Defendant contends that the court erred in admitting his alleged confession without first conducting a voir dire examination.
In the case of
State v. Gray,
“When the State proposes to offer in evidence the defend *434 ant’s confession or admission, and the defendant objects, the proper procedure is for the trial judge to excuse the jury and, in its absence, hear the evidence, both that of the State and that of the defendant, upon the question of the voluntariness of the statement. In the light of such evidence and of his observation of the demeanor of the witnesses, the judge must resolve the question of whether the defendant, if he made the statement, made it voluntarily and with understanding. [Citations omitted.] The trial judge should make findings of fact with reference to this question and incorporate those findings in the record. Such findings of fact, so made by the trial judge, are conclusive if they are supported by competent evidence in the record.”
Accord:
State v.
Barber,
A general objection is sufficient to challenge the admission' of a proffered confession if timely made.
State v. Vickers,
From a cursory examination of the record in the instant case it would seem that objection was made to a preliminary question and therefore not properly made. However, we deem it necessary to examine it with more care in order to determine whether the objection was sufficient to require the trial judge to conduct a voir dire examination.
It is stated in Stansbury, North Carolina Evidence, § 27, at 51 (2d Ed. 1963): “An objection must be made in apt time, that is, as soon as the opponent has the opportunity to learn that the evidence is objectionable . . . Unless prompt abjection is made, the opponent will be held to have waived it.” (Emphasis ours)
In 6 Jones’ Commentaries on Evidence, § 2518, at 4980 (2d Ed. 1926), we find the following:
“If a ground of objection is known and apparent, the objection should be immediate; . . . The practice of permitting a question to be answered without objection, and, if perchance the answer is unfavorable, then to object to both question and answer, is not proper or fair practice. It permits a party to speculate on the chances of a favorable answer before committing itself against the question.”
*435
A preliminary question to a witness is not usually open to objection, 2 Conrad, Modern Trial Evidence, § 1223, at 370;
Kersey v. State,
While we recognize and reaffirm the general rule that unless an objection is made at the proper time it is waived,
State v. Bryant,
Thus, upon defendant’s objection the trial court should have excused the jury and in its absence heard the evidence of both the State and defendant and resolved the question of the voluntariness of the statement. The court should -have then made findings of fact on this question and incorporated them into the record. State v. Barnes, supra; State v. Gray, supra.
Since there must be a new trial, we do not deem it necessary to consider defendant’s other assignments of error.
New trial.
