State v. Craddock

158 S.E.2d 25, 272 N.C. 160, 1967 N.C. LEXIS 994
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 13, 1967
Docket252
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 158 S.E.2d 25 (State v. Craddock) 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. Craddock, 158 S.E.2d 25, 272 N.C. 160, 1967 N.C. LEXIS 994 (N.C. 1967).

Opinion

PARKER, C.J.

The trial court having found that all the defendants were indigent entered an order allowing them to perfect their appeal in forma pauperis and appointed J. Phil Carlton, their trial attorney, and Marvin V. Horton to represent them in this Court. The court’s order further directed that the County of Edgecombe should furnish defendants with a transcript of the evidence in the case and the charge of the court and that the record and the briefs of defendants should be mimeographed according to the rules of this Court under the direction of its Clerk at the expense of Edgecombe County, thus giving these indigent defendants the opportunity to perfect their appeal and present their case to this Court in the same fashion as if they were each fully solvent.

Defendants assign as error the order by the court consolidating the four indictments for trial. The four defendants were charged in four separate indictments with participating in the same crime as principals. The State relied upon the same set of facts at the same time and place as against each defendant. The consolidation was proper and was authorized by the provisions of G.S. 15-152. It prevented four trials involving the same facts. S. v. Spencer, 239 N.C. 604, 80 S.E. 2d 670. Under the provisions of G.S. 15-152, the order *167 of consolidation, upon motion of the solicitor, was within the discretionary power of the court, and no abuse of discretion appears. S. v. Truelove, 224 N.C. 147, 29 S.E. 2d 460. This assignment of error is overruled. It would seem that the solicitor for the State would have drawn one indictment charging all four defendants with the crime. The drawing of four separate indictments served no purpose, except to increase the court costs.

F. K. Simmons, Jr., a Rocky Mount police officer, after first testifying that at 4:30 a.m. on 14 February 1967 in the city limits of Rocky Mount he saw a 1959 red and white Ford automobile bearing Florida license No. 2-W-42973, was asked: “How long had you been looking for the car?” Over the objection and exception of defendants, he was permitted to answer: “Since the 7th of February when the State Bureau of Investigation bulletin came out.” Police officer G. W. Griffin, who was with officer Simmons, was asked: “For what reason did you pay particular attention to this 1959 Ford?” Over defendants’ objection and exception he replied: “Prior knowledge from a bulletin we had received from other law enforcement authorities' — •” Whereupon the solicitor asked him: “Do you recall which law enforcement authority you had received information from?” Officer Griffin replied: “Yes, sir, the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation.” Defendants assign the admission of this testimony as error. The statements were in connection with the automobile and not the defendants. Nothing in the witnesses’ reply referred to defendants, or any one of them. The reply of the witnesses does not support defendants’ contention that it was designed to influence the minds of the jurors against the defendants as being notorious criminals before the relevant facts of the case were presented. Even if we concede that this evidence was irrelevant, we think it was not so prejudicial as to cause a new trial. This assignment of error is overruled. If statements in the bulletin were prejudicial, the defendants brought it out on cross-examination of the witness Plorace Winstead, who testified on cross-examination:

“When I came to work at 3 o’clock I was told by Captain Godwin that these four subjects listed on the police bulletin out of the State Bureau of Investigation office in Raleigh, Rodney Craddock, Michael Bryan, Vernon Jordan and Allen Lunsden, were in jail, that they had been put in jail by the third shift, and that he would like for me to talk with them. As result of that, I took each one out and talked with him.”

Damaging testimony as to what the State Bureau of Investigation bulletin contained appears on page 33 of the record, but this was introduced in evidence after the jury- had been excused on motion of *168 defendants. It was not heard by the jury and could not have been prejudicial.

F. K. Simmons, Jr., testified that when the defendants got out of the car, the officers saw a lock pick in plain view in the front portion of the car about four inches in front of the seats on top of the transmission housing hump, and attached to the lock pick by a rubber band was a makeshift homemade key. The witness was asked: “Just tell what it is.” Over defendants’ objection and exception, he was permitted to answer: “This is a burglary lock pick. I am not a locksmith and therefore I couldn’t go into details on how it is used but I do recognize it as a burglary lock pick.” Defendants assign the admission of this evidence as error for two reasons: (1) This permitted the witness to give an opinion on one of the very questions the jury had to decide, and (2) the instrument which the witness was describing was certainly not a complicated mechanism and the jury was as well qualified as the witness to form and express an opinion with regard to it. G.S. 14-55, the statute under which the indictments were drawn, prohibits the possession, without lawful excuse, of any picklock, and it would seem that the statute contemplates it as being a burglary tool when it is in the possession of someone without lawful excuse. It would seem that a “lock pick” and a “picklock” are the same thing. Webster’s New International Dictionary, Second Edition, defines “picklock” as follows: “(1) One who picks locks, specif, a thief; also, a tool for picking locks.” “Justice does not require that courts profess to be more ignorant than the rest of mankind.” S. v. Vick, 213 N.C. 235, 195 S.E. 779. The testimony'of the witness that this is a burglary lock pick is competent as a “shorthand” statement of collective fact. 2 Strong’s N.C. Index 2d, Criminal Law, § 71. This assignment of error is overruled.

Defendants assign as error the admission in evidence of all the objects found in the automobile and in the refusal of the court to suppress the evidence of the witnesses who testified as to what was found in the automobile. These assignments of error are overruled. (1) The picklock and the key attached to it, the coins, and what the officers saw through the windows of the car by the aid of a flashlight without opening the doors of the car to search were competent In evidence. This is said in 47 Am. Jur., Searches and Seizures, § 20, n. 516:

“Where no search is required, the constitutional guaranty is not applicable. The guaranty applies only in those instances where the seizure is assisted by a necessary search. It does not prohibit a seizure without a warrant where there is no need of a search, and where the contraband subject matter is fully disclosed and open to the eye and hand.”

*169 This is quoted with approval in S. v. Giles, 254 N.C. 499, 119 S.E. 2d 394, and in S. v. Kinley, 270 N.C. 296, 154 S.E. 2d 95. (2) Defendant Craddock, who was driving the automobile, freely and voluntarily gave his consent to the search of the automobile. The State’s evidence shows that after ascertaining that the defendants were unarmed the two officers who stopped the automobile put their pistols away.

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Bluebook (online)
158 S.E.2d 25, 272 N.C. 160, 1967 N.C. LEXIS 994, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-craddock-nc-1967.