Court Opinion

ID: 3646763
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:02:43.155951+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:07:43.410338
License: Public Domain

At the March Term, 1935, Buncombe Superior Court, the defendant herein, Robert Dunlap, was tried upon indictment charging him with the murder of one Pauline McMellan, alias Ola McMellan, which resulted in a conviction of murder in the first degree and sentence of death. From the judgment thus entered, the defendant gave notice of appeal to the Supreme Court, and by consent was allowed sixty days within which to make out and serve statement of case on appeal. The clerk certifies that nothing has been done towards perfecting the appeal; that the time for serving statement of case has expired, and that no extension of time for filing same has been recorded in his office. S. v. Williams, ante, 352; S. v. Brown, 206 N.C. 747,175 S.E. 116.
The prisoner, having failed to make out and serve statement of case on appeal within the time fixed, has lost his right to prosecute the appeal, and the motion of the Attorney-General to docket and dismiss must be allowed. S. v. Williams, supra; S. v. Johnson, 205 N.C. 610,172 S.E. 219. It is customary, however, in capital cases, where the *Page 433 
life of the prisoner is involved, to examine the record to see that no error appears upon its face. S. v. Williams, supra; S. v. Goldston,201 N.C. 89, 158 S.E. 926. This we have done in the instant case without discovering any error on the face of the record. S. v.Williams, supra; S. v. Hamlet, 206 N.C. 568, 174 S.E. 451.
The motion of the Attorney-General must be allowed. S. v. Williams,supra, and cases there cited.
Appeal dismissed.