First, the defendant urges that the evidence was insufficient to carry the case to the jury over his motion for judgment as of nonsuit made at the conclusion of all the evidence. This brings into focus the evidence relied on by the State.
"Will J. Harmon testified: “I hold the position of Deputy Sheriff with Avery County. I was Deputy Sheriff on the 25th day of June, 1952. I know Bob Honeycutt. ... On that day Mr. E. M. Harmon gave me a *597 warrant for him for a worthless check. I went up the road and . . . met him and his son in a car. ... I went a little piece and turned around— came back down the road and overtook them — they was driving slow, and I blowed and they pulled out. His son was driving. ... I parked my truck down in the middle of the road. It is a one-way road. I stopped in front of his truck and went back — had the warrant in the glove compartment of my truck — went back got it in my hand and went on the lefthand side of the car. Bob Honeycutt was on the lefthand side of the car. I said, ‘Mr. Honeycutt, I have got a warrant for you/ . . . He said, ‘What for, can’t you read it?’ I commenced reading it — read down to where it said worthless check. He said, ‘you are scared too bad to read it’— snatched it out of my hand. ... I opened the door and took Mr. Honey-cutt by the arm and pulled him out. He said, ‘I ain’t going with you.’ Well, I pulled him out, . . . the boy said to me, ‘You are going to get your G— d— head beat off.’ I said, ‘I am a deputy sheriff and a sick man, besides,’ and just went dragging him on down. He said, ‘I ain’t going, you will have to take me.’ I got nearly down to the truck, the boy (defendant’s son) come around back of the car. (Then followed a narrative account of the argument which ensued between officer Harmon and defendant’s son) . . . the boy then hit me ... I ran to get the key out of the car (defendant’s) ; the boy grabbed me and held me. He told his daddy to get the key and his daddy got it. . . . they jumped on the car and run and I ordered them both under arrest and they both jumped in the car and run. ... I ran them for three miles, they got away. . . . He (defendant) had the warrant when he left. I don’t know what he done with it.”
The defendant testified in part: “. . . We pulled out on the side of the road and he (Deputy Harmon) passed us and he come back by the side of the truck and said, ‘Is this Bob Honeycutt?’ and I answered, ‘Yes.’ He said, ‘I have got a paper here for you,’ and he read it and handed it to me. I layed it down on my lap, reached in to get my glasses. . . . (cross-examination) . . . When Mr. Harmon told me he had a warrant or paper for me, I did not tell him he was too scared to read it. He handed it to me in the car and said, ‘Bead it.’ ”
As bearing on the question of nonsuit, the defendant’s chief contention is that the State’s case fails for want of specific proofs respecting the facts in connection with the issuance and contents of the warrant, such as (1) who issued the writ, (2) whether it contained an order of arrest, (3) whether it was issued by a justice of the peace of Avery County, or some other county, and (4) if the latter, whether it was properly endorsed as required by G.S. 15-22. The defendant urges that in the absence of specific proofs in respect to these factors, the State failed to show that the arresting officer was acting under valid process.
*598
As to this contention, it is noted from a perusal of tbe record that in tbe trial below tbe defendant did not challenge tbe validity of tbe warrant. And tbe rule is that in tbe absence of evidence to tbe contrary it is presumed that tbe acts of a public officer are in all respects regular.
S. v. Gaston,
Tbe evidence was sufficient to take tbe case to tbe jury, and tbe court below properly overruled defendant’s motion for judgment as of nonsuit.
Assignments of error Nos. 3, 4 and 5 (based on Exceptions Nos. 6, 7, and 8) relate to the court’s reference to tbe evidence and statement of contentions in charging tbe jury. However, as to these assignments, tbe record discloses that tbe matters complained of passed unchallenged below. Tbe rule is that a misstatement of tbe evidence, or of contentions of tbe parties arising on tbe evidence must be called to tbe attention of tbe trial judge at tbe time so as to afford an opportunity for correction before tbe case is given to tbe jury. It is too late to challenge such inaccuracies for tbe first time on appeal.
In re Will of Kemp,
Next, tbe defendant assigns as error this excerpt from tbe charge of tbe court: “your minds must be satisfied to a moral certainty that Harmon was a deputy sheriff, that Harmon was in tbe performance of bis duty on tbe occasion' in question, that be arrested, or was in tbe attempt or process of arresting tbe defendant, and that by force, unlawfully and wilfully, by tbe aid of bis son, or by bis own resistance individually, prevented, delayed, obstructed tbe carrying out of tbe official duties of tbe said Harmon in tbe performance of bis public duty, and if you are so satisfied it will be your duty to return a verdict of guilty.”
Tbe fault which tbe defendant finds with this instruction is, as pointed out in tbe brief, that it does not include a statement “that tbe jury must also be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that Harmon bad in bis possession a valid warrant of arrest for the defendant, before tbe jury could return a verdict of guilty.”
Tbe exception is without substantial merit. An examination of tbe record discloses as we have seen that tbe validity of tbe warrant was never challenged during tbe course of tbe trial. Officer Harmon testified be bad a warrant and that it was snatched away from him (and kept) by tbe defendant. Tbe defendant also testified that Harmon told him be bad a paper for him and that “be read it and banded it to me.” Nowhere in tbe defendant’s evidence, or in tbe cross-examination of tbe State’s witnesses, is there any intimation that tbe warrant was invalid.
*599 Moreover, it is observed that the court in another part of its charge' — - when discussing the defendant’s contention that the arresting officer was motivated by spite — told the jury: “if the witness Harmon is found by you, beyond a reasonable doubt, to have been (a) duly authorized and accredited officer of Avery County and had a warrant in his hand for the arrest of Honeycutt, that he had the right to make the arrest, regardless of any previous difficulties between them.”
Accordingly, the challenged instruction to the jury that “your minds must be satisfied to a moral certainty that Harmon . . . was in the performance of his duty on the occasion in question, . . .” when considered contextually with the rest of the instructions and in the light of the theory of the trial may not be held as prejudicial error. The theory upon which a case is tried in the lower court must prevail in considering the appeal and interpreting the record and determining the validity of the exceptions.
Parrish v. Bryant, ante,
256,
Besides, an exception to what the court did say does not necessarily challenge its omission to charge further on a related phase of the case.
Karpf v. Adams
and
Runyon v. Adams, ante,
106,
"We have examined the rest of the defendant’s exceptive assignments and find them to be without substantial merit.
On the record as presented prejudicial error has not been made to appear. The verdict and judgment will be upheld.
No error.
