29 N.C. 251 | N.C. | 1847
It is the privilege of parties to be heard at the bar through their counsel, and a wide latitude is given to the latter in making their argument to the jury. Nor do we know of any obligation on a judge to interrupt counsel in stating their conclusions either of law or fact. It is the right and the duty of the presiding judge, if counsel state facts as proved upon which no evidence has been given, to correct the mistake, and he may do it at the moment or wait until he charges the jury — perhaps the most appropriate time. In criminal charges the prisoner's character cannot be put in issue by the State unless he open the door by giving testimony of it; nor is it a conclusion of law that from his silence the jury are to conclude he is a man of bad character. Our attention has been drawn by the Attorney-General to S. v. Vane, 12 Wend., 78, 82. It certainly sustains him in his position, but we do not feel disposed to follow it. We much prefer the rule established by this Court in S. v.Collins,
The motion in arrest of judgment cannot avail the defendant. The indictment uses the language of the act. But it is true that this, in all cases, is not sufficient. Thus in an indictment under the statute for stealing a slave, the name of the slave must be set forth, and so in an indictment for forgery the instrument forged must be set forth; and it is a general rule "that the special matter of the whole fact ought to be set forth with such certainty that it may judicially appear to the court that the indictors have not gone on insufficient premises," Hawk. P. C., Book 2, ch. 55, sec. 57; that is, that the facts set forth amount to a criminal offense, as charged. The authorities to which our attention has been directed by the counsel for the prisoner sustain his proposition, but not his objection. The objection is that the indictment does not set forth the mark of Martha Benson, the owner of the cow, nor the (254) mark into which the defendant put her; at least, as we understand it, the language of the objection is that the indictment does not charge the particular mode in which the mark was altered. Pursuing the words of the statute is sufficient, except in cases where the subject of the indictment cannot be brought within the meaning of the statute without the aid of extrinsic evidence. There is an indictment on the statute, 37 George III., ch. 70, making it felony to endeavor to seduce a soldier or a sailor from his duty: it is sufficient to charge an endeavor, without setting out the means employed. Rex. v. Fuller, 1 Bos. Pul., 180. Theendeavor to seduce, without any respect to the means, is the gist of the offense. Arch. Cr. Pl., 52. Now, in the case before us it is of no importance what Mary Benson's mark may be; it is made criminal by the statute knowingly to alter it, with intent to defraud, and it is a matter of no importance into whose mark it is altered; it is the willful alteration that constitutes the offense. In addition to this, the indictment conforms to the precedents heretofore in use in this State and sanctioned by this Court. In S. v. Davis,
We are of opinion there was no error committed by his Honor on the trial below, on either point decided by him.
PER CURIAM. No error.
Cited: Arey v. Stephenson,