Case Name: STATE v. GEORGE LOVE
Court: Supreme Court of North Carolina
Jurisdiction: North Carolina
Decision Date: 1924-01-22
Citations: 187 N.C. 32
Docket Number: 
Parties: STATE v. GEORGE LOVE.
Judges: 
Reporter: North Carolina Reports
Volume: 187
Pages: 32–39

Head Matter:
STATE v. GEORGE LOVE.
(Filed 22 January, 1924.)
1.' Homicide — Criminal Haw — Evidence Excluded — Instructions—Appeal and Error.
Where a prisoner was tried for and lias been convicted of murder in tlie first degree, and there was conflicting evidence that he acted in self defense, and further that he had acted premeditatedly and with prior malice, it is reversible error for the trial judge to state as a part of the State’s contentions certain evidence as to the prisoner’s long continued Xirior malice he had excluded as too remote; and this error is not cured by a further instruction that the law would attribute the motive of the killing to the present provocation and not to preexisting malice unless it so appeared from the circumstances.
2. Same — Constitutional Haw.
In an action involving the crime of murder in the first degree, an instruction that refers to a pregnant circumstance to show the previous malice and subsequent premeditation of the prisoner to commit the act, as a fact sworn to but which had been excluded from the evidence, is reversible error in denying to the prisoner his constitutional right to confront the witnesses against him, and to submit them to his cross-examination. Constitution of North Carolina, Art. I, sec. 2.
3. Same — Contentions—Objections and Exceptions.
The rule that requires an objection at the time -to an erroneous statement in the charge of the contention of the parties, does not apply on the trial of first degree murder, when such statement includes the assumption of sworn evidence against the prisoner upon the trial, that had been excluded, tending to show previous malice of the prisoner, vitally necessary upon the question of his premeditation.
Clark, C. J., dissenting.
INDICTMENT for murder tried before Lane, J., at February Term, 1923, of Haywood.
Defendant was indicted for the murder of "William Brock deceased, and on issues joined and evidence offered there was a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree, judgment, and prisoner excepted and appealed.
Attorney-General Manning and Assistant Attorney-General Nash for the State.
J. W. Ferguson and Frank Garter for prisoner.

Opinion:
Hoke, J.
There was evidence on the part of the State tending to show that on Saturday night 13 January, about 10 o'clock, the prisoner followed the deceased going to his home along Pigeon Street in Waynes-ville, N. C., and at a point not far beyond Shelton Branch, on said street, shot and killed the deceased and that such killing was deliberate and premeditated, and from ill-feeling long harbored by the prisoner towards the deceased. There were also facts in evidence permitting the inference that the homicide was not a premeditated murder, but that deceased, going along the street some distance ahead, turned and came on the prisoner with a threatening exclamation and attitude and the prisoner shot and killed deceased on this sudden and unexpected meeting. It was proved that the fatal shot entered the, front just above the heart, ranging back through the body. One R. A. Teague, a witness for the State, testified that he owned a store on Pigeon Street not far from the Shelton Branch; that Brock, the deceased, lived further out on said street beyond a colored settlement, and that George Love lived in said settlement some distance off Pigeon Street; that the ordinary place for George to leave Pigeon Street was just beyond the Shelton Branch, and that the homicide occurred a short distance beyond this, but there were other ways for him to leave Pigeon Street further on. That on the night of the homicide witness was in his store at 10 :00 o'clock p. m., just about bis closing time; deceased was in tbe store sitting by tbe stove when tbe prisoner came in, bought a few things, inquired if bis wife bad bought their groceries yet, and asked witness if she bad not done so could be get them in tbe morning; that a few seconds after prisoner entered Brock left, going towards bis home, and soon after tbe prisoner left; that witness, standing in bis doorway, could see tbe two going along Pigeon Street, tbe one about twenty-five or forty feet behind tbe other, and be saw them until they passed out of tbe light from two street lamps near tbe branch into tbe shadow; that witness then turned and bearing two shots looked out again and saw one of them coming back into tbe light, staggering, and fell — this proved to be tbe deceased Brock, fatally shot as stated. With a view of showing that this was a deliberate and premeditated murder tbe State introduced a witness by tbe name of Will Gaddy, who testified that in July or August preceding tbe homicide, witness and deceased were sitting in front of a hardware store in Waynesville and prisoner walked by and turned, looking at tbe deceased. Two, three, or four minutes later Brock moved off and witness, having moved up near, and beard him say to another colored boy who was with him, "Yes, I will get tbe God-damned son of a bitch sooner or later." In support and corroboration of this position, tbe State later in tbe trial, proposed to prove by a witness Jim Smith that 30 months before tbe homicide, when deceased bad made a serious assault on the old father of tbe prisoner, tbe latter was beard to use language about tbe deceased applying to him tbe same epithets and showing a deadly animosity towards him, tbe jury having been sent out to allow a discussion of tbe question, the court ruled that tbe proposed evidence was too remote and both tbe circumstance of tbe assault and tbe prisoner's language concerning it was excluded. In bis charge to tbe