Court Opinion

ID: 3651738
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:06:10.962875+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:28:54.765354
License: Public Domain

The prisoner was charged with the murder of Mrs. Alva Hester, which is alleged to have been committed in Forsyth County on 5 March, 1918. The case, upon motion and affidavit of the prisoner, was removed to Surry County for trial.
It was not denied by the prisoner that Mrs. Hester was killed at the time stated, about 5:30 o'clock in the afternoon of Tuesday, 5 March, 1918, but he contended that he was not there at the time and took no part in the homicide. There is evidence tending to show that almost immediately after the reports of the pistol were heard, a man was seen going over a knoll, about 25 yards from the house where the Hesters lived. He was not recognized at the time, but the witness, James *Page 711 
Stanly, stated that he wore a dark suit and there was something white around his neck, above his coat. He did not see him well enough to know who he was. Further evidence tended to show that the prisoner was seen the same afternoon in that neighborhood, and walking in the direction of the house, and wearing a dark cap and coat, and having something white around his neck, and something over his face, so that you could not see it. He also had on goggles. John Ford, one of the witnesses, saw him pass when going in the direction of the Hester home, and his tracks were traced from that place to the Hester house, and a shoe put in his tracks which was found to fit it. The same evening, after the homicide had been committed, he was seen to come out of the woods and from the general direction of the Hester place. He returned to his home, and his mother stated to Mrs. Bean, her language being, "That's my boy, coming from his work, but that's a funny way for him to come from his work." He came in the back way from the direction of the Shady Mount schoolhouse. He was arrested in his room that very evening, and the goggles, clothes, overalls, scarf, and pistol were found there. He was in bed when the officers went to his home. He was asked where his pistol was, and replied that it was downstairs in his mother's room, but the officers turned up his pillow and found the pistol, which was of 38 caliber. The goggles were found behind the bed, where the ceiling and weather-boarding stopped. The warrant was read to him, charging that he had carried a concealed weapon — a pistol — to Mrs. Daniels, when he said that he was not the man, as the Hanes Knitting Mill, where he worked, did not close until 5:30 p.m. He was taken by the officers to Mr. Boyd's, where he was identified by certain witnesses as the man they had seen that afternoon. There was evidence contradicting his statements as to where he was during the afternoon when Mrs. Hester was killed. He had quit his work at the mill about noon and did not return in the afternoon of that day, though he had said that he could not have been at the Hester house at 5:30 p.m., the time of the homicide, because the mill did not close until 5:30 o'clock p.m. While in jail he was asked why there was blood on his handkerchief and on his overalls, and he replied that his nose had bled and he used his handkerchief. The officers found another handkerchief in his pocket with blood on it, and still another, and he gave the same explanation as to each one of them, and added that the blood from his nose had dripped on his overalls. On one of the handkerchiefs there was a spot that looked like burnt powder, and when questioned about it he stated that he had a dog and wanted him to bite, and had fed him with powder for that purpose.
There was other evidence tending, more or less, to connect the prisoner with the commission of the homicide, but it need not be stated, in the view taken of the case, except to say that when the body of Mrs. Hester *Page 712 
was found she was lying on her back in the room and was covered with blood, which was fresh. As Mr. Hester was coming to the house, after hearing the report of the pistol, he was shot in the head when near the house.
The jury found the prisoner guilty of murder in the first degree, and from the judgment upon the verdict he appealed.
After stating the case: It cannot be well doubted that there was ample evidence of the prisoner's guilt. The evidence, it is true, was circumstantial, but sufficiently strong for submission to the jury, and the court clearly and fully explained in its instructions the nature of such evidence and what was required to make it sufficient for a conviction. The charge was altogether favorable to the prisoner, and his rights were carefully guarded in every respect, and there is no ground upon which any objection to it can securely rest, though we will later on notice one or two exceptions taken to it.
Exceptions were entered to several rulings of the court upon evidence, and other matters, which we will consider in the order of their assignment.
