Defendant contends that the trial judge committed prejudicial error by permitting the witness Davis to testify as to what he told the police. The witness was asked, “What did you tell the officers?” He replied, “I told them what Joe had told me to tell them, that Cleveland Wilson had took us to Greystone and left us.” Defendant contends that this is hearsay evidence. We disagree.
In 1 Stansbury’s North Carolina Evidence, Section 138, pp. 459-460 (Brandis Rev. 1973), it. is stated:
. . . [W]henever the assertion of any person, other than that of the witness himself in his present testimony, is offered to prove the truth of the matterasserted, the evidence so offered is hearsay. If offered for any other purpose, it is not hearsay.
The challenged evidence was not offered to prove the truth of the declarant’s statement but to explain his action in originally making a false statement to the police.
We also note that just prior to the time this evidence was elicited, the witness had testified without objection that defendant “. . . told me to tell them [the officers] that Cleveland took me and him to Greystone and put us off and we ain’t seen him since. . . .” It is well established in this jurisdiction that when evidence is admitted over objection but the same evidence has theretofore or thereafter been admitted without objection, the benefit of the objection is ordinarily lost.
State v. Sanders,
Defendant argues that the trial judge erred in accepting the verdict.
The record discloses the following proceedings when the jury returned its verdict:
The COURT: Ladies and gentlemen, have you reached a verdict in the case of State versus Joe Edward Hampton, Jr.?
FOREMAN: Yes, sir.
The COURT: All right. Take the verdict, Madam Clerk.
MADAM Clerk: Mr. Foreman and members of the jury, how say you: Is the defendant guilty of murder of the first degree, the offense with which he stands charged, or is he guilty of murder in the second degree, or is he not guilty?
FOREMAN: We reached a verdict he was guilty as charged in the first degree.
MADAM Clerk: Is this your verdict, so say you all? Foreman: All of us.
Mr. Frank Banzet: Your Honor, I would like to have the jury polled.
The COURT: All right. Poll the jury.
Madam Clerk: John T. Allen.
JUROR Allen: Yes, ma’am.
MADAM Clerk: You as foreman has [sic] returned for your verdict that the defendant is guilty of murder in the first degree. Is this your verdict?
JUROR Allen: Yes, ma’am.
MADAM Clerk: And do you still assent thereto?
JUROR Allen: Yes, ma’am.
All the remaining jurors verbally answered the same questions in the affirmative except for jurors Austin and Boyd who nodded their heads when the two questions were directed to them.
Defendant first avers that the verdict was not responsive to the indictment, and, therefore, the court should have refused to accept it and should have directed the jury to reach a proper verdict.
A verdict is a substantial right and is not complete until accepted by the court.
State v. Rhinehart,
Here, in his final mandate to the jury and throughout the charge, the trial judge made it clear that the jury might find defendant guilty of murder in the first degree as charged in the bill of indictment, guilty of the lesser included offense of murder in the second degree, or not guilty. The only possible verdict submitted which contained the language “in the first degree” was the crime charged in the bill of indictment, to-wit: murder in the first degree. When the indictment, the evidence and the charge are reasonably considered in connection with the verdict returned, it is clear that the jury intended to find, and did find, defendant guilty of murder in the first degree. Nevertheless, defendant contends that the clerk coerced a verdict by the language used during the polling of the jury. A contention similar to this was made in the case of Davis v. State, supra, and in rejecting this contention the Court reasoned that the record did not disclose that the clerk dictated or suggested what the verdict should be but merely addressed an inquiry to the jury. So it was here.
Finally, by this assignment of error, defendant contends that the verdict was not unanimous because two of the jurors merely nodded their heads in response to the inquiry of the clerk.
In
State v. Sears,
For reasons stated, this assignment of error is overruled.
We next turn to defendant’s contention that the trial judge erred by permitting the district attorney to question him concerning prior unrelated acts. On cross examination by the district attorney, defendant was asked whether he had stolen a 1972 Chevrolet automobile, whether he had broken into a school and stolen food therefrom, whether he had stolen $250.00 worth of beer from the Starlight Palace, and whether he had assaulted Carlton Smith with a stick. Defendant’s reply to each of these questions was in the negative with the exception of his admission that he assaulted Smith.
In
State v. Williams,
Defendant next assigns as error the failure of the trial judge to instruct the jury on the lesser included offense of voluntary manslaughter.
