection by the officer. He then testified: “That’s the one. I picked him up and his hair was hanging down on his forehead just like she described it.” The defendant now contends that this answer was not responsive to the question propounded to the officer. The record does not show what the question was and we are, therefore, unable to find merit in this assignment of error.
There was no error in the sustaining of the objection to the defendant’s questions to the jailer and to one of the investigating officers, called as witnesses by him, as to alleged requests by the defendant to them for the administration of a lie detector test. The purpose of such proposed testimony was
*651
clearly to present the inference that the defendant was innocent of the charge and had nothing to fear from such a test. Thus, the proposed testimony went further than the mere proof of a statement as a fact in and of itself. Being designed to establish the truth of the inference to be drawn from it, the proposed testimony was hearsay. Stansbury, North Carolina Evidence, 2d Ed., § 138. Being a self-serving declaration and not within any of the established exceptions to the Hearsay Rule, the objections were properly sustained.
Trust Co. v. Wilder,
The court properly charged the jury as to the burden of proof upon the contention supported by the defendant’s evidence designed to establish an alibi. Included in that portion of the charge was the following sentence: “Alibi is not a defense within any accurate meaning of the word ‘defense’ but is a mere fact which may be used to call into question the identity of one person charged or the entire basis of the prosecution.” The charge on the subject of alibi was full and complete and there is no merit in the exception to this excerpt from it. See
State v. Bridgers,
The defendant’s final contention that there was error in denying his motion for judgment of nonsuit is obviously without merit.
No error.
