State v. . Harrison

50 N.C. 115
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1857
StatusPublished

This text of 50 N.C. 115 (State v. . Harrison) 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. . Harrison, 50 N.C. 115 (N.C. 1857).

Opinion

The murder was charged to have been committed on the body of one William Portis, and the evidence in the case, as set forth in the record, was as follows:

"Mary Hodges, witness for the State, testified that she was well acquainted with the prisoner and the deceased; that she lived with her father, Meecham Hodges; that the prisoner came to her father's the 16th of May, about 3 o'clock in the evening — was drinking — was drunk, and said he came there to stay, to which she objected; he had a gun — swore he would stay — threatened to shoot her and take her child — he lay down on the bed near the fire-place — but one room in the house — Portis, the deceased, came there about sun set — she invited him in — said how do you do Mr. Harrison; I am d___d pleased — how do you do? Portis replied, "sorter tolerable;" prisoner asked what he came for; said he had come to deliver a message to Mr. Hodges from his son; he began to deliver this message; prisoner said d___n you, you are drunk, and I'll make you drunker; and raised his gun, which was lying on the bed; pointed it at the deceased, who was standing at the fire-place, who advanced one step and *Page 116 tried to ketch the gun, but it went off before he could close his grasp — shot in the head, and he fell and expired without speaking; she said the prisoner had killed him; he said yes, and he intended to kill him; she was greatly alarmed; thought her life was in danger; struck the prisoner with a chair; knocked him from the bed, and fell on the floor; continued to beat him until her father pulled her away; struck him with the chair a dozen blows; she then run over to Mr. Kemp's, a half a mile off — told what had occurred; said the prisoner had married her half sister, and had seduced her — was the father of her child, a boy six years old; Portis had neither done nor said any thing to the prisoner except what she had stated.

"In her cross-examination, she stated the prisoner had given her son a small knife; had also given one to her father, and offered her a bottle of cologne, which she refused; said her father was setting at the table, at supper, when the deceased came; her little boy met him and handed him his knife, with a whetstone, and asked him to sharpen it; he took them and walked to the fire-place; changed the knife from his right, to his left hand, when he attempted to ketch the gun; when shot, the knife and stone fell on the floor, which her father picked up and gave to her boy, who had lost it.

"Was asked if she had not had criminal intercourse with the deceased. Said she had not, nor with the prisoner since the birth of her child; prisoner had lived six miles off, and deceased half a mile, and was in the habit of coming to her father's.

"Was asked if she had not stated to Goodwin Daniel, that the prisoner ought to be hung, and would be, if her oath could hang him; said not; but she had said, the prisoner ought to be hung, and would be, if her oath would hang him, and she said so now; and Goodwin had said, at the same time, prisoner ought to be hung; that she was greatly agitated in her examination before the magistrate, and hardly knew what she had said; and the same case before the coroner; had not seen Portis before on that day, and did not know whose gun it was *Page 117 that deceased had; had not raised or offered to raise it; described the position of the table, and where she was setting at the time of the shooting.

"Meecham Hodges, testified that the prisoner came to his house on the evening of 16th of May — was drunk — had his gun — threatened his daughter — lay on the bed; he went after wood; met Portis, told him Harrison was at the house and advised him not to go; said he would not; gave him bag of meal, sent by his son; returned, prisoner still on the bed, his gun by his side, him and his daughter at supper, he setting with his back to the prisoner; Portis came to the door, set his gun down on the outside of the house, and he came in — spoke to the prisoner, who answered, "I am d___d pleased, how do you do? replied, sorter tolerable; what did you come for? to which deceased said, to bring a message from his son; Harrison said, you are drunk, d___n you, I'll make you drunker; turned his head — saw Harrison shoot deceased in the head, who fell dead; Portis standing with back to chimney; he saw no knife; prisoner said he intended to kill his daughter; she then struck him with chair; he believed she would have killed him — pulled her away. He then pushed Harrison out of the door; him and Harrison had a scuffle for the gun; he got it, he very bloody about the head; he found the gun setting up against the house; carried it in — was loaded; claimed by Kemp.

"Cross-examined. Was questioned as to what he had said to Daniel; which he denied — thought prisoner ought to be hung.

"Mr. Kemp said, he had heard prisoner, Harrison, threaten to kill or whip first Portis caught at old Hodges.

"Elizabeth Kemp lived with her brother, half a mile from Hodges; Portis lived at her brother's — had been to Weldon the day of the affair; Portis left about sun-down with gun, said going turkey-hunting; Mary Hodges came there about dark — seemed agitated; told what had happened — witness too much frightened to recollect it.

"R. Wheeler testified, that Harrison came to the store *Page 118 about two o'clock the day of the murder — had gun — bought two knives and bottle cologne; was drinky — left in a buggy, and did not say where going — boy returned same evening with buggy — saw no gun." The State closed.

"WITNESSES FOR THE DEFENSE."

"Dr. Wm. Carstarphin, testified to having seen the prisoner on the night of the occurrence; found very bloody and much bruised — a cut on the head, also a cut on the ear — thought it had been done with a sharp instrument — might have been done with a chair, but he thought not."

"Other witnesses were examined as to the wounds and injuries of prisoner; one witness thought the ear seemed to have been cut by passing something through it.

"The magistrate and coroner were examined as to what was said by the two Hodges' — that neither of them had said any thing as to the knife or gun, and denied what had been said by them as to their swearing to take the life of the prisoner.

"It is not deemed necessary to state this testimony, as it all went to impeach the testimony of Mary Hodges and her father.

"The Court, after repeating the testimony of Mary Hodges and Meecham Hodges, told the jury, if the testimony of these two witnesses was to be believed, then it was most clearly a case of murder; and whether they were to be believed or not, it was their province to determine.

"The prisoner's counsel say the testimony is not to be relied on; that their statement is unreasonable and contradictory, and too improbable to be credited; that the condition in which the prisoner was found, proves most clearly that the prisoner was set on by the deceased; that he was forced to kill to save his own life; or at most, it was a case of mutual combat, and as such, only a case of manslaughter.

"The killing being admitted, and that with a deadly weapon, the law pronounced it a case of murder, and threw upon the prisoner the necessity of making good his defense by direct testimony, or by satisfying the jury that the testimony *Page 119 offered by the State, by a fair and legitimate construction, led them to that conclusion."

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 N.C. 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-harrison-nc-1857.