State v. . Hughes

181 S.E. 737, 208 N.C. 542, 1935 N.C. LEXIS 78
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 9, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 181 S.E. 737 (State v. . Hughes) 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. . Hughes, 181 S.E. 737, 208 N.C. 542, 1935 N.C. LEXIS 78 (N.C. 1935).

Opinion

The bill of indictment charged that the defendants Tom Hughes and Leonard Vance, on 8 January, 1935, "with force and arms, at and in the county aforesaid, did unlawfully, wilfully, and feloniously, in the nighttime, break and burglariously enter the Spruce Pine Store Company, Inc., store building, with the criminal intent to commit a felony therein, to wit: take, steal, and carry away money in the Spruce Pine Store Company, Inc., safe, and other articles of value in said store, with intent to deprive the owner thereof, said store building being at that time used as sleeping quarters for one of the employees of said Spruce Pine Store Company, Inc., said store being entered at nighttime, about eight o'clock p.m., against the form of the statute in such cases made and provided and against the peace and dignity of the State."

The evidence on the part of the State: Sheriff W. G. Honeycutt testified, in part: "I know Tom Hughes and Leonard Vance. I do not recollect the exact date that they are charged with breaking in the store of the Spruce Pine Store Company, at Spruce Pine, but some time ago *Page 544 I was in the store of the Spruce Pine Store Company, about 8:00 o'clock p.m., and it was raining very hard, and a window was punched out on the back side of the building. The glass fell within six or eight feet of where I was standing, and whoever did it remained out of the building. A little later Tom Hughes came through the window and went to the safe in the office of the Spruce Pine Store Company, and was trying to work the combination. I remained quiet for three to five minutes and let him work at it, and finally I decided he was not going to be able to open it, and might possibly break the combination and damage the safe. I was right up over him in the balcony and I started down the steps, and there was a carpet and it didn't make any noise until I got two-thirds of the way down the steps and one of the steps squeaked and made a noise, and he recognized the noise and looked up at me. He had a flashlight in his left hand and was working at the combination with his right hand. He turned the light on me and then I put mine on him and told him to consider himself under arrest. C. C. Garland, deputy sheriff, and J. L. Folger, State Highway Patrolman, were with me in the building. Tom Hughes made a statement to me that if I would let him, he could go back and open the safe, and if I would let him go back he would show me, and I let him go back to the safe and make the second try after I arrested him, and he failed to open it. When I first told him to put his hands up he failed to do it, and I put my gun on him and told him to put his hands up, and afterwards I made an apology and told him he was the second man I had put my gun on, and I hated to do it, and told him he was carrying a gun and that more than likely he would kill anybody before they could arrest him, and he said if he had a gun he would have done like I did. He said he heard the Harris Clay Company would have a pay roll in that safe between $1,200 and $1,800, and he was figuring on getting that. The Harris Clay Company owns the Spruce Pine Store is my information. The Harris Clay Company operates the mine, and their pay roll comes through the Spruce Pine Store Company. He said he understood the pay roll would be between $1,200 and $1,800, and he was going to get that. That was about eight o'clock at night. It was raining very hard. After Tom got in there, I didn't give any alarm to anyone. I didn't quite understand your question about giving an alarm. I went to explain a while ago. I took the boy in the back, at the back of the Spruce Pine Company Store, Mr. Berry and Mr. Carver, if anyone else came on the outside that they would be outside and that whenever I accomplished my purpose on the inside that I would shoot my gun off one time inside, and they could apprehend whoever was on the outside when I shot. Two officers were outside, Cas Carver and Reed Berry. I came to be there because I was called by telephone to come to Spruce Pine *Page 545 and was given information that this robbery was going to take place that night, or was thought it would take place."

The evidence of Sheriff Honeycutt was corroborated by Chris C. Garland, and in part by Reed Berry. In regard to defendant Leonard Vance, Reed Berry testified: "Tom Hughes came up there behind the Spruce Pine Store and took a little lath or piece of lumber that was there, about 1 1/2 square piece, about eight feet long, and he punched the window and broke part of it out, the large part of the light, and then he ran around down toward the shed, and we waited about ten or fifteen minutes, maybe, or not quite so long, and he came back, and that time Leonard Vance was with him, and they both came down next to the store and looked at the window and it was not all broken out, and Vance turned and walked up to the window corner of the store, where there was a door, and he looked around the building, and Tom Hughes picked up the stick and punched the remainder of the glass out, and they both ran down to the front street. We waited a little bit and they came back and came back to the upper side of the store, and about that time a car came around the street and turned and the light flashed on them, and they run back to the platform close to where we were, and they repeated that three times. Every time a car would come they would run, and they did that three times, and then Tom Hughes got up to the window and went through the window and Leonard Vance turned and ran around below Spruce Pine Store. Someone made a remark, `What is the matter? Are you yellow?' and the other one said, `Wait and see.' The conversation passed between the two men, but I don't know which one said which, and Tom Hughes went in and Leonard Vance whirled and ran down in front of the Spruce Pine Company Store, and we caught him, and Mr. Carver caught him in front of the Spruce Pine Company Store."

C. J. Carver testified, in part: "In a little while he came back, but I didn't know him at that time, but I know him now. It was Tom Hughes, and in a little while he came back and picked up the lath again and punched the window out. Then he ran off and was gone a few minutes and him and Leonard Vance came back together, and Reed Berry called their names and said it was Tom Hughes and Leonard Vance. He said that to me. I was at the door and Mr. Berry was next to the window, and Hughes didn't get enough of the window punched out, and came back and he took a piece of car or truck bed and set it up against the building and examined to see if they could go in, so they couldn't get in, and a car came along and they ran under the floor right up next to me and Mr. Berry, in about 5 feet from the door when they ran under the feed store, or the feed department or platform, and after that they went back down and they both climbed up together on this *Page 546 piece they set up there. Tom Hughes went in and Leonard Vance came out on the corner."

The defendant Leonard Vance denied that he had anything to do with the burglary, and testified, in part: "I am one of the defendants in this case. I have known Tom Hughes about a year and a half or two years. I live in Spruce Pine. Have lived there about nine years. I remember the night that Mr. Hughes entered the Spruce Pine Store Company's store. I was on the street that night. I was up at the hot-dog stand and Mr.

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Related

State v. Burnette
87 S.E.2d 191 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1955)

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Bluebook (online)
181 S.E. 737, 208 N.C. 542, 1935 N.C. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hughes-nc-1935.