State v. . McDonald

73 N.C. 346
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1875
StatusPublished

This text of 73 N.C. 346 (State v. . McDonald) 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. . McDonald, 73 N.C. 346 (N.C. 1875).

Opinion

The following is the evidence in the case:

Thomas J. Green, the prosecutor, was introduced as a witness for the State, and testified: I am Captain of a steamboat plying between Fayetteville and Wilmington. On the night of the 11th of August, 1874, my dwelling house on Person street, in Fayetteville, was forcibly entered by prizing open the blinds of a window on the east side of my house. These blinds I had hooked myself the evening before, and left the sash up for air. On the next morning I noticed my axe lying on the ground under the window. A goods box was also under the window and a chair beside it so as to form steps. I noticed *Page 347 a slight impression or dent in the blinds, and signs of dirt as if from the axe. This was the sleeping room of my little daughter, aged twelve years, and of the nurse. The next morning I found these were the only window blinds open — they were pushed too, but the wrong one first, so as not to shut up tight. The rest of the windows were all closed and the doors were all locked. I had closed and fastened these windows myself before lying down. My own family, consisting of myself and wife and five children, were all at home We also had a guest with us that night, named Mrs. Carver I was the first one to rise next morning. I rose when it was clearly light, between daylight and sunrise. I lost my vest which I had hung up the night before in the passage at my bed room door, and with it my watch which I had left in my vest job. I also missed my overcoat and $50 in currency. This money was in a memorandum book, which I had handed to my wife the day before. I found the book on the parlor mantle, but no money. The watch was a fine gold lever watch, with thick hunting case. It was of the make of S. J. Tobias Co., Liverpool, No. 32,398; on one side a landscape was engraved and on the other a sportsman in the act of shooting a deer. The hands were large steel hands, unusually large, which I had put on specially to see at night. The watch cost $180, and was 18 carats fine. My kitchen was connected with my dwelling, forming an L, and is sixteen feet from my dwelling. It was entered that same night. The nails over the window sash were broken and the sash was taken out. I think I would recognize my vest, (a vest was then shown to the witness.) This is my best which my watch was in. I found this vest in a trunk at the prisoner's house, on the 11th or 12th of December last. The trunk was locked, the key could not be got, and the officer broke open the trunk, the prisoner not being present. We found in the trunk this vest; there were also in it an old coat and pants. We saw another trunk there, the key to which we found; it contained the regular clothing of the prisoner. I certainly recognize this vest as the one *Page 348 which contained my watch. I had the prisoner, Robert McDonald, arrested by an officer acting under a State's warrant, at a house four miles from Fayetteville. I had a conversation with the prisoner on our way to town.

The State's counsel proposed to give this conversation in evidence. The counsel for the prisoner objected, and thereupon in reply to questions asked him, the witness answered as follows: The prisoner seemed anxious to communicate. I made no threats, but spoke mildly to him and used no harsh words. The prisoner's counsel then remarked, "It appears no threats were used and that the statement was voluntarily made, the objection is withdrawn."

The witness then further testified: The prisoner then stated that he bought this vest, a bucket of butter and a piece of cheese, weighing five or six pounds, on Friday night, the 4th of December last, between ten and eleven o'clock at night, of a colored man named William Richardson. I asked if this was all he bought. He answered, "yes." I asked, "Robert, did you ever have my watch?" He answered, "Not as I know of, I sold a watch for William Richardson in September last." He then described my watch nearly as accurately as a jeweller would have done it, except the number. I think the prisoner knew my watch, he had seen it time and time again. He had been with me on my boat from 1870, off and on. His name is on my pay roll from that time, at intervals. I asked Robert, "What did you get for the watch?"

Here the prisoner's counsel renewed the objection to the admission of the conversation, on the ground that the prisoner was under arrest on a criminal charge, was then actually in the custody of the officer, and was not notified that his answer would be used against him as was admitted by the witness. Upon this ground the counsel for the prisoner moved the Court to exclude the whole conversation, both that which was already in evidence, and that which follows.

His Honor ruled that the State was entitled to introduce the whole of the conversation on that occasion, in evidence especially *Page 349 after a part of the same had been given in evidence upon a withdrawal of objection by the prisoner's counsel. To this ruling of his Honor the prisoner excepted.

The witness then further testified:

He answered, "Twