The defendants make these assertions by their assignments of error:
1. That the court erred in refusing to dismiss the prosecution upon a compulsory nonsuit. G.S. 15-173.
2. That the court erred in the admission of testimony.
3. That the court erred in its instructions to the jury.
The parties to homicides are divided into four classes: (1) Principals in the first degree. (2) Principals in the second degree. (3) Accessories before the fact. (4) Accessories after the fact.
S. v. Powell,
*721 Tbe State bottoms this prosecution on the theory that Minton is guilty as a principal in the first degree, and that Bullis is guilty as a principal in the second degree.
A principal in the first degree in the commission of a homicide is the person who actually perpetrates the killing,
i.e„
the person whose unlawful act causes the death of the victim without the intervention of any responsible agent. A principal in the second degree in the commission of a homicide is one who is actually or constructively present when a homicide is committed by another, and who aids or abets such other in its commission.
S. v. Allison,
To warrant the conviction of an accused upon a charge of unlawful homicide on the theory that he participated in the killing as a principal in the first degree, the State must produce evidence sufficient to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that the death proximately resulted from his unlawful act.
S. v. Hendrick,
The State did not undertake to show any causal relation between the wound and the death by a medical expert. Eor this reason, the question arises whether the cause of death may be established in a prosecution for unlawful homicide without the use of expert medical testimony. The law is realistic when it fashions rules of evidence for use in the search for truth. The cause of death may be established in a prosecution for unlawful homicide without the use of expert medical testimony where the facts in evidence are such that every person of average intelligence would know from his own experience or knowledge that the wound was mortal in character.
Waller v. People,
When it is tested by these rules, the evidence of the State at the trial suffices to show beyond a reasonable doubt that the death of the deceased was proximately caused by the pistol bullet fired by Minton and the resultant hemorrhage.
The defendants lay hold on the State’s testimony that the corpse was “frozen stiff” on the morning of 17 December, 1949, and base this assertion on it: “Thus it appears from the State’s witnesses that the deceased might well have come to his death by exposure.” The assertion rests on mere conjecture and speculation. Still we deem it not amiss to observe that Minton would not necessarily be exonerated from criminal responsibility for the death of the deceased on the present record even if the assertion had foundation in fact. An accused who wounds another with intent to kill him and leaves him lying out of doors in a helpless condition on a frigid night is guilty of homicide if his disabled victim dies as the result of exposure to the cold. This is true because the act of the accused need not be the immediate cause of the death. He is legally accountable if the direct cause is the natural result of his criminal act.
Williams v. U. S.,
In passing from this phase of the appeal, we indulge the observation that good legal craftsmanship will undoubtedly prompt solicitors to offer expert medical testimony as to the cause of death in all prosecutions for unlawful homicide where such testimony is available.
Bullis takes this alternative and secondary position on the assignment of error based on the refusal of the court to enter a compulsory nonsuit: The action should have been involuntarily nonsuited as to him for insufficiency of evidence of aiding and abetting on his part even if the State’s testimony is ample to prove that Minton intentionally inflicted a mortal wound upon the deceased in his presence. This position is insupportable. The State’s evidence suffices to show beyond a reasonable doubt not only that Bullis was actually present when Minton fatally wounded the deceased, but also that he was present with intent to assist Minton in killing the deceased in case such assistance became necessary and that his presence and purpose were known to Minton, who was encouraged thereby to inflict the mortal wound.
S. v. Allison, supra; S. v.
*723
Cloninger,
Many of the exceptions to the receipt of testimony tendered by the prosecution have been abandoned by the defendants under Eule 28 of the Eules of Practice in the Supreme Court.
1. The State was properly permitted to exhibit to the jury the pistol of foreign manufacture identified by the witnesses Ezell Crysel and J. B. Edwards as having been possessed by the defendant Minton both before and after the homicide. Although the testimony did not directly show that this particular pistol was actually used to kill the deceased, the pistol corresponded in caliber with the bullet which inflicted the mortal wound, and might well have been the weapon employed for that purpose.
S. v. Brabham,
2. The State elicited from the defendant Bullis on his cross examination testimony indicating that his paramour “was running around with Edsel Minton” while she was keeping house with him. The court received this evidence against Bullis but not against Minton. The woman was not a witness in the cause, and it is not altogether clear why this testimony was brought out or admitted. Be this as it may, the defendant Bullis waived the benefit of his original objection to its receipt by testifying without objection to the same facts in other portions of his examination.
S. v. Hudson,
3. The State introduced in evidence a letter and oral statements of the defendant Minton promising Thelma "Wyatt, who was detained in the county jail as a material witness for the prosecution, that he would procure her release from custody and take her anywhere she wanted to go if she would testify that she “didn’t know who killed Felts Curtis” and thus “help get him free.” The court rightly ruled that this testimony was admissible against Minton but not against Bullis. An attempt by an accused to induce a witness to testify falsely in his favor may be shown against him. Such conduct indicates a consciousness on his part that his cause cannot rest on its merits, and is in the nature of an admission that he is wrong in his contention before the court.
