State v. . Cunningham

72 N.C. 469
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 72 N.C. 469 (State v. . Cunningham) 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. . Cunningham, 72 N.C. 469 (N.C. 1875).

Opinion

Btnum, J.

The prisoner was charged with the murder of one Daniel Sternbergh.

In making up the jury on the trial, one of the venire was called, and not being challenged by the State, was tendered to the prisoner, but before he was accepted, he objected to himself as being of kin to the prisoner. The Court thereupon stood him aside and the prisoner excepted. The jury was then completed with’óut exhausting the prisoner’s right of peremptory challenge. I n the State v. McNair, 66 N. C., 298, after twelve persons were tendered and accepted by the pris oner and sworn, but before they were empannelled, the Court wTas informed that one of the jurors was related, by affinity, to two of the prisoners which, upon inquiry, appeared to be so but the fact was not known when the juror was sworn. The *474 juror was discharged, and after exception thereto, another was tendered and taken. On appeal, it was held by this Court, that as the jury was not empannelled and charged with the ca6e, it was within the discretion of the Court to allow the State the benefit of a challenge for cause, so as to secure a jury indifferent as between the State and the prisoner. Certainly it can be no less within his discretion, when the proposed juror is not only not empannelled and charged with the case, but not so much as accepted and sworn. As the prisoner obtained a jury of his own selection, in no point of view was. he prejudiced by the action of the Court.

The prisoner, in his defence, relied upon the plea of insanity, and to establish it gave in evidence that some of his uncles and aunts were insane, but the case states that “ there was no testimony whatever that the prisoner had exhibited signs of insanity ,” and the testimony, which is made a part of the case, fully bears out the statement just quoted. When a foundation is laid by some evidence tending to show insanity in the prisoner, it is held admissible in corroboration, and as an additional link in the chain of circumstances to give in evidence, a hereditary taint in the blood, of a like malady. But it has never been held in this State, or elsewhere, so far as our researches extend, that such evidence is admissible by itself, and without some testimony that the prisoner himself was affected by some form of mental alienation. To allow such evidence to go to the jury as independent proof of the insanity of the prisoner, would be of the most dangerous consequence to the due administration of criminal justice, since there are but few persons, it is ascertained, who have not had ancestors or blood re. lations near, or remote, affected by some degree of mental aberation. To admit such testimony, then, under the conditions set forth in this case, would break down the strongest barriers to crime established by the laws of evidence, as heretofore understood. State v. Christmas, 6 Jones, 376.

The special instructions for the jury, as to the insanity of the prisoner, should have been denied in every form in which *475 they were presented, and the Judge should have told the jury that there was no evidence of the prisoner’s insanity. Instead of doing this, his Honor gave the prisoner the full benefit of the instructions asked for by his counsel, not indeed in the precise form asked for, but in substance and effect. For one of the instructions asked for by the prisoner’s counsel was that “if the jury believe that at the very time of the commission of the act alleged against him, the prisoner was from causes either of congenital mental taint or otherwise then operating on his mind,"or suddenly occurring to him, unconscious of the nature of the act in which he was engaged, he ought to be acquitted.” This charge his Honor gave and repeated it in four other form’s out of eleven, in which the ingenuity of counsel contrived to present the same thing in substance and legal effect. If, therefore, there had been any evidence of insanity to go to the jury, the prisoner would not have been entitled to a more favorable, charge.

But as the charge was upon purely a hypothetical state of facts, it was in error in favor of the prisoner, of which he cannot complain. "We are therefore relieved from any examination of the special inssructions allowed or refused, or of the conditions and limitations, under which evidence of hereditary insanity becomes admissible.

The objection has been here made, that the Court which tried the prisoner, had no jurisdiction of the case. The indictment was found in the county of Buncombe, and upon the application and affidavit of the prisoner, that he could not have an impartial trial in that county, the Court ordered the case to> be removed to the county of Madison, for trial, and he was there tried. This order of removal was made under the provisions of the Rev. Code, chap. 31, sec. 115. It is insisted by the counsel of the prisoner, that this provision for the removal of causes, having been omitted in Battle’s Revisal, and chap. 121, sec. 2, of this Revisal, having^repealed “ all acts and parts of acts, therefore passed, the subjects of which are digested and compiled in the Revisal, or which are repugnant to the *476 provisions thereof.” that by force of this section, the provision of the Rev. Code, for the removal of criminal actions, was repealed. If such is the proper construction of the effect of chap. 121, of the Revisal, the Court which tried the prisoner, had no jurisdiction, even if such a construction should operate in many eases, as a denial of justice.

It thus becomes necessary to inquire and ascertain, what effect is to be given to Battle’s Revisa!, as a digest and compilation of our laws. And to arrive at a just conclusion upon this question, we must put together and construe as one act, the act which authorized the compilation, and the act which subsequently put the Revisal into operation.

Chapter 210, of the Acts of 1871-72, is entitled, “An Act to provide a compilation of the public statutes,” the first section of which provides, “that William Ii. Battle be and he is hereby appointed a commissioner to collate, digest and compile all the public statute laws of the State, now in force or in use «fee., distributing them under such titles, divisions and sections as he may think convenient and proper, to render the said acts more plain and easy to be understood.” It is thus seen that the legislative purpose was, that the commissioner should collect together the scattered public statutes, into one book for easy reference and so arranged as to be “ more plain and easy to be understood.” He had no authority to omit any, but on the contrary, he was charged to “ compile all the statute laws now in force.” To carry out the original design, arid in execution thereof, chap. 74 of the Acts of 1872-’73, was passed after the work was compiled, the second section of which enacts, that all acts and parts of acts, &u., the subjects whereof are digested in this Revisal, or which are repugnant to the provisions thereof, are hereby declared to be repealed,” &c. Construing these two acts together, two conclusions are apparent: 1st. That all

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Bluebook (online)
72 N.C. 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cunningham-nc-1875.