State v. Cole

240 S.E.2d 355, 294 N.C. 304, 1978 N.C. LEXIS 1236
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 24, 1978
Docket43
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 240 S.E.2d 355 (State v. Cole) 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. Cole, 240 S.E.2d 355, 294 N.C. 304, 1978 N.C. LEXIS 1236 (N.C. 1978).

Opinion

BRANCH, Justice.

The threshold question presented by this appeal is whether the Court of Appeals erred in holding that the Superior Court of Martin County did not have original jurisdiction to try defendants on the misdemeanor charges of possessing a dead game animal, a bear, which was taken during closed season in Tyrrell County in violation of G.S. 113-103 and Chapter 103 of the 1973 Session Laws.

The district court division has exclusive original jurisdiction of criminal actions below the grade of felony, G.S. 7A-272, unless otherwise provided by G.S. 7A-271. One of the provisions of G.S. 7A-271 is that the superior court has jurisdiction to try a misdemeanor when the charge is initiated by presentment. The State *307 contends that the misdemeanor charges here involved were initiated by presentment. In reaching a contrary conclusion, the Court of Appeals noted that the presentment in instant case alleged that defendants violated the North Carolina Game Laws “by taking and possessing a bear in Tyrrell County during closed season contrary to Chapter 103 of the 1973 North Carolina Session Laws and G.S. 113” and that the bills of indictment under which defendants were tried charged that defendants violated the North Carolina laws by “possessing a dead game animal in violation of G.S. 113-103.” The Court of Appeals held that the offense charged in the presentment was different than that charged in the indictments and reasoned that these cases had not been initiated by presentment within the exception contained in subsection (2) of G.S. 7A-271(a) so as to confer original jurisdiction upon the Martin County Superior Court.

In the landmark decision of State v. Thomas, 236 N.C. 454, 73 S.E. 2d 283, Justice Ervin speaking for the Court reviewed the history and law of the modes of prosecution from the date of the Constitutional Convention in Halifax in 1776 to the date of that opinion in November, 1958. Prior to 1797, an accused could be tried upon an indictment or a presentment. The history of the changes in the modes of prosecution, the reasons therefor, and the effects of such changes are found in the following quote from Thomas:

The experience of early days proved the practice of trying criminal cases upon the presentments of grand jurors to be wholly impracticable. As a consequence, the General Assembly of 1797 outlawed the practice by a statute, which has been retained to this day in slightly changed phraseology, and which now appears in this provision of the General Statutes: “No person shall be arrested on a presentment of the grand jury, or put on trial before any court, but on indictment found by the grand jury, unless otherwise provided by law.” G.S. 15-137. Since the adoption of the Act of 1797, a presentment is regarded as nothing more than an instruction by the grand jury to the public prosecuting attorney for framing a bill of indictment for submission to them. S. v. Cain, 8 N.C. 352; 42 C.J.S., Indictments and Information, section 7.
*308 The reasons which motivated the General Assembly to abolish the practice of trying criminal cases upon presentments were summarized in this fashion in S. v. Guilford, supra: “Prior to the Act of 1797, it was found that the presentments made by the grand juries were frequently so informal that a trial could not be had upon them, and very frequently the presentment would set out a matter which was not a criminal offense; so that sometimes the citizen was arrested and greatly oppressed when he had committed no violation of the public law, and oftentimes he was put to the trouble and expense of a trial, when, if the public law had been violated, the charge was made without the averments necessary to insure certainty in judicial proceedings, and it was necessary to enter a nol. pros, and send a bill of indictment. To remedy these evils, the Act of 1797 was passed, but it made no change in the distinction between an indictment and a presentment.”

G.S. 15-137 was repealed by Session Law 1973, C. 1286, s. 26, effective July 1, 1975, and Chapter 15A of the General Statutes was enacted by the same General Assembly, effective, in pertinent part July 1, 1975. G.S. 15A-641(c) provides:

A presentment is a written accusation by a grand jury, made on its own motion and filed with a superior court, charging a person, or two or more persons jointly, with the commission of one or more criminal offenses. A presentment does not institute criminal proceedings against any person, but the district solicitor is obligated to investigate the factual background of every presentment returned in his district and to submit bills of indictment to the grand jury dealing with the subject matter of any presentments when it is appropriate to do so.

The above-quoted portion of G.S. 15A does not change the law as stated in State v. Thomas, supra, but only codifies and clarifies that holding.

A presentment then does not institute a criminal proceeding but is only a device whereby the grand jury brings to the attention of the district attorney subject matter which requires investigation by the district attorney and the submission of a properly drawn indictment by him to the grand jury when the *309 facts so warrant. In instant case, the language of the presentment and that contained in the bills of indictment dealt with the same factual subject matter and the charges contained in the bills of indictment were in fact initiated by presentment. The Court of Appeals, therefore, erred by holding that the Martin County Superior Court was without original jurisdiction since the charges were initiated by presentment.

Having held that the Martin County Superior Court had original jurisdiction to try the cases before us, we now turn to the question of whether the bills of indictment, in fact, charge a crime.

Chapter 103 of the 1973 Session Laws of North Carolina (hereinafter referred to as Chapter 103) provides:

Section 1. It shall be unlawful for any person to take or hunt bear in the county of Tyrrell at any time during the next two years.
Sec. 2. Violation of this act shall be a misdemeanor punishable by fine or imprisonment at the discretion of the court.
Sec. 3. This act shall be in full force and effect on and after June 9, 1973.
In the General Assembly read three times and ratified, this the 26th day of March, 1973.

G.S. 113-103 provides in part:

Unlawful possession — The possession, transportation purchase or sale of any dead game animals, dead game birds, or parts thereof during the closed season in North Carolina . . . shall be unlawful ....

Obviously, Chapter 103 does not make mere possession of a dead bear a crime. Since G.S. 113-100 fixes the “open season” on bear as October 1 to January 1 of each year, it is equally clear that possession of a dead bear on November 16 is not a violation of G.S. 113-103.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
240 S.E.2d 355, 294 N.C. 304, 1978 N.C. LEXIS 1236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cole-nc-1978.