Tbe prisoner was convicted of murder, in tbe first degree, of one Gus Alsobrooks. Tbe deceased was shot on tbe nigbt of 8 March, 1912, while asleep in a chair a few feet from a window, by some one standing outside. Quentin, son of deceased, testified that be was sleeping in tbe bed in tbe same room; that tbe dogs began barking outside; that be got up, went to bis father and tried to wake him; that while be was standing behind tbe chair tbe gun was fired by some one outside. He said that tbe shot struck tbe deceased in bis eyes and also bit tbe witness. Another son testified that be was in bed when bis father was shot, and when be got up be found Quentin lying on tbe floor. There was also evidence that preceding tbe killing there bad been bad feeling between tbe deceased' and tbe prisoner and quarrels and fights between their children; that shortly before, as tbe deceased was passing tbe bouse of tbe prisoner, be was shot at from ambush by some one. Tbe deceased took out a warrant against tbe son of tbe prisoner for such shooting, and tbe prisoner threatened tbe deceased that if be did not withdraw tbe warrant be would not be living when it came to trial.
There was evidence that it bad been raining tbe nigbt of tbe murder; that tracks were found 3% or 4 feet from tbe window, and several persons testified to following tbe tracks in a roundabout direction to within 50 feet of tbe prisoner’s home, and that tbe shoes worn by him fitted in tbe tracks. There was a bard path leading to tbe bouse from tbe place where tbe print of tbe tracks ceased. Other tracks a little distance from tbe prisoner’s bouse, wbicb be admitted to be bis, looked like tbe *240 same tracks which, had been followed by the witness. It was also in evidence that at one place it appeared as if the person making the tracks had fallen and there was a print of his knee on the ground. The prisoner admitted that he had worn overalls that day, and when the house was searched overalls were found with dried mud on the knee. A shell was found close to the tracks which the witnesses had followed to the prisoner’s house at about 200 or 300 yards from the house of the deceased.
Clifford Fowler, witness for the State, testified in regard to the tracks found outside the window and to following them to the house of the prisoner. He stated that when the coroner’s jury was at the house of the deceased, the prisoner went-to the house with his gun and was put in the tracks, and that the prisoner was of sufficient height to have fired the gun. He was then ■asked, “Tell how the prisoner acted in taking these measurements,” to which witness answered: “I like not to have got him up there. He didn’t want to go there at all.”
“Q. What did he do? A. Some one handed me a gun. I took him around to the window and handed him the gun. I said, Ham, get up there; I want to see if you are high enough to do the shooting.’ I said, ‘You must take the gun.’ He did, and stepped up and put the gun over his shoulder. I said, 'Put it to the shoulder just like you were going to shoot it.’ He fetched the gun uj> and did like this [witness crouches down]. He put his feet within 3 or 4 inches of the track. I said, ‘Measure it and put your gun up there.’ The gun looked like it might have been that distance, about 7 inches from the window.
“Q. State to the jury, after he put it on his shoulder and pointed, if you got behind and sighted to see where it sighted with reference to where deceased was sitting-. A. It was on a line, and the shot was on the line.”
To the foregoing questions and answers the prisoner entered two objections and excepted. The objections here taken present the question whether the prisoner has been deprived of his privilege against self-incrimination, guaranteed by Article I, sec. 11, of the Constitution, which declares that every n?an has a right “not to be compelled to give evidence against himself.”
*241 It bas been frequently held, proper, and has become a common practice, to compare tracks found at a place where a crime has been committed with the shoes worn by a suspected person or one under arrest. That was done in this ease, and evidence was admitted of the conclusions of the witnesses. Such evidence is not considered as making a person furnish evidence against himself. It is dependent upon physical facts and conditions, and does not depend upon confessions, admissions, or statements of the prisoner.
The testimony of the constable, giving the' result of the observation of the prisoner standing at the window and pointing his gun in the direction in which it is known that the prisoner was at the time he was shot, is a physical fact or condition as to which he could testify as in the case of the comparison of shoes and footprints. Wigmore on Ev., sees. 2263, 2265.
In
S. v. Graham,
S. v. Graham
has been cited with approval.
S. v. Lindsay,
The question is not whether the prisoner could have been compelled to take the position and point the gun, or put his feet in the tracks, but the result of such pointing being in the line or direction where the deceased lay, was not duress, and was a matter of evidence to go to the jury, just as whether the shoes fitted the tracks or not. If the prisoner had declined to take the position as requested and point the gun, such refusal also would not have been due to duress, and, as
Reade, J.,
said in
S. v. Graham,
would have been competent evidence for the jury to consider. Nor do we think that the prisoner’s contention was valid, that when the witness stated that the prisoner “Didn’t want to go there at all,” this was merely an expression of opinion. It was the statement of his conduct and appearance on that occasion, as to which the prisoner could have cross-examined the witness.
Sherrell v. Telegraph Co.,
The above are the only exceptions presented in the prisoner’s brief, and the others are deemed to be waived. Rule 34, 140 N. C. However, we have examined them, and agree that they do not require discussion.
No error.