1. The court permitted the witness, J.T. Thompson, to use a map of the premises where the homicide occurred, to explain and illustrate his testimony, and it was used for no other purpose, the court restricting it to that special purpose. We have often held that maps and diagrams are competent for the purpose of enabling a witness to explain his testimony, so that the jury may understand it. S. v. Wilcox, 138 N.C. 1120; S. v.Rogers, 168 N.C. 112; Wharton's Ev. in Cr. Cases, p. 1116, sec. 537a.
2. The testimony of the witness, J.W. Daniel, as to the man shooting at his dog near his home, was competent as some evidence of the prisoner's identity and of the fact that he had a pistol, and this is true when this testimony is read in connection with that of Mary Walker, who was walking behind the man who shot at the dog, and who testified that it was the prisoner, as she thought at the time. The appearance of the dog as he returned to the house was natural evidence. "The instantaneous conclusions of the mind as to appearance, condition, mental or physical state of persons, animals and things, derived from observation of a variety of facts presented to the senses at one and the same time, are, legally speaking, matters of fact and are admissible in evidence." S. v. *Page 713 Leak, 156 N.C. 643; Renn v. R. R., 170 N.C. 128. Within this rule, the opinion of the witness as to the appearance of the dog and his conduct was permissible.
3. The question asked the witness, J.W. Daniel, which was excluded on objection of the State, was, of course, not answered, and it did not appear what the answer would have been. It might have been unfavorable to the prisoner, in which case his objection would have failed, as he could gain nothing by such an answer and was deprived of no beneficial testimony.McMillan v. R.R., 172 N.C. 853.
4. The testimony of Mary Walker as to the identity of the man she saw near J. W. Daniel's house when the pistol was fired and the dogs barked and were frightened away, was competent. She could give her impression or opinion as to who he was, from what she saw, as she knew him before. "Opinion, so far as it consists of a statement of an effect produced on the mind, becomes primary evidence, and hence admissible whenever a conditions of things is such that it cannot be reproduced and made palpable in the concrete to the jury. Eminently is this the case with regard to noises and smells, to questions of identification, where a witness is allowed to speak as to his opinion or belief, and to the question whether a party believed himself at the time to be in great danger of death." Wharton's Ev. in Cr. Cases, sec. 459, p. 962.
5. It was competent, as corroborative of otis Ross' testimony, to show that he had made to other persons statements similar to those he made on the witness stand, and this may be shown by his own testimony. S. v. Rowe,98 N.C. 629, and cases cited; S. v. Whitfield, 92 N.C. 831.
6. The testimony as to the fitting of the shoe to tracks found where the prisoner had been seen was admissible, as it was a circumstance tending to show identity. S. v. Graham, 74 N.C. 646; S. v. Lowry, 170 N.C. 730. This is "real" evidence, as called by the civilians, and its value as proof is greater or less, according to the circumstances. Best on Evidence, sec, 183; S. v. Lowry, supra. It is some evidence tending to identify the prisoner as the perpetrator of the crime. There was sufficient proof that the tracks were those of the prisoner to warrant the admission of this evidence as to the correspondence between the tracks and the prisoner's shoes.
7. The allusion of the sheriff to the white scarf was not admitted to show that it was the one the prisoner wore around his neck when the witness, James Stanly, saw him "with something white above his coat," but as the prisoner was silent when this was said in his presence and hearing, and it was equivalent to charging that he had committed the murder, it was some evidence of the fact. He was permitted to explain it by saying that he thought they were referring to the charge of carrying a concealed weapon at Mr. Daniels' when he wore a white *Page 714 
handkerchief; and the judge, in commenting on this evidence, most carefully and minutely explained it to the jury, and the effect of it in the case, and told the jury that if they found that the prisoner's statement was true, and that he did not understand that the sheriff was referring to the homicide, they should utterly reject this evidence and not permit it to have any influence in making up their verdict. The prisoner's rights were thus sufficiently protected.
8. The testimony as to the prisoner having been an inmate of the reformatory was restricted to the purpose of identification of him as the man who was walking in the direction of the Hester home. One witness, Mary Walker, has testified that the man she saw was the Spencer who had been in the reformatory; and, to show who this was, it was competent to prove that the prisoner was the only man by the name of Spencer who had been confined there. It was the normal and logical way to prove the other fact.
