State v. . Martin

70 N.C. 627
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 70 N.C. 627 (State v. . Martin) 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. . Martin, 70 N.C. 627 (N.C. 1874).

Opinion

The prisoner was indicted with two other for the murder of Willie Carter. The facts and the evidence are contained in the 628) following statement of the presiding Judge, sent to this Court as part of the record.

THE CONFESSIONS OF DAVID MARTIN, MADE TO JESSE J. CASSADY, THE EXAMINING MAGISTRATE.

He says: Between the hours of 1 and 2 o'clock, on Monday last, I and Jimmie Anderson and William Hooper, and Willie Carter, the deceased, started for Smith's Creek, to go in swimming, and when about half way between the Union Depot and the creek, we sat down on the railroad track. While sitting on the track, Jimmie Anderson took out of his pocket a two-bladed corkscrew knife, which had the point of one blade broken off. Stopped and sharpened the knife on the iron rail, remarking that he always wanted his knife sharp, so that he could cut anybody that aroused his angry passions. After sharpening the knife, the boys got up and proceeded to the creek, and when near the thicket, one of them cut a club about fifteen inches long and one and a half-inches in diameter, which he carried along.

Arriving at the place where they intended to go in swimming, they found it unsuitable to the purpose; so they went farther up the creek, *Page 507 through a blind path, and through an undergrowth, to a spot where they would have a better opportunity of committing the deed without the fear of discovery while in the act.

While Carter and one of the boys stripped off and plunged (629) into the water; Jimmie threw Willie's hat into the water, which he, (Willie,) swam after and secured. They next threw his clothes in, which he also swam after, and in attempting to get ashore, was jumped on and repeatedly shoved under, until he was nearly drowned, and when he reached the shore, was pulled on the bank by him (David.) Willie spread his clothes in the sun, and while waiting for them to dry, Jimmie Anderson, with knife in hand, made an assault upon Willie and attempted to cut him. Willie resisted, and finally threw the boys off, remarking as he did so, that he did not like such fun. In a few minutes thereafter one of them struck him with a club in the forehead, which stunned him, and he staggered towards the bank of the creek, and Jimmie and William shoved him in the water. They then tied the legs of his pants, which they filled with rocks, and threw over his neck. The boys then sat on the bank of the creek (with the exception of David, who lay on the hill out of sight) and watched the boy fifteen minutes, until the last bubbles were seen to rise.

Dr. W. W. Lane, being duly sworn, deposes and says:

I was called on to make a post mortem examination of Willie Carter; found the head in a contused condition, the tongue hanging out of the mouth, terribly lacerated. I found the arm off close to the shoulder, with about two inches of the humeries and head in the socket. Arm was missing. Was forty or fifty hours between death and the time of examination. The body was mutilated by a smooth clean cut, and must have been made with a knife. There was a small gash, a diagonal cut on the thigh. The whole head and face was severely bruised, evidently by a dull instrument. I did not cut into the skull, as the evidence of foul play was so evident. Made no examination to see if deceased was drowned. The body had the appearances of being choked, and the head bruised. The left arm was removed; the bone was broken, and an irregular fracture.

Upon his cross-examination, Dr. Lane said: I would not like (630) to say whether the boy was drowned or murdered first. I did not make a careful examination. My opinion is he was drowned first; though he might have been beaten and drowned simultaneously.

There was much evidence tending to show the guilty participation of the boy David in the homicide, which it is not deemed necessary to *Page 508 report. But all the evidence as to the means and manner of the homicide is herein stated.

Oliver Kelly, was sworn as a witness, and testified as to the confessions of the prisoner, David; to the effect that David stated that he went into the water with the deceased, and that he pushed Willie under the water until he was nearly dead. That he and one Elijah Martin held his arm while one Duke cut it off with a hatchet. David also said that he himself held Willie's head under the water until he was nearly strangled. David also said that Jimmie Anderson struck him with a stick, they having got into a fight about a biscuit. In another statement made by David Martin, he said the body of Willie Carter was not mutilated until after his death, and the body had been drawn up out of the water, after his death. He also stated, when examined by the Justice, that Willie was standing on the bank close to the river, facing the water, when the boys, Jim Anderson and Billy Merrick, shoved him in the creek and drowned him.

It was also in evidence that in a statement subsequent to those above given, David stated that Elijah, whom he had implicated by his previous statements, was not present at all, had nothing to do with it, and upon being asked why he had charged Elizah with it, said he did not know why he did it, that he just lied about it. And several witnesses testified to an alibi as to Duke, who had been implicated by the statement of the prisoner, David. In some of David's statements which were in evidence, he described the place where the homicide was done, and his description was confirmed by numerous witnesses who examined the place.

(631) In the course of the trial, the boys, David, Jim and Billy Merrick, being at the bar, on trial, when the State rested it case, the counsel for the prisoner, Billy Merrick, moved that the Court direct a verdict of not guilty, as to him, and that he be discharged upon the ground that there was no evidence against him to go to the jury. The Court said that there was nothing whatever in the State's case showing the guilt of the prisoner, Billy Merrick, except the confessions of his co-defendants, which were not evidence against him. "Therefore," said the Judge, "I shall direct an acquittal as to him, although I think it not improbable that he was there." To this remark of the Court, the prisoner, David, excepts. The remark was made as to Billy. Counsel for prisoners argued to the jury, that according to the evidence, the homicide, if committed at all by the prisoners, (which was denied) was upon a sudden fight, and, therefore, manslaughter.

This argument that was made to the jury, "That if the defendants *Page 509 were guilty at all, they were only guilty of manslaughter, was based upon the confessions that were made by Jimmie Anderson, which showed a certain fight, which resulted in the death of the deceased, and not from any confessions or statements that were made by David Martin."

The Court charged the jury, that if the deceased came to his death by a blow with the stick or by other means occurring upon a sudden quarrel, and in a sudden fight, which deceased had contributed to bring about, then it would be manslaughter, and not murder; but that if the jury believed that the killing was accompanied by the circumstances of teasing and tantalizing the deceased, and then mutilating the body in the atrocious manner described by witnesses, that this would indicate the existence of malice. Prisoner prayed the Court to instruct, that if deceased came to his death by being drowned, then the prisoners cannot be convicted.

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

Related

Furst-Edwards v. St. Louis S. W. Ry. Co.
146 S.W. 1024 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1912)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 N.C. 627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-martin-nc-1874.