Appellant is the only person charged in the bill of indictment appearing in the record; and the agreed case on appeal states that “defendant Jack Franklin and codefendant Frank Thomas Keith were charged, upon a bill of indictment, as appears in the record, . . .” As to Keith, no indictment appears in the record. However, counsel for appellant, with commendable candor, stated on oral argument that Frank Thomas Keith was indicted in a separate bill containing identical charges and that, each defendant having pleaded not guilty, the cases were consolidated and tried together.
In
S. v. Kerley,
This occurred, according to the record, during the direct examination of Officer Holland:
*697 “Q What did he (Keith) say about it? OBJECTION. OVERRULED. EXCEPTION (No. 1) BY DEFENDANT FRANKLIN. A He said that Jack Franklin gave him the check and told him to go get it cashed. Q Did he tell you who had written the check? OBJECTION. OVERRULED. EXCEPTION (No. 2) BY DEFENDANT FRANKLIN. A He said that Jack Franklin wrote the check at his home — at Keith’s home.” On cross-examination, Holland testified that Franklin was not present when Keith made these statements. Thereupon, Franklin’s counsel moved that all of this evidence be stricken out as to Franklin. According to the record, the court’s only response to the motion was: “COURT: There is nothing in the record as to Jack Franklin.” Exception (No. 3) was taken to the court’s failure to instruct the jury not to consider Holland’s testimony as evidence against Franklin.
This occurred, according to the record, during direct examination of Officer Moffitt: “Q What, if anything, did Keith tell you? OBJECTION BY DEFENDANT FRANKLIN. SOLICITOR: That is as to Keith, admitted only as to Keith. A Keith said that Jack Franklin was sitting in their kitchen, that is in Keith’s kitchen, and wrote this check for $16.00, and he took it to the First National Bank in West Asheville and had it cashed. OBJECTION. OVERRULED. EXCEPTION (No. 4) BY DEFENDANT FRANKLIN.” (Note: There is no contention that Franklin was present when Keith made these statements.)
While the comments by the court and solicitor raise serious questions as to whether the record accurately reflects the court’s rulings, the quoted excerpts from the record require the interpretation that Franklin’s objections were overruled; and, according to the record, no instruction was given when this evidence was received or at any time during the reception of evidence to the effect that it was not admitted as to Franklin but was for consideration only as against Keith.
Patently the testimony of the officers
as to what Keith told them
concerning Franklin’s actions and statements, was wholly incompetent as to Franklin; and Franklin’s objections to this testimony should have been sustained.
S. v. Green,
The State contends that, since this testimony was competent against Keith, appellant’s general objection is insufficient to support his exception. This contention is based on the portion of Rule 21, Rules of Practice in the Supreme Court,
We are constrained to hold that the quoted rule refers to a factual situation where the evidence is competent for some purpose, but not for all,
against the objecting defendant,
e.g., for the purpose of corroborating or contradicting the testimony of a witness. It was so applied in
S. v. Hawkins,
Frankness compels the admission that
S. v. Casey,
Even so, the State contends that the error, if any, was cured by the instruction given in the charge. It appears that, after reviewing the testimony, including that of Officer Holland relating to what Keith had told him, the court, towards the end of the charge, gave this instruction: “Now, members of the jury, in considering the guilt or innocence of the defendant Franklin, you will not consider as against Franklin any statements made by the defendant Keith to the officers. Now, any statements which Keith made to the officers, you may consider as against the defendant Keith, but in passing upon the guilt or innocence of Franklin, you will consider only the evidence tending to show the statements which he made to Officer Moffitt himself.” (Note: While Moffitt’s testimony tended to show that Franklin had made incriminating statements, the prejudicial effect thereof fell far short of the prejudicial effect of the statements which, according to the officers, were made by Keith.)
If Franklin’s objections had been sustained, this instruction would be entirely correct; but the record, which imports verity, confronts *699 us with the fact that Franklin’s objections had been overruled and the testimony admitted without limitation or restriction.
It is quite plain that the learned trial judge was well aware that the officers’ testimony as to what Keith said was wholly incompetent as against Franklin. Presumably, she was under the impression that Franklin’s objections thereto had been sustained; but the record, by which we are bound, shows clearly that Franklin’s objections had been overruled.
In the quoted instruction, no reference is made to the court’s prior rulings on Franklin’s obj ections. In this respect, it differs from a case where an erroneous ruling is subsequently and specifically reversed and the jurors instructed to disabuse their minds of any and all prejudicial impressions lodged by the incompetent evidence. Compare
S. v. Choate,
Conflicting instructions in a charge, if material and prejudicial, necessitate a new trial.
Owens v. Kelly,
If Franklin had been tried separately, the testimony of the officers as to what Keith said would not, under the rule then applicable, have come before the jury at all. The evidence, being competent against Keith, came before the jury trying Franklin’s case solely because the two cases had been consolidated for trial. The incompetency of this evidence as to Franklin was not altered by the consolidation. He was entitled to have his objections sustained and an explicit instruction to the jury that such testimony was not to be considered by the jury in any way in determining the charges against him.
Defendant’s assignment of error, directed to the refusal of the court to allow his motion for judgment of nonsuit, is without merit; but, for the reasons stated, defendant is entitled to a new trial
New trial.
