State v. . Caveness

78 N.C. 484
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 78 N.C. 484 (State v. . Caveness) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. . Caveness, 78 N.C. 484 (N.C. 1878).

Opinion

Bynum, J.

This case is before us on the appeal of the defendant from the refusal of the Court below to give him ,a new trial for alleged errors, which we will specify and dispose of in their order.

*486 1. Exception. The character of the prosecuting witness was impeached by the defendant. A witness examined for that purpose testified that he was acquainted with the general character of Mary E. Bray, and that it -was bad. He was then asked the question — “ From her general character in the neighborhood would you believe her on oath ?” The answer was objected to by the State, and ruled out by the Court. In that ruling there was no error. This question of practice has been settled in this State for over twenty years and, as settled, has been acted upon by the profession uniformly ever since the decision of. the Court in the case of Hooper v. Moore, 3 Jones 428. We are aware that there are conflicting decisions in other States and countries upon the admissibility of such a question and answer, but we adhere to our own decisions as being founded on the better reason, and because it is the decision of our own Court.

2. Exception.. That while the Judge in his charge to the jury recapitulated all the circumstances relied on by the State, he omitted several of the most important relied on by the defendant..

These several facts which were omitted by the,Judge are enumerated in the exception, and of them it is only necessary to remark, that they all are collateral to the main issues on trial, and that the case states that they were fully commented on in the argument. The Court permitted the parties to raise immaterial issues and as a consequence to take a wide range in the introduction of collateral testimony. But for finding a bill of indictment in the record it would be difficult to gather from it that a person had been on trial for larceny and receiving stolen goods. As tried it was essentially a civil action to try the title to a mule and colt in which the case was made principally to turn upon side issues, to wit, the adultery and fraudulent bankruptcy of the defendant. The Judge was therefore right in passing by all evidence not strictly relevant, as .only calculated to distract *487 and mislead, and in directing the minds of the jury to the evidence material to the true issues. This we think he did fairly and with sufficient fullness. It is preposterous to expect a Judge in summing up to repeat all the evidence adduced in a prolonged trial. The law gives general directions only, as to the manner and substance of his charge, necessarily leaving to him a large discretion in the particulars of it, the exercise of which must depend upon and be governed by the exigencies of each particular case. That this discretion may not be abused, it is the right and duty of counsel, before or during the charge and before the jury ■ shall be sent out to consider of their verdict, to ask for such instructions to the jury, both as to evidence improperly omitted, and that which has been stated correctly, and to de•clare and explain the law arising thereon. Fairness to the Judge, as well as the due and orderly administration of justice, requires that his attention should be called to all errors and omissions in stating the evidence, before it is too late to correct them, — that is, before the jury retire from the box, and ■certainly before the verdict is returned. The exception wre are considering was not made until after the rendition of the verdict. The exception came too late, unless it can be made clear to this Court that the error or omission amounted •to an error in law. Nothing of the kind appears here. It unfortunately occurs frequently, and perhaps it occurred in this case, that counsel do not discover the shortcomings of the Judge, until the verdict comes in — against them. This exception is overruled; State v. Moses, 2 Dev. 452; Simpson v. Blount, 3 Dev. 34; State v. Scott, 2 Dev. & Bat. 35 ; State v. Haney, 2 Dev. & Bat. 390; Boykin v. Perry, 4 Jones 325.

3, 4. Exception. The defendant bad oonvoyed the land -on which she lived to the prosecutrix and in her examination she was allowed to testify that the conveyance was .made before he went into bankruptcy. The prosecution .¡under objection was then allowed to ask the prosecutrix if *488 the defendant’s indebtedness to her was any part of the consideration of the deed, and she answered that it was not. It does not appear at whose instance the evidence as to the-conveyance of the land was brought out, but as it was wholly inmaterial, and was not objected to, it was not error to allow the witness to explain the whole transaction. And so the argument, founded on that evidence, though it might properly have been arrested by the Court, was a matter within its discretion to allow or disallow, under all the circumstances of the case. This Court will not undertake to- supervise that discretionary power, unless it clearly Appears to have been abused, and to the prejudice of the defendant. It does not so appear.

5. Exception. The counsel for the State ■ used this argument to the jury : “ That at some time or other, possibly one of them might be compelled to have a suit for property upon which he relied for subsistence, and the person with whom he was in litigation might seize and detain it, as the defendant had done in this case ; that they must remember-that at some time one of them might be placed in the circumstances of the prosecutrix, and as they would expect justice themselves, so they must mete it out to the prosecu-trix.” The Judge here stopped the counsl, and told him he must not appeal to the fears or prej udices'of the jury. The Judge could hardly have done less, and we think he was not required to do more. The rebuke was well-timed and sufficient. The Stale, properly represented, never asks that one of her citizens shall be either convicted of a high crime ■ or imperiled in his trial by appeals to the passions afid selfish private interests of the jurors. Her prosecutions are placed upon, higher grounds ; the evidsnpo should be legal, and'pertinent, fairly and impartially stated to the jury,.and the ' deductions and argument therefrom legitimate and-candid.

6 Exception, One Alfred Caveness was sworn asa witness. *489 for the defendant but not examined by him, and was tendered to the State. The State’s counsel proposed this question’: “Upon atrial at Ashboro some time ago, in which the defendant was a party and Mary Bray, the prosecutrix, a witness, did you not hear ihe defendant prove her to be a woman of good character ? ” The question was excluded and the witness stood aside and not further examined. In his argument to the jury the State’s counsel, “ adverted to the question propounded, the proposed proof and the objection thereto by the defendant. ” Upon objection to such comments by the defendant the prosecuting counsel desisted, and the Judge neither then interfered nor did he correct or allude to it in his charge.

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Bluebook (online)
78 N.C. 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-caveness-nc-1878.