jury, however, tbe court, in stating tbe claims and contentions of the State that this was a wilful and deliberate homicide, from a settled and long-cherished malice felt by. prisoner towards the deceased, stated and referred to tbe fact that 30 months before tbe deceased bad bad trouble with tbe father of tbe prisoner in tbe course of which deceased bad knocked down tbe older Love." To tbe statement and reference thereto prisoner duly excepted and, in our opinion; tbe exception must be sustained. Here was a prisoner on trial for bis life and tbe sole question was: "Was this a deliberate murder prompted by malice long harbored towards tbe deceased, or was it a homicide on a sudden meeting and from an instantaneous impulse, and permitting also suggestions of a killing in self-defense? And on an issue of this supreme import, after excluding the proposed testimony of a serious assault by deceased on tbe witness' aged father 30 months before as being too remote, puts it to tbe jury as a fact in evidence to sbow tbe origin of the prisoner's malice and as tending to support the State's contention that this was murder done of a deliberate and settled purpose. And when coupled, as it was in this portion of the charge, with the threat proved by the witness Gaddy that within six months before the prisoner was heard to say, supposedly of the deceased, "I will get the God-damned son of a bitch sooner or later," the fact of this fight with the father became of tremendous significance as 'tending to show an abiding malice towards the deceased, and its statement in the hearing of the jury after it had been excluded, should undoubtedly be held for reversible' error. True, this feature of the charge was prefaced by the statement that it is the contention of the State, and we have numerous decisions to the effect, that if .the court, in stating the contentions, commit an error, it is too late to except to it after verdict — but while the deduction from the facts was given as a contention of the State, the putting of the fact before the jury as sworn testimony where it had been excluded was the act of the judge and of a highly prejudicial kind and none of. the decisions referred to go to the extent of disallowing an exception under such circumstances. Suppose the counsel for the prisoner had excepted and on discussion the judge had withdrawn the evidence referred to, this would only have served to emphasize the error and strengthen the lodgment it had necessarily made on the minds of the jury. Like an expression of opinion by the Court on the merits of the case, the harmful impression could not well be effaced, and in our opinion, should not be taken as waived because not presently excepted to. See S. v. Cook, 162 N. C., 586, and cases cited. Again it is insisted, for the State, that the evidence referred to in this portion of the charge is competent and therefore no harm has come to the prisoner in referring to it, but if this be conceded, in that aspect of the matter, there is error for the fact objected to was put before the jury in such a way and under such circumstances that gave the prisoner no opportunity of disproving it or cross-examining the witness who testified to it, it therefore violated the constitutional right of the prisoner to be confronted with the witnesses against him. The right of a defendant charged with crime to know the nature of the charge and to confront his accusers and the witnesses against him, has prominent place in óur State Constitution, Article I, section 2, and appears also as the sixth of the first ten amendments adopted to the Constitution of the United States, and is universally recognized as of vital importance to the administration of well-ordered justice. S. v. Dixon, 185 N. C., 727; S. v. Dowdy, 145 N. C., 432-436. Speaking to the question in S. v. Dowdy, the Court said: "This right, of such supreme importance to the citizens, so essential to any proper and impartial administration of justice, should appeal most impressively to the courts of this State, for North Carolina declined to adopt the Federal Constitution until the amendment by which it was guaranteed had been formulated by the Federal Congress and its adoption practically assured. It has, too, prominent place in our Bill of Rights, and this Court would never uphold or countenance any legislation or procedure by. which it was destroyed or substantially impaired." Again it is contended, for the State, that the error, if any, is cured by the following which appears as a part of his Honor's charge: "If the jury shall find from the evidence that the prisoner had ill-feeling and malice towards the deceased and had formerly threatened the deceased, and if _ the jury shall further find from the evidence that the parties met accidentally upon the occasion of the fatal encounter and that the deceased suddenly advanced upon the prisoner, cursing him and threatening to 'fix him,' or words to that effect, and that the prisoner instantly thereupon shot and killed the deceased, the law would attribute the motive of the killing to the present provocation and not to the preexisting malice, 'unless it so appeared from the circumstances of the affair.' " But this amounts to no more than an admonition to the jury to adopt the theory of a killing on a sudden impulse from present circumstances rather than attribute it to an antecedent malice, for the closing part of the charge "unless it so appears from the circumstances of the affair" clearly leaves to the jury whether the matter be decided one way or the other. This but adds to the significance of the error complained of in putting before the jury a fact of pregnant significance on that question, which had not been testified to by any witness.
For the error indicated the prisoner is entitled to have his cause heard before another jury, and it is so ordered.
New trial.