State v. . Davis

98 S.E. 785, 177 N.C. 573, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 172
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 9, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 98 S.E. 785 (State v. . Davis) 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. . Davis, 98 S.E. 785, 177 N.C. 573, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 172 (N.C. 1919).

Opinion

Walker, J.,

after stating the case: There was plenary evidence to show that the prisoner shot the deceased, inflicting a mortal wound *576 from which he died. The charge of the court upon all the different phases of the case was exhaustive and correct in every particular, and there is no exception to it. We will proceed, therefore, to consider the questions of evidence.

1. There is a slight error of fact in this assignment of error, as the witness Jacob Jackson stated, not that “some one in the crowd said 'Let’s hold him,’ but that 'they,’ meaning, of course, the crowd, said so. But, assuming that he had referred to only some one in the crowd, the evidence was competent, and what we say here covers the second assignment of error.” For the purpose of showing the admissibility of this evidence we may well refer to Saunders v. Gilbert, 156 N. C., 463, at pages 470 and 471. In that case it appeared that_many persons had gathered in the street and followed the plaintiff to his home, where they stopped in front of his house, some or all of them using abusive and threatening language. The question arose in the trial below, whether these outcries of this mob or unlawful assembly were competent against each and every one of the crowd. With regard to this, we said: “The testimony as to what was said in the road and in front of the plaintiff’s home was clearly competent. The res gestee includes what was said as. well as what was done. The acts and the outcries of this unlawful assembly — for that is, in plain speech and in law, what it was — is held to be competent as pars rei gestee, and also as tending to show their purpose or quo animo. Nothing is better settled than this rule of evidence. S. v. Rawls, 65 N. C., 334; S. v. Worthington, 64 N. C., 594. We find it stated in 4 Elliott on Evidence, sec. 3128, that 'What is said and done-by persons during the time they are engaged in a riot (or unlawful assembly) constitutes the res gestae, and it is, of course, competent, _as a¡ rule, to prove all that is said and done’ — the acts and words of the-mob or any members of it, as in Rex v. Gordon, 21 State Trials, 485. (563), wherein evidence of the cries of the mob 'No Popery,’ as it was; proceeding towards Parliament House, were held competent and admissible as a part of the res gestee.” This would seem to be a full answer to these objections. The same rule of evidence had been before stated and applied by us in Henderson-Snyder Co. v. Polk, 149 N. C., 104, 107. We there held that where two prisoners are engaged together in the-execution of a common design to defraud others, the declarations of each relating to the enterprise and in furtherance of it, are evidence against the other, though made in the latter’s absence, if a common design has been shown, citing Lincoln v. Chaplin, 7 Wallace (U. S.), 132. It is, perhaps, the universal rule that any act done, or any declaration made, by any one of the conspirators in the furtherance or perpetration of the alleged conspiracy may be given in evidence against himself or his co-conspirators. This rule has been more aptly stated asp *577 follows: “The law undoubtedly is, that where two or more persons combine or associate together for the prosecution of some fraudulent or illegal purpose, any act or declaration made by one of them in furtherance of the common object, and forming a part of the res gestee, may be given in evidence against the other.” The principle on which the declarations of other conspirators, and acts done at different times, are admitted in evidence against the persons prosecuted is that, by the act of conspiring together, the conspirators have jointly assumed to themselves as a body the attribute of individuality, so far as regards the prosecution of the common design, thus rendering whatever is done or said by one, in furtherance of that design, a part of the res gestee, and therefore the act of all. Substantially the same rule applies in criminal as in civil cases as to the admissibility of the acts or declarations of one conspirator as original evidence against each member of the conspiracy. 4 Elliott on Evidence, sec. 2939, citing Card v. State, 109 Ind., 415; Cuyler v. McCarthey, 40 N. Y., 221; S. v. George, 29 N. C., 327; Cabiness v. Martin, 15 N. C., at p. 110. See, also, Lockhart on Evidence, sec. 210; Blair v. Brown, 116 N. C., 631. This doctrine as to the competency of the cry or exclamation of a mob, or any one of the mob, while it is in the prosecution of its illegal design or purpose, has been of long standing, and was certainly established in the proceedings against Lord George Gordon for high treason, when such evidence was freely admitted by Lord Mansfield and his associates on the King’s Bench, Justices Wittes, Ashurst and Buller, who presided at the hearing of that celebrated case (21 St. Trials, 486), for the same riot, so graphically described by Charles Dickens in his Barnaby Rudge.

2. As to the third and fourth assignments, we must hold that there was evidence that the prisoner was with the rioters when the assault was committed on John C. Ayers, and also when they were marching on Fifth Street and crying “Halt.” These events were but a part of one whole transaction, which was continuous in its nature and essence from beginning to end, and what was said or done by the mob or any of its members was competent to show its unlawful character and motives. It was held, in a case resembling this one in its principal features, that acts and circumstances forming a continuation of the main transaction are admissible as pars res gestee. Floyd v. State, 143 Ga., 286. The several events occurring) one after the other, in close and connected succession, must be viewed as linked together for one purpose, which was a bad one as tending to a breach of the public peace and to strike terror into the travelers on the highway, who had the right .to go their way without molestation or being made afraid. It had for its purpose even more than that evil design, it aimed actually not only to terrify but to commit highway robbery, or murder if need *578 be, in order to gratify its fiendish and wanton desire. It was.regardless of every duty it owed to society, and fatally bent on mischief. "While in the execution of their illegal and high-handed purpose, to hold that any outcry from this band of marauders is not admissible as evidence against each one of them would violate a rule of the law too well established, founded as it is upon a just and adequate reason, to be set at naught where it applies so aptly. Dr. Wharton, in his excellent treatise on Evidence, has said: “If in one of our streets there is an unexpected collision between two men, entire strangers to each other, then the res gestee of the collision are confined within the few moments that it occupies.

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Bluebook (online)
98 S.E. 785, 177 N.C. 573, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-davis-nc-1919.