State v. . Long

23 S.E. 431, 117 N.C. 791
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 23 S.E. 431 (State v. . Long) 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. . Long, 23 S.E. 431, 117 N.C. 791 (N.C. 1895).

Opinion

The defendant was a school teacher and had whipped the prosecuting witness, a boy of 13 years, with a hickory switch or sprout, inflicting injuries from which the boy suffered some weeks. *Page 544

Zeb Gardener testified: "I am about thirteen years old, and was going to school to Mr. Long last February. He whipped me with a hickory withe about three feet long and as large at the but end as my thumb — whipped me for shooting a boy with a small crossbow. The boy held up his hand for me to shoot at and I shot him with a small arrow, which had a pin in the end of it. We were not mad at each other. The bow would not shoot more than three steps. I did not hear Mr. Long tell me, before I shot, not to do so. He struck me seven times with the hickory and twice with the other switch. I used crutches for more than a month to walk with. The switch he whipped me with was a sprout. Had been on good terms with Mr. Long always before that time. At the time he whipped me he said I was a good boy, had never given him trouble before, but that I had disobeyed him and he would have to whip me."

Mrs. Miller testified: "I am the grandmother of Zeb Gardener. (793) He was thirteen years old last January. Zeb came home on Monday, the day of the whipping; did not eat much dinner, and complained that his leg hurt him, where Mr. Long had whipped him. There was one cut on his leg three or four inches long — two others not so long, and were not bleeding; his stocking was bloody. This was 12 o'clock; saw it again that night; badly bruised between the cuts, which were located on the calf of the leg. Monday night he moaned all night; had to prop up his leg in bed. Tuesday night he complained and moaned all night. I waked up his father and told him about Zeb's condition. Zeb had his head thrown back and had violent pains and trembled like a leaf; gave him laudanum and other things; teeth chattered; sat up with him all night; did not seem to know anything until Friday morning; he was continually crying, `Oh, my leg!' It was about a week before he could get up, his leg was propped up all the time; after that he went about on crutches; he complains sometimes now; used laudanum and smoked sugar on his leg; on Wednesday used vaseline and carbolic salve. Long acknowledged that he cut several times in the same place. Zeb said his knees and breast hurt him; said pain was also in his head and jaw and affected his breathing."

Jonas Gardener testified: "I am father of Zeb. I first knew of the whipping Tuesday night. He was ailing before that, but I did not know what was the matter. On Tuesday night he had spasms, jerking his head back and gritting his teeth; kept up until one hour before day. His leg was swollen and bloody; water was oozing out. He lay on the pallet for thirteen days. I then brought him to town court week; never walked at all for fifteen days, then he used crutches for something *Page 545 like a month. Long was at my house and said he was high strung and liable to get mad. Said he was a little off on that day and was mad. He said this in the presence of Zeb's (794) grandmother. I sent for the doctor on Thursday, and he would not come. Long said he whipped Zeb because he was disobedient; that he never had had trouble with him before, and that he was a good boy."

The defendant, G. W. Long, introduced in his own behalf, testified: "I am a school teacher. Have been teaching for some six or eight years. Zeb Gardener, the prosecutor, was one of my pupils. On Monday morning (the day of the whipping) at recess, as I was walking out of the schoolroom on the playground, I saw Zeb have a crossbow and an arrow with a pin stuck in the end of it. I told him not to shoot on the ground, as he might injure some of the children. I was very close to him, and as I spoke he lowered the crossbow from an attitude of shooting, which satisfied me that he had heard what I said. On my return I was told that he had shot one of the boys in the hand, not inflicting any great injury. I sent for Zeb and the boy that was shot, and whipped them both with the same switch. Before whipping Zeb, I told him that I was very sorry that I had to whip him; that he had always been a good boy and had never given me trouble before, but that I had expressly commanded him not to shoot the bow on the ground, and that he had, almost immediately, violated my instructions. He said that he knew he had done wrong, and was willing to take the whipping. I struck him two licks with a small switch that I had in the schoolroom, and the switch broke. I sent one of the boys out for another switch. He returned with two; both of them were hickory sprouts of one year's growth; the largest one, at the but end, was about the size of my little finger, and probably three feet long. I trimmed the knots off carefully and limbered it up with my hand. I then struck Zeb some six or seven (795) licks with this switch: did not entend to and do not think I struck him too hard. I whipped him around the legs; struck him on the calf of the leg (which was only protected by a stocking) unintentionally. He made no outcry until I struck him the last lick, and when he made the first sign of pain I stopped. I then whipped the other boy with the same switch, but not quite as hard as I whipped Zeb. I do not know whether I whipped him with the large switch or the small one Mr. Gardener, Zeb's father, went to the schoolhouse afterwards and got possession of both switches, and I have not seen them since. He made no complaint that day to me, and came back to school Tuesday and appeared to be as well as usual. On Wednesday I heard that his father wanted to see me, and I went to the house and saw Zeb lying on a pallet. His leg was swollen and had three whelps on the calf. In one *Page 546 of them the skin was broken and it appeared to be irritated — had a bluish, reddish look, as if he had caught cold in it. I told Mr. Gardener I did not know I had hit the boy hard enough to inflict this wound, and that probably the reason the skin was broken in this place was because the hickory had struck twice in that place. I deny ever having told Gardener that I was off and was mad. I did not twist the switch under my foot, and was not in the least angry. I saw no blood oozing out of the wound on the day he was whipped or when I saw him on Wednesday at his home. I had no malice or ill will toward the boy; he had never given me trouble before, and I only whipped him because I felt it necessary to do so to maintain discipline in the school, and also thought he needed punishment for disobeying my orders."

At the close of the evidence the defendant requested the court to charge the jury as follows:

"1. That, in order to convict the defendant, the jury must be (796) convinced beyond a reasonable doubt, or fully satisfied, that the injury was inflicted, not for punishment or for correction of the boy because of his disobedience, but from malice towards him, or that the injury is permanent.

"2. That there is no evidence of malice.

"3. That there is no evidence that the injury is of a permanent character, such as the law makes it criminal to inflict.

"4. That the defendant had the right to punish the boy, Zeb Gardener, for disobedience, for any violation of the rules of the school, and had the right, also, to whip him; and even if the jury believe that the punishment was excessive or cruel they cannot convict unless they also find that the defendant was actuated by malice towards the boy, or unless the defendant inflicted a permanent injury upon him.

"5.

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

Related

Crocker v. Griffin
694 S.E.2d 523 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 2010)
State v. Jenkins
268 S.E.2d 458 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1980)
State v. Wilkerson
247 S.E.2d 905 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1978)
State v. Wrenn
185 S.E.2d 129 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1971)
State v. Atkins
87 S.E.2d 507 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1955)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 S.E. 431, 117 N.C. 791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-long-nc-1895.