183 N.C. 815 | N.C. | 1922
Lead Opinion
The power of a court having jurisdiction to suspend judgment on conviction in criminal cases for determinate periods and for a reasonable length of time is fully recognized in this jurisdiction. S. v. Hoggard, 180 N. C., 678; S. v. Greer, 173 N. C., 759; S. v. Tripp, 168 N. C., 150; S. v. Everitt, 164 N. C., 399; S. v. Crook, 115 N. C., 760. And these and other eases on the subject hold, also, that the suspended judgment may be on the condition of good behavior of defendant for like determinate and reasonable periods of time, and that on inquiry duly instituted, the court having jurisdiction, and hearing the matter, may in its sound discretion determine for itself whether the conditions have been violated. S. v. Greer, supra; S. v. Tripp, supra; S. v. Everitt, supra. A position that is modified, however, where it is properly made to appear that a defendant has been acquitted by the jury or other competent tribunal having jurisdiction of the criminal offense which is the sole basis of the proceedings. As to that fact, and to that extent, the court or judge hearing the matter of the suspended judgment should be concluded.
The authorities are to the effect further that where a judgment has been suspended on condition of payment of cost and good behavior, etc., the term “good behavior,” by correct interpretation, means conduct that is authorized by law and bad behavior such as the law will punish.
It is urged in support of the present judgment that while the facts found by his Honor may be only evidential as to a breach of the criminal laws of the State, they are sufficient of themselves to amount to a finding as to a violation of the Federal regulations on this subject as contained in the Eighteenth Amendment and the Yolstead Act, passed by Congress with the view and purpose of making the amendment effective. Speaking in general terms, this Eighteenth Amendment prohibits within the territory of the Hnited States the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors for beverage purposes. And the Yolstead Act, designed, as stated, to make this amendment effective, makes it a criminal offense to manufacture such liquors for the purpose indicated. The
4 When the State court, therefore, suspended judgment on condition that the defendant should be on good behavior, that is, should not break the law for two years, this, without more, should be construed as meaning the State law, the only law the court had jurisdiction to enforce, and where it appears that the defendant is keeping or has kept that law, it is both right and just that the State authorities should keep faith with him and forbear an imposition of sentence.
Again it is contended that the present judgment finds support in S. v. Yates, ante, 753, a decision made at the present term, in which the power of the Governor to annex conditions of similar import to a pardon granted by him, the power being upheld in a forcible and learned opinion by Associate Justice Adams. In that case the applicant had been condemned by the law, and the Governor was in the exercise of the prerogative of mercy, under a constitutional power containing express provision that except in case of impeachment the Governor could grant pardons, commutations, etc., under such conditions as he may see proper. Acting-in amelioration of defendant’s condition, the Governor is purposely made a law unto himself, subject to the limitation that the conditions imposed must not be “illegal, immoral, or impossible of performance.”
But not so as to the administration of the law by the courts. Here the judge sits in judgment and not in the exercise of mercy. He can only proceed along fixed and well ordered lines, that a citizen, defendant or other, may know his rights, and while he keeps faith, these rights must be recognized and preserved to him. In this case, as we have seen, judgment was suspended with the understanding that he would pay the sum of $200 to the counsel who had prosecuted him. This he has paid,, and on the condition that he be of good behavior, that is, that he do not violate the State law. This condition he has thus far kept, so far as the record has established, and for anything that now appears, he is not. subject to sentence.
For the reason stated, the judgment against the defendant will be set aside, and the cause remanded to be proceeded with in accordance with this opinion, and the Superior Court will inquire and determine whether there has been such a breach of the State law on the part of defendant as will justify and uphold a sentence on the suspended judgment.
Remanded.
Concurrence Opinion
concurs in the body of the opinion of the court, but dissents from the conclusion. In this cause the defendant 'having been convicted by a jury, at July Criminal Term, 1921, of the Superior Court of Robeson, of the crime of assault with a deadly weapon, with intent to kill,-by the consent of the solicitor and the defendant an entry was made in the cause as follows: “Prayer for judgment continued by consent upon payment of costs; defendant to appear at each criminal term of this court for two years and show that he has been of good behavior and not violated the law in any respect!’
At the very next term of the court, in November, 1921, upon prayer of judgment by the solicitor and upon statement of the sheriff and deputy sheriff, upon which the facts stated in the following judgment were found, the court entered the following judgment: “At the July term of this court, 1921,,the defendant, Nasby Hardin, was convicted by the jury of an assault with intent to kill Lacy Burnett, prayer for judgment was continued for two years by consent and upon payment of costs. At this term of the court the defendant was called to appear and show cause that he had been of good behavior. It appears to the court, and the court finds it a fact, that this defendant had manufactured and had in his possession as much as 150 gallons of wine, and that the defendant had bought grapes in Bladen County; that persons had drunken of the said wine, and numerous persons had been seen going to and from the home of the said Nasby Hardin intoxicated. Thereupon the court,
Upon the said finding of facts by the judge, the only question that can arise is whether the defendant has kept the conditions upon which the sentence was suspended at the previous term, that is, has he been “of good behavior and not violated the law in any respect.”
The Constitution of the United States provides as follows, Article YI (2) : “This Constitution, and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof, . . . shall be the supreme law of the land and the judges in every state shall be bound thereby, anything in the Constitution and laws of any state to the contrary notwithstanding.” This is an injunction upon every state judge which in his oath of office he is sworn to obey as the highest law, any state constitution or law to the contrary notwithstanding.
The Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution -provides : “After one year from the ratification of this article, the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating liquors within, the importation thereof into, or the exportation thereof from the United States, and all territory subject to the jurisdiction thereof, for beverage purposes is hereby prohibited.” Section 2 of that article provides: “The Congress and the several states shall have concurrent power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation”; and the Yolstead Act, passed in pursuance of that amendment, in section 3, makes it a criminal offense to manufacture intoxicating liquors, and defines wine to be intoxicating liquor, and provides further that in order to be a lawful manufacture there must be a permit from the Eevenue Department of the Government.
As the Constitution of the United States, and the laws made in pursuance thereof, are the highest law of this land, the trial judge could not have held that these facts found by him were not a breach of the conditions upon which judgment had been suspended, and that the defendant had been “of good behavior and had not violated the law in cCny respect." He had violated the highest law known to this Country, the Constitution of the United States, and the laws made in pursuance thereof. It was suggested in the argument here by the defendant’s counsel that the defendant might have procured a permit from the United States Eevenue Department to make this wine, but there is no such suggestion in the evidence, or in the record, and being a matter in defense, it cannot be assumed. The burden was upon the defendant to allege and to prove the exception that would take him from under the statute which denounces such conduct. This is an elementary and uncontradicted principle of criminal law.
It was suggested that this Court does not execute the laws of the United States, but the contract of the defendant upon which this judgment was suspended was that he should not violate the law in any respect, and if there had been a State statute expressly authorizing the defendant to manufacture wine and buy grapes and sell the wine, it would have been a nullity in view of the United States Constitution, Art. VI, sec. 2, that the Constitution and the laws of the United States in pursuance thereof “shall be the supreme law of the land, and the judges in every state shall be bound thereby, anything in the constitution and laws of any state to the contrary notwithstanding.”
It should be noted that the defendant is not bn trial for the manufacture and sale of wine, but had already been convicted by a jury for an assault with- intent to kill. That verdict stands. Judgment thereon was simply suspended upon a contract that he should not violate the law “in any respect,” and a breach of the law, whether it is municipal, State, or Federal, is a violation of the law, and of the obligation “of good behavior.” It is not required that the breach of the law shall be in any one particular respect. It is true that the State, except in a few cases, does not enforce the Federal laws, but when the Eighteenth Amendment forbids doing the things which the defendant has done, it strikes out any state statute, or any proviso in a state statute, if there had been any, which would permit such things to be done, and they become nonexistent in the state statute.
It was contended by the defendant that C. S., 3367, permits wine and cider to be manufactured from grapes, berries, fruits, etc., but it must be noted: (1) That this proviso was enacted long before the ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment, and the enactment of the Volstead Act has had the effect of striking out the permission given by that proviso just as the Nineteenth Amendment struck the word “male” out of every state constitution as a qualification for voting. And, besides, C. S., 3378, a later enactment, forbids in any manner “handling spirituous, vinous, or malt liquors in this State”; and C. S., 3379 (2) makes it prima facie evidence of violation of law to possess more than three gallons of spirituous liquors at any time. That section, without that
I concur in the opinion of the Court that the action of the recorder in finding the defendant not guilty is no estoppel upon the action of the Superior Court putting in operation a suspended judgment, and which cannot be interfered with by judgment in the recorder’s court. S. v. Greer, 173 N. C., 759, which, besides, had no jurisdiction. S. v. Hicks, 179 N. C., 733.
If a man commits a homicide it may be that it was done in the heat of passion or to avenge a fancied or real wrong done him; if he commits larceny, it may be done under the strong influence of hunger of himself or his wife and children; if he commits rape, it may be under the influence of passion; and so of many offenses against the law there may be found more or less extenuating circumstances; but that cannot be said of this offense. To violate the law in this respect the man does not act from passion or strong impulse, or any necessity. He proceeds upon the most sordid basis, and deliberately, with preparation and secrecy, violates the law of his Country, for the sordid purpose of gain. Neither is this a slight offense. It comes as near treason as any in the calendar, for it sets at defiance the solemn enactment expressing the highest and most deliberate will of the supreme power of this Country. It was not enacted in haste, but after nearly a century of discussion and debate. It was considered of sufficient importance to the public welfare 'to be enacted by a two-thirds vote in each House of Congress, and was then ratified by the Legislatures of 46 out of the 48 states in this Union. It was enacted to lessen poverty and crime and other matters detrimental to the public welfare. Every voter, as well as every office holder, has sworn to maintain that provision as the highest law between the two great oceans. Every state judge has sworn to support such provision, “the constitution and laws of any state to the contrary notwithstanding.” The learned judge who tried this case was acting in the performance of
Judge Kerr having found the facts above set out, properly held that the defendant had not kept his obligation “not to violate the law in any respect ” for he had violated the highest law, which even an express State statute could, not nullify — much less could a proviso as to facts unalleged and unproven do so, and the judge did his duty in revoking the suspension of the' judgment when the defendant had so speedily broken the conditions upon which it had been suspended.
It was once an accepted saying that “the King’s writ does not run in -Connaught” — a wild, lawless province in the west of Ireland. But the Constitution and laws of the United States are as much authority in North Carolina as anywhere else throughout the Union. The judge having found that the defendant had “bought grapes in another county, had manufactured as much as 150 gallons of wine, that numerous men had drunken of this wine, and had been seen coming from defendant’s place intoxicated,” if it was error for the judge in this case to hold that the defendant had broken his obligation (on which the judgment against him had been suspended) “not to violate the law in any respect,” then the laws of the United States, set out in the Yolstead Act, do not “run in North Carolina,” and it would not be “a violation of law in any respect” for a great corporation to buy grapes all over the State, manufacture many thousands of gallons of wine, that numerous men should drink of that wine and be seen coming from their factory intoxicated. The sole difference is that here the defendant, already convicted of a serious crime with a judgment suspended on condition he shall be of .good behavior and “not violate the law in any respect” has manufactured as much as 150 gallons — how much more than that does not appear.