State v. . Lane

81 S.E. 620, 166 N.C. 333, 1914 N.C. LEXIS 403
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 29, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 81 S.E. 620 (State v. . Lane) 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. . Lane, 81 S.E. 620, 166 N.C. 333, 1914 N.C. LEXIS 403 (N.C. 1914).

Opinion

This is an indictment for the murder of George McCain on 28 October, 1912. It was alleged by the State that the prisoner knew that the deceased had a large amount of money on his person, and that he lured him into a swamp, about 300 or 400 yards from the station at Aberdeen on the Seaboard Air Line Railway, for the ostensible purpose of gambling with him, but for the real purpose of robbery. The two were seen entering the swamp about 4:30 or 5 o'clock p. m. on the day of the homicide, and shortly thereafter two reports of a gun were heard, and deceased's body was found that night about 8 o'clock, with a fatal wound in the breast and one in the head, the side of his face having been blown off. The prisoner was seen about 6 o'clock, going in the (335) direction of the home of his father, Joab Lane, where he lived, and tracks of the prisoner were also found leading from the place of the homicide in the direction of that house. The prisoner had promised Julia Jones, who had picked cotton on that day for his father, to return *Page 300 in the afternoon and weigh the cotton for her, and he did not do so, according to her statement, though he told the officer, Dan McDonald, that he had returned to his home for that purpose. There was evidence tending to show a close resemblance between shells in the prisoner's gun and two empty shells, one found near the body of the deceased and the other at a place in a field where prisoner had shot a rabbit on that day. When the body was found, the pockets of the deceased, where the money was, had been turned inside out, all the money was gone, the playing cards had been torn up, and a receipt and railroad pass with the name of the deceased on it, and a flat pint-bottle containing about a teaspoonful of scuppernong wine, were found near the body, the prisoner having been seen with such a bottle full of wine on the same day, just before the homicide was committed, having marks on it corresponding with those on the bottle that was found near the body. The prisoner made contradictory statements as to his whereabouts that day, and after being arrested, escaped from the officers, fled, and was not recaptured for several days. He made a confession in jail, to one Judson Jackson, that he had killed the deceased, in a manner indicating premeditation and deliberation, and robbed him of the money, $141. He then went down the creek and to his home, where he hid the money under a pile of cotton. The prisoner denied that he had killed the deceased or had made any confession to Jackson. He also introduced evidence to show an alibi and to explain the circumstances, evidence of which was offered by the State. Under the evidence and charge of the court, the jury returned a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree. Judgment was entered upon the verdict, and the prisoner appealed. (336) After stating the case: This case was very carefully tried in the court below, and the charge of the court is to be commended for its very clear and comprehensive statement of the law as applicable to every phase of the evidence, and for an equally lucid and logical analysis of the evidence itself, so that the issues were presented to the jury fairly and fully for both parties. There was undoubtedly evidence of the prisoner's guilt, and this was explained to the jury in such a way that the prisoner, at least, has no ground for complaint. If there is any error therein — and we do not think there is — it was committed in favor of the prisoner, and not against him. We will consider the exceptions in the order of their statement in the record. *Page 301 Exception 1. When the court admitted the testimony of Dr. McLeod, that the empty shell was "found at the body," and upon afterwards discovering that the witness was speaking from hearsay, ruled it out, the error, if any, based upon the misapprehension of counsel and the court as to the nature of the testimony, was harmless, for the court distinctly and emphatically excluded it and cautioned the jury not to consider it. Cowlesv. Lovin, 135 N.C. 488; Livingston v. Dunlap, 99 N.C. 268; Blalock v.Clark, 137 N.C. 140; S. v. Keen, 95 N.C. 646; and more especially S. v.Flemming, 130 N.C. 688; S. v. Ellsworth, ibid., 690. We cannot assume that the jury disobeyed the court's instruction and considered the evidence, but we must presume the contrary, unless prejudice appears or is shown by the appellant in some way. The burden is on him to prove it. Rush v. SteamboatCo., 67 N.C. 47; Thomas v. Alexander, 19 N.C. 385.

Exceptions 2 and 3. The testimony of E. Hillman, that the man he saw coming towards Joab Lane's house looked like the defendant, was competent in connection with the other evidence of identity. Similar rulings have been sustained by the following authorities: 17 Cyc., 132; S. v. Lytle,117 N.C. 799; S. v. Costner, 127 N.C. 566; and more recently by S. v.Carmon, 145 N.C. 481, where the impression of the witness as to identity, based upon knowledge of the person, was less pronounced. But the evidence was afterwards excluded, and this rendered it harmless, even if at first it was erroneously admitted; and the same reason applies to exceptions 4, 5, 8, and 9, for the (337) testimony as to the examination and comparison of the three empty shells was withdrawn, with a proper caution to the jury in regard thereto, the gun and shells having been handed to the jurors for their inspection, by consent of the parties. Even then the court instructed the jury not to consider their own inspection of them, unless they found that they had been properly identified. The rights of the prisoner were fully guarded at every point.

Exception 6. The objection to the testimony of Dan Chambers came entirely too late. It was discretionary with the judge whether he would strike it out at that stage of the case, after it had been admitted without objection. S. v. Efler, 85 N.C. 585. But the probative force of the testimony was so slight that the prisoner could not have been prejudiced thereby. If it tended to prove anything, it was that the prisoner knew the deceased had much money, or was in the habit of carrying "a big wad of money," and this was a relevant circumstance in view of the strong trend of the evidence that robbery was his purpose when he went into the swamp on the afternoon of the homicide. *Page 302 Exception 7. The question put to the witness David Knight, who was deputy sheriff, as to finding keys at the place of the homicide belonging to deceased, was not answered, nor was the nature of the evidence which was proposed to be elicited disclosed by the prisoner. We cannot, therefore, see that there was error. In re Smith's Will, 163 N.C. 464; S. v. Rhyne,109 N.C. 794; Sumner v. Candler, 92 N.C. 634; Knight v. Killebrew,86 N.C. 400. We must know what the answer would have been before we can pass upon the competency or relevancy of the evidence. Besides, as it now appears to us, the evidence was irrelevant and harmless, if we are to judge by the question.

Exceptions 10, 11, 12, and 13.

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Bluebook (online)
81 S.E. 620, 166 N.C. 333, 1914 N.C. LEXIS 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lane-nc-1914.