State v. Crawford

133 S.E.2d 232, 260 N.C. 548, 1963 N.C. LEXIS 775
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 27, 1963
Docket361
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 133 S.E.2d 232 (State v. Crawford) 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. Crawford, 133 S.E.2d 232, 260 N.C. 548, 1963 N.C. LEXIS 775 (N.C. 1963).

Opinion

PARKER, J.

The record discloses that the State .introduced evidence as follows: On Sunday, 18 November 1962 Sandra Denise Marshall, a Negro, girl bom 14 August 1954, was living with her mother Vera Sanders in a house .at 1203 Free Street in, the Happy Hill Garden section oif the city of Winisbon-Salem. Defendant Marion, Frank Crawford, a Negro man .bom on 10 June 1936, lived in .a house on Willow Street, which is hack of the honse .where Vera Sanders and her daughter lived. Vera Sanders knew .the defendant by the name of Willie. Sandra and other children in the neighborhood called him Uncle Willie.

About 4:00 p.m. on Sunday, 18 November 1962 the defendant came to Vera Slanders’ home. He .stayed about 15 minutes, and then he and Sandra went out the house about the .same time. That was the last time Vera .saw Sandra .alive.

Eloise Finney lives at 1207 Free Street. About 4:00 or 4:15 p.m. on 18 November 1962 defendant came to. her house with Sandra Denise Marshall. Eloise said to him: “Now that your wife has gone home already, you’re just like .a little chicken, on a wire.” “I says, you’re just running around .everywhere.” He said: “Yes, that when Ms wife was •there he gave her all the loving and affection she needed, but when she Was .away he did what he wanted to.” Sandra did not say anything, “She just looked up like she was hypnotized.” They stayed three or four minutes. Then, ,as Eloise testified, “‘he just took ¡her by the- hand, and they both want out my back door.”

When Sandra did not return home, her mother went out looking for her. Periodically she returned to see if Sandra had come ¡back. About 11:00 ip.nx. that night Eloise Finney dame to hear house to use a buffer. She and Eloise went to. Where the defendant was living, .arriving there .about 11:15 p.m. Tire defendant came to. the door. Vera asked him ¡about Sandra. He replied, “he left ¡all the Children out on the street playing.” Vera then went to. Elizabeth Griffin’s house, and called her mother’s home. She then went back to where the defendant lived. Then she and the defendant went to ,a number of places, and finally to the police .station to report that Sandra was missing.

*551 About 10:30 a.m. on 26 November 1962 Sergeant G. C. Wilson oí the Winston-Salem Police Department and four policemen, and 'the Rescue Squad went to a graveyard in the Happy Hill Garden section. This 'cemetery is not kept up. It is grown over with briers, 'honeysuckle vines, weeds, and trees, and in some places it is impossible t© get through. They searched this graveyard for about three hours looking for Sandra, but without success. They left and went to other places looking for her, and again without success. Then they returned to the cemetery in the Happy Hill Garden section, and that 'afternoon found Sandra’s dead body in. a hole under ia tree that had blown over and pulled up some dirt as it was blown over. The dead ¡body and the hole were covered with leaves and honeysuckle vines and a ©mall toy wagon. When Sergeant Wilson raised the little toy wagon and saw the child’s coat, he placed the wagon back and called the ¡county coroner Dr. W. D. Vreeland. He did not move or touch the body.

Dr. Vreeland is a graduate of an accredited medical school and is licensed to practice medicine in North Carolina. The court found he is an expert physician and 'surgeon. When he arrived at the scene and was standing within two feet of the ¡body, he could not see it, because it was covered with vines and leaves. Sergeant Wilson pointed, the place out to him. He cleared away the vinas and leaves and the little toy wagon that was on the top of the -body. When he first saw ¡the body, it was lying ¡on its left side with the head sharply doubled down, up under the left shoulder, the arms were wrapped ¡around the head, and the legs were pulled up sharply against the chest; Her dead body was fully clothed ¡except for her panties, which were under 'the body. Dr. Vreeland used gloves in a superficial examination of the body there, because ¡she appeared to have been dead some time. The ¡body was carried to the Kate Bitting Hospital morgue, where Dr. Vreeland examined the body in more 'detail. In the hospital he found her vagina gaping open widely, -and it definitely appeared to be injured. Dr. Vree-land’s opinion was that Sandra died from ¡suffocation and shock due to trauma. Being of ¡opinion that it would be preferable to have Sandra’s body examined by a ¡pathologist, Dx. Vreeland sent ¡her body to Dr. Geoffrey Mann of Richmond, Virginia, for an autopsy.

At 8:20 p.m. on 26 November 1962, Sergeant C. E. Cherry of the Winston-Salem Police Department picked up the dead body oí Sandra Denise Marshall at the Kate Bitting Hospital morgue and delivered it to the morgue of the University of Virginia, Medical Center, Richmond, Virginia, at 2:20 a.m. on 27 November 1962. About 9:00 a.m. on 27 November 1962, Dr. Geoffrey Mann started an autopsy on *552 Sandra's dead body. Sergeant Cherry was present during most oí Dr. Mann’s autopsy on Sandra’s dead body.

Dr. Geoffrey Mann is a graduate of am accredited medical school, the University of Manitoba, Manitoba, Canada. He holds the following degrees: AA, BS, LLB and MD. He is licensed .to practice medicine in Virginia and Mississippi. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine -and Hygiene, a Fellow of the American College of Pathologists, a Fellow of the American College of Clinical Pathologists, a Fellow of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences. He is the author of a number’ of textbooks in the field of .forensic pathology and traumatic pathology. He is a contributor to about a (hundred papers on the subject. He is Chief Medical Examiner of Virginia; Professor and Chairman of the Department of Legal Medióme of the Medical College of Virginia; and Professor of Forensic Medicine at the University of Virginia. He is senior consultant to' the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, and senior consultant oif the Federal Air Aviation Agency. He has been engaged in the practice of forensic pathology 'and 'conductor of post-mortem examinations due to traumatic deaths for about twenty years. He has performed ten to> fifteen thousand autopsies. The court held that Dr. Mann is an expert as a physician and surgeon, specializing -in the field of pathology.

Dr. Mann testified in substance: Beginning at 9:30 a.m. on 27 November 1962 he performed .a poist-mortem examination on tire body of Sandra Denise Marshall, which body was identified to him bjr Sergeant C. E. Cherry, a police officer who accompanied the body. He examined Sandra's body from head to toe, inside and out. He first made ■an external examination of the foody. The child had a considerable number of abrasions about the face and forehead and over Various other portions of the legs and arms, where the ¡skin had rubbed ¡off. She Iliad numerous scratches about the foody, many of which he thought were poist-mortem; that is, that they occurred after death, and probably ¡caused from dragging the -body, or the body being forced against isome object, isuch a© the ground or some extraneous, foreign material. Hie autopsy disclosed that the child's vaginal orifice had been widely dilated. Her hymen had been- violently torn and completely ruptured as a ¡result of ¡some entry into her vagina. Fie could .pick up the hymen (by using fórceps and reconstruct it. There was a tremendous amount of bruising inside her vagina.

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.E.2d 232, 260 N.C. 548, 1963 N.C. LEXIS 775, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-crawford-nc-1963.