9. This exception was taken to testimony of Mr. Craven, who was the manager of Rex Theater. The prisoner had been told by J.A. Thomas, chief of the police of Winston-Salem, that they had investigated as to his whereabouts in the afternoon of the day when Mrs. Hester was killed, and discovered that he was not at the Hanes Mill at that time. The prisoner then admitted that he was not there, but left the mill about 1 o'clock and went to his home, and afterwards, the same afternoon, to Mr. Craven's theater. Mr. Craven was introduced to show that the prisoner was not at his theater, and his testimony was clearly competent for this purpose. The flat contradiction of himself was some evidence of his guilt, and the contradiction by Mr. Craven was also a circumstance to be considered by the jury. S. v. Swink, 19 N.C. 9; S. v. Rowe, 98 N.C. 629.
10. There was no element of manslaughter in the case, and the court was right in so stating to the jury. The homicide had more the appearance of a willful and deliberate murder, with no excusing, extenuating or palliating circumstance. The question was not as to the degree of the crime, but as to who was its perpetrator. The learned judge charged the jury as to murder in the second degree, and the prisoner got the full benefit of this proper instruction, but it is impossible to see in what consisted the element of manslaughter. Whoever it was fired three times at Mrs. Hester, each ball taking effect, two of them lodging in her breast, and then the husband as he approached the house, was shot down by the same person. It was not a sudden altercation, nor was there any legal provocation or any other fact or circumstance which, if found by the jury, could in law reduce the grade of the crime to manslaughter. The slayer went there to steal, or perhaps to commit some other felony, and *Page 715 
to kill if discovered and resisted. S. v. Logan, 161 N.C. 235; S. v.Lane, 166 N.C. 333. The burden of reducing the crime from murder in the second degree to manslaughter was upon the prisoner, and there is no evidence that would have warranted a verdict of manslaughter. We said, inS. v. Lane, supra: "The instruction, that if the prisoner intentionally killed the deceased with a deadly weapon, to wit, a gun, the law implied malice, and the prisoner would be guilty of murder in the second degree, is well sustained by the cases. In all indictments for homicide, when the intentional killing is established or admitted, the law presumes malice from the use of a deadly weapon, and the defendant is guilty of murder (now in the second degree), unless he can satisfy the jury of the truth of facts which justify or excuse his act or mitigate it to manslaughter. The burden is on the defendant to establish such facts to the satisfaction of the jury, unless they arise out of the evidence against him. This rule has been uniformly adhered to by this Court in indictments for homicide. S. v.Quick, 150 N.C. 820. This principle has been reiterated by us in more recent cases." S. v. Worley, 141 N.C. 764; S. v. Yates, 155 N.C. 450;S. v. Rowe, ibid., 436; S. v. Simonds, 154 N.C. 197; S. v. Cox,153 N.C. 638; S. v. Fowler, 151 N.C. 731; and formerly in S. v. Clark,134 N.C. 698; S. v. Brittain, 89 N.C. 481. To these may be addedS. v. Davis, 175 N.C. 723.
11. We do not think there was any misstatement of the contentions of counsel in the charge, but if there had been it should have been called to the attention of the court at the proper time, so that it might be corrected. S. v. Blackwell, 162 N.C. 672; S. v. Martin, 173 N.C. 808;S. v. Burton, 172 N.C. 939.
We may conclude with what was stated by Judge Gaston in S. v. Swink,19 N.C. 9 ( and reiterated in S. v. Rowe, 98 N.C. 629), which seems to be applicable to this case: "All the surrounding facts of a transaction may be submitted to the jury when they afford any fair presumption or inference as to the question in dispute. Upon this principle it is that the conduct of the accused at the time of the offense or after being charged with it, such as flight, the fabrication of false and contradictory statements, the concealment of the instruments of violence, the destruction or removal of proofs tending to show that an offense had been committed or to ascertain the offender, are all reviewable in evidence as circumstances connected with and throwing light upon the question of imputed guilt."
We are of opinion that the jury could fairly deduce, beyond any reasonable doubt, the guilt of the prisoner, as there was ample proof to warrant such a finding after applying most strictly, as the presiding judge did in this case, the rule as to circumstantial evidence.
The record discloses no error in the trial.
No error. *Page 716