42 S.E. 944 | N.C. | 1902
The prisoner was convicted of murder in the first degree of Godfrey Webber. The appeal was most fully argued *565 here, and every exception which counsel thought might avail the prisoner was taken below, as fifty exceptions appear in the record, though on fuller consideration these were reduced, as was proper, to thirteen errors assigned in the case on appeal. After careful consideration, we have been able to find nothing prejudicial to the rights of the prisoner, and must affirm (810) the judgment.
It would serve no good purpose to go over, one by one, each assignment of error, and discuss them in a lengthy opinion, since opinions are for guidance in other cases, and there is little presented by the exceptions which has not already been decided, or the discussion of which would be of service in any other case. We have none the less carefully considered and passed upon each error assigned in the record. Among the errors assigned, those perhaps most earnestly pressed were:
The plea in abatement and motion to quash on the ground that the county commissioners, in June, 1901, added no new names to the jury list, and merely purged the box by taking out the names of those who had not paid their taxes, was properly overruled. It has been too often decided to be questioned that "the regulations contained in sections 1722 and 1728 of the Code, relative to the revision of the jury list, are directory only, and, while they should be observed, the failure to do so does not vitiate thevenire, in the absence of bad faith or corruption on the part of the county commissioners." S. v. Perry, 122 N.C. at p. 1021, and numerous cases there cited. Those cases are not overruled in Moore v. Guano Co.,
To contradict the testimony of witnesses for the defense, the court allowed evidence of their statements made (some of them in writing), under oath, at the coroner's inquest. The prisoner excepted, on the ground that the coroner was not legally authorized to hold such inquest. That was immaterial. Contradictory statements, no matter when or where made, were competent.
The deceased was shot, about 7 P. M., 22 November, 1901, by some one lying in ambush along the road. In (811) his dying hours (he died that night, after being carried home), after stating that he was dying, and asking for prayers, he stated he was first shot from behind, and when he fell the man rushed out and shot him while lying on the ground, on his back (which was corroborated by the physician's testimony as to the range of the shot), and said that his assailant was a small white man, and that he looked like Cyrus Dixon, and, when he ran off, *566 that he ran like him. This testimony was competent as dying declarations. There was evidence of the tracks of a man running from the place to a branch which led up back of Dixon's house; that the tracks were measured and an impression taken by cutting paper to fit in the track, and this pattern corresponded with the prisoner's shoes. It was further in evidence that the gun wadding picked up at the place of the killing, between the stump from behind which the shooting was done and where the deceased fell, was part of pages 361 and 362 of "The Delineator" magazine, and that at Dixon's house the magazine was found with those pages torn out. Another copy of "The Delineator" of the same date was produced, and the matter of pages 361 and 362 contained the same matter as was on the wadding thus picked up. The prisoner objected, because the genuineness of the last copy was not proved by the publishers. We cannot sustain the objection. The whole was a circumstance, properly left to the consideration of the jury.
There was evidence tending to show improper intimacy between the prisoner (who was twenty-one years of age) and the wife of the deceased, who was twenty, while the deceased was older; that on one occasion the prisoner had sought to hire a horse and buggy to take "his gal" to church; that when questioned as to who she was, he had replied, pointing to the deceased, "She is that old man's wife," and, when cautioned, had said that (812) she was "already his"; that he had carried her in a buggy to a camp meeting, and there had introduced her as a "Miss Lina Hall, from the Banks"; that he had said the deceased had told him to let his wife alone, and had threatened him, but he said, "Damned if powder and shot are not cheap for me as for old man Webber"; that he had refused to take service where Webber was employed, "because," as he said, "there was an unpleasantness between them"; that on one occasion he and Webber's wife had gone into the woods "to get tooth brushes," accompanied by a negro woman, and had sent the negro woman back; that the afternoon just before the slaying, he had bought some new caps for his gun, and that when his gun was examined, soon after the killing, it had new caps and bore signs of having been recently fired. These and many other circumstances went to the jury, together with such evidence as the prisoner offered in rebuttal or contradiction. One witness testified that the gun found in the prisoner's possession had been his two years before, but had been lost, he knew not how, and that at the time of its disappearance the prisoner was working at his place. The prisoner contended that this tended to charge him with larceny and was prejudicial. It did not tend to show larceny, this possession *567
after the lapse of two years; and while its relevancy is not very apparent, its admission was not reversible error. Even if it had been charged (which was not), and even had it been shown that the prisoner stole the gun, the jury could not have therefrom concluded that, beyond a reasonable doubt, the prisoner waylaid and slew the deceased. The facts of this case, in many particulars, resemble those in S. v. Outerbridge,
The prisoner assigns as error that the jury, during their deliberations, had the gun and the court docket in full view. The recital of facts in an assignment of error cannot be considered by the court unless such facts are found by the judge and set out in the case on appeal. Patterson v. Mills, 121 (813) N.C. at p. 269; Merrell v. Whitmire,
The judge properly told the jury that they should return a verdict of murder in the first degree or not guilty. All the evidence tended to show a killing by shooting from ambush, and there was nothing to contradict this, and the sole question, if the evidence was believed, was simply whether the prisoner was, beyond all reasonable doubt, the slayer. S. v. Rose,
It has been stated to us by the Attorney-General that he has been informed that the prisoner has escaped jail since the argument. We are not advised whether the report has been verified, nor do we know whether the prisoner has been retaken or not. If the reported escape is not true, the report is immaterial; if it is true, it is not ground for any favor. In a capital case, even when the escape is before argument here, "the Court may, in its discretion, either dismiss the appeal or hear and determine the assignments of error, or continue the case." S. v. Cody,
Affirmed. *568
Cited: Moore v. Palmer,
(814)