Unquestionably, a defendant is entitled to have all permissible verdicts arising on the evidence submitted to the jury under proper instructions, and the trial judge must submit the question of a defendant’s guilt of a lesser included offense when there is evidence of guilt of such crime of lesser degree. The presence of evidence from which the jury could find that such included crime of lesser degree was committed is the determinative factor. “Mere contention that the jury might accept the State’s evidence in part and might reject it in part will not suffice.”
State v. Hicks,
Voluntary manslaughter (a lesser included offense of first degree murder) is the unlawful killing of a human being without malice, expressed or implied, and without premeditation or deliberation.
State v. Wynn,
“Malice is not only hatred, ill-will, or spite, as it is ordinarily understood — to be sure that is malice — but it also means that condition of mind which prompts a person to take the life of another intentionally without just cause, excuse, or justification. S. v. Banks,143 N.C. 652 . It may be shown by evidence of hatred, ill-will, or dislike, and it is implied in law from the killing with a deadly weapon; and a pistol or a gun is a deadly weapon. S. v. Lane,166 N.C. 333 .”
State v. Benson,
In instant case, the State’s evidence discloses that after defendant struck deceased one blow with the jack, Wilson withdrew from the assault on Davis. Nevertheless, when deceased threatened to “get the cops,” defendant resumed his assault upon the victim by felling him with the jack and continuing his assault by striking deceased about the head and face with the jack as deceased lay prone in a gully. As defendant continued to inflict the head wounds which proved to be mortal, he verbally indicated an intent to kill deceased. The State’s evidence was sufficient to raise reasonable inferences of an unlawful killing with malice, perpetrated after premeditation and deliberation. Defendant’s evidence was to the effect that he never assaulted deceased in any manner and that, in fact, the witness Davis was the killer. This evidence did not tend to dispel malice but only tended to support the possible verdict of not guilty. We, therefore, hold that there was no evidence to support the lesser included offense of manslaughter and that the trial judge correctly submitted as possible verdicts: guilty of murder in the first degree, guilty of murder in the second degree, and not guilty. We further note that
For reasons stated, this assignment of error is overruled.
Defendant’s assignment of error number 4 is as follows:
Did the trial court err in omitting from the jury charge the “with deliberation and premeditation” elements of the crime of murder in the first degree?
In the initial portion of his instructions on murder in the first degree, the trial judge charged:
Now, murder in the first degree is defined as the unlawful killing of a human being with malice and with premeditation and deliberation.
Murder in the second degree is the unlawful killing of a human being with malice, but without premeditation and deliberation.
Now, in order to warrant the conviction of the defendant of the crime of murder in the first degree, the State must satisfy you from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant intentionally and with malice beat the decedent Cleveland Alonzo Wilson about his head and face with an automobile jack.
The court then defined malice and continued seriately to give, define, and explain the additional elements of the crime including intent to kill, malice, proximate cause, premeditation and deliberation. After each element of the crime had been defined and explained, the court in its mandate to the jury on first degree murder charged:
So I instruct you ladies and gentlemen with respect to the crime of murder in the first degree that if the State has satisfied you from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt, the burden being upon the State so to do, that on or about the 22nd day of January, 1977, the defendant Joe Edward Hampton, Jr. intentionally beat Cleveland Wilson about his face and head with an automobile jack thereby proximately causing the death of Cleveland Wilson, and that the defendant Joe Edward Hampton, Jr. intended to kill the said Cleveland Wilson, and that he, the defendant Hampton, acted with malice, and that he acted after premeditation and deliberation, it would be your duty if the State has so satisfied you in each of these respects to return a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree.
The rules that there are no stereotyped forms of instructions and that a charge must be considered contextually as a whole are now so firmly established that citation of authority is not required. Here a contextual reading of the charge clearly shows that the trial judge chose to array his instructions so that each element of the crime of first degree murder would be separately defined and explained. He then gave a clear and concise definition of the crime of murder in the first degree which contained each previously defined and explained element. We, therefore, disagree with defendant’s contention that the first above-quoted portion of the charge was incorrect. It was a proper part of a contextually correct charge. The trial judge’s instructions as a whole presented the law of the case in such a manner that there is no reasonable ground to believe that the jury was misled or misinformed by his instructions.
In the trial below, we find
No error.