S. v. Smith,
4. The defendants undertook to discredit the State’s witness Garfield Holloway by drawing from him on cross examination the admission that on some past occasion he endeavored to strike the defendant Minton with a pipe. The court allowed Holloway to testify on his re-direct examination to facts tending to show that he used the pipe merely to repel an unprovoked assault made on him by Minton. The court did not err in so doing. After a litigant brings out on cross examination specific acts of an adverse witness for the purpose of impeachment, the party by whom the witness is called may sustain the character of the witness by eliciting from him evidence explaining those acts, or mitigating their effect.
S. v. Hicks,
5. The State’s witness Thelma Wyatt gave testimony on direct examination in substantial accord with paragraphs 1, 2, and 3 of the summary of the State’s evidence. With a view to her impeachment by self contradiction, the defendants drew from this witness on cross examination admissions that shortly before the trial she made statements out of court denying knowledge of any facts tending to connect the defendants with the death of the deceased. The court permitted this witness to testify on her re-direct examination that her extra-judicial statements were not true, and that she had been induced to make them by threats and offers of bribes made to her by the parents of the defendant Minton. The court rightly ruled that the witness’ explanation was competent for the consideration of the jury on the question of her veracity. After the opposing party has sought to impeach a witness by showing that he made statements out of court inconsistent with or contradictory of his testimony at the trial, the witness thus assailed is entitled to support his cred
*725
ibility by explaining the circumstances under which, the statements were made and his reasons for making them.
Queen v. Insurance Co.,
6. The defendant Minton complains of the reception of the testimony of Mrs. Felts Curtis that shortly before 16 December, 1949, she saw him driving a motor vehicle along a public highway in Wilkes County in the wake of an automobile operated by the deceased. Inasmuch as all the evidence in the case shows that the defendant Minton resided in the immediate vicinity, this testimony cannot be held prejudicial to him even if it be taken for granted that it was not relevant to the controversy.
The defendants assign as error the charge as to alibi. The instructions, on this subject were as follows: “The defendants, in addition to their plea of not guilty, plead what the law calls an alibi. They rely not only upon their denial of the State’s cause, contending that the State failed to. prove its cause, but likewise rely upon what the law calls an alibi; and at this time I will instruct you as to what is meant by the term alibi. An alibi simply means that the accused was at another place at the time the crime was alleged to have been committed, and, therefore, could not have committed it. All the evidence should be carefully considered by the jury, and if the evidence on that subject, considered with all other evidence, is sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt as to the guilt of the defendant, you should acquit the defendant. The accused is not required to prove an alibi beyond a reasonable doubt, or by a preponderance of the evidence. It is sufficient to justify an acquittal if the evidence upon that point raises a reasonable doubt of his presence at the time and place of the commission of the crime charged, if you should find that a crime was committed, and you will understand also that the attempt of the accused to prove an alibi does not shift the burden of proof to the defendant. The burden remains on the state to prove the defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt and that at all times.”
*726
The defendants assert that these instructions are erroneous in two respects. They insist initially that the trial judge described the evidence ■offered by them for the purpose of establishing their alibis as mere attempts to prove alibis and in that way expressed an opinion that it was factually insufficient for that purpose contrary to G.S. 1-180 when he gave the instruction that “the attempt of the accused to prove an alibi ■does not shift the burden of proof to the defendant.” This contention lacks validity. It ignores the truth embodied in the aphorism of
Justice Holmes
that “a word, is not a crystal, transparent and unchanged; it is the skin of a living thought and may vary greatly in color and content, according to the circumstances and time in which it is used.”
Towne v. Eisner,
The defendants assert secondarily that the trial judge erred in the instructions as to alibi because he separated their alibis from the general issue, and charged the jury, in substance, that the burden of proving their alibis rested on them. We do not deem the language of the trial judge reasonably susceptible of this construction. When he told the jury that “the defendants, in addition to their pleas of not guilty, plead what -the law calls an alibi,” the judge did not repudiate the settled doctrine that an alibi is not an affirmative defense, but is simply a denial of the ■commission of the crime by the accused.
S. v. Bridgers,
An accused, who relies on an alibi, does not have the burden of proving it. It is incumbent upon the State to satisfy the jury beyond a reason *727 able doubt on tbe whole evidence that such accused is guilty. If the evidence of alibi, in connection with all the other testimony in the case, leaves the jury with a reasonable doubt of the g-uilt of the accused, the State fails to carry the burden of proof imposed upon it by law, and the accused is entitled to an acquittal.
This being true, the charge as to alibi is in accord with approved precedents.
S. v. Bridgers, supra; S. v. Jaynes,
The defendants also assign as error the instructions on character evidence. When these instructions are read aright, it appears that the court charged the jury as follows on this aspect of the case: (1) To consider the evidence of the character of each defendant as substantive evidence on the question of his guilt or innocence, and also as evidence bearing on his credibility as a witness; and (2) to consider the evidence of the character of any other witness simply as going to his credibility. Inasmuch as éach defendant testified in his own behalf and also put his character in issue by offering evidence of his own good character, these instructions were proper.
S. v. Bridgers, supra; S. v. Nance,
The remaining exceptions challenge the charge on the theory that the trial judge expressed opinions on the facts adverse to the defendants, and failed to explain the law arising in the case in an adequate manner. The charge is not justly subject to either of these criticisms. Since these exceptions raise no new or unusual questions, they require no elaboration.
This case illustrates anew the unrelenting truth that “the sin ye do by two and two ye must pay for one by one.”
No error.
