State v. . Knotts

83 S.E. 972, 168 N.C. 173, 1914 N.C. LEXIS 34
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 23, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 83 S.E. 972 (State v. . Knotts) 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. . Knotts, 83 S.E. 972, 168 N.C. 173, 1914 N.C. LEXIS 34 (N.C. 1914).

Opinion

WalKER, J.,

after stating the ease: The motion to quash was properly disallowed. It was based upon the ground of duplicity in the indictment, as the defendants were charged therein with a secret assault upon two persons, Neal Elliott and A. B. Moore. Motions of this kind are not favored. “The courts usually refuse to quash on the application of the defendant where the indictment is for a serious offense, unless upon *180 tbe plainest and clearest grounds, but will drive tbe party to a demurrer, or motion in arrest of judgment, or writ of error,” as tbe case may require. S. v. Colbert, 75 N. C., at p. 373; Chitty’s Cr. Law, p. 300; S. v. Baldwin, 18 N. C., 195; S. v. Knight, 84 N. C., 790; S. v. Flowers, 109 N. C., 841. Tbe court may quasb tbe indictment in tbe first instance, without requiring tbe defendant to plead, but tbis power is . purely discretionary. Instead of dismissing it in tbis summary way, the .court will leave tbe defendant to bis other remedies, unless tbe defect be gross and apparent. S. v. Baldwin, supra. Tbe statute provides that every criminal proceeding by warrant, indictment, information, or impeachment shall be sufficient in form for all intents and purposes, if it express tbe charge against tbe defendant in a plain, intelligible, and explicit manner; and tbe same shall not be quashed, nor tbe judgment thereon stayed, by reason of any informality or refinement, if in tbe bill or proceeding sufficient matter appears to enable tbe court to proceed to judgment. Revisal, sec. 3254. It is true that tbis Court held in S. v. Nash, 88 N. C., 618, that if one commits an indiscriminate assault, by one stroke, or pistol shot, upon two or more persons; it is an assault upon each and every one of them, following S. v. Merritt, 61 N. C., 134, and that an acquittal or conviction for tbe assault upon one was not necessarily a good plea in bar to a subsequent indictment for the assault upon tbe other, which was met by an able and vigorous dissent by Justice Ashe; but tbis does not establish tbe defendant’s proposition, that tbe pleading is double if tbe State elects to indict for a single assault upon all. It is best for tbe defendant that it should do so, and decidedly to bis advantage in at least one respect, which is that an acquittal or conviction will be a complete bar to any further prosecution for an assault upon each of tbe persons. If be is embarrassed in bis defense by tbe joinder, or single prosecution, tbe court may, on proper application, require tbe State to elect, or perhaps to sever tbe prosecutions, treating tbe indictment as one in two counts for different offenses. 1 Bishop’s New Cr. Law, sec. 442. No such motion was made in tbis case, nor do we think the facts, or a proper regard for tbe rights of tbe defendants, suggested that such a course should be taken. It is laid down' that injuries inflicted on two or more persons by another’s single act may be charged against tbe latter in a single count, for there is, or may be deemed to be, but one offense. Thus, a battery or murder of two or more persons may be alleged in one count. We have some authority contrary to tbis, but by reason and tbe better decisions, certainly if one bullet or one blow, or one wrongful impulse of any kind, or probably if one transaction, results in tbe injury or death of two or more persons, all may be-alleged in one count as one offense. Where two, with intent to murder, commit a joint assault, tbe one with a knife and tbe other with a gun, *181 they may be jointly beld in one count. And if a man shoots at two, meaning to kill one, but regardless which, a single count may contain the full accusation. So a libel on more persons than one may be averred in one count, without rendering it double, if the publication is a single act. Many acts, if together they constitute but one offense, may be laid in one count. Thus, assault, battery, and false imprisonment may be charged in one count, because, though when separately considered they are distinct offenses, yet collectively they constitute but one offense. 1 Bishop’s New Cr. Law (2 Ed.), secs. 437, 438. This principle, as thus stated in the text-books, is supported by Rex v. Benfield, 2 Burrow, 980, 984; Rex v. Giddings, Car. and M., 436 (41 Eng. bom. Law Rep., 344 and star p. 634) ; The King v. Jenour, 7 Mod., 400; Shaw v. State, 18 Ala., 547; Cornell v. State, 104 Wise, 527; S. v. Batson, 108 La., 479; Kannon v. State, 78 Tenn., at p. 390, and cases cited; U. S. v. Wiseman, 182 Fed. Rep., 1017; Oleson v. State, 20 Wise, 62; People v. Milne, 60 Cal., 71; Rucker v. State, 7 Texas App., 549, and authorities cited. These eases hold, and many others might be cited to the same effect, that an indictment for an assault or murder of two persons is good upon its face, for the assault or murder may be committed in the same degree, by one and the same act. A person may, by a single act, endeavor to accomplish two or more criminal results. In such a case there can be no doubt that if the indictment sets forth the act and 'the intent to commit the two or more offenses according to the fact, it will not be open to the objection of duplicity. There is but one attempt, though the object aimed at is multifarious. In Regina v. Giddings, supra (41 E. C. L. Rep., 344), an indictment, which consisted of but one count, charged the four prisoners with assaulting George Pritchard and Henry Pritchard and stealing from George Pritchard two shillings and from Henry Pritchard one shilling and a hat, on 14 May, 1842. It appeared that the persons assaulted were walking together when the prisoners attacked and robbed them both. A motion was made to put the counsel for the prosecution to his election, upon the ground that the count charged two distinct felonies; but the court held that, as the assaulting and robbing of both individuals occurred at the same time, it was one entire transaction, and refused the motion. The great weight of authority, and we may safely venture to add, the almost -unanimous opinion of the courts and text-writers, sustains this view. The case of Rex v. Glendon, 2 Strange, 870, which seems to be against it, was denied to be law in Rex v. Benfield, 2 Bunon, 984, and in other subsequent cases, until it may now be regarded as overruled and as no longer a precedent. See 93 Eng. Reports (Full Reprint), p. 905; 2 Hawkins Pleas of the Crown, ch. 25, sec. 89 (8 Ed.), p. 331. In Archbold’s Cr. Pl. and Pr. (6 Am. Ed.), at side page 96, he says: “There is no objection to charging a defendant *182 in one count with assaulting two persons when tbe whole forms one transaction,” citing Rex v. Benfield, 2 Burr., 984, an opinion by Lord Mansfield, Chief Justice. And Wharton’s Cr. Law (7 Ed.), sec.

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Bluebook (online)
83 S.E. 972, 168 N.C. 173, 1914 N.C. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-knotts-nc-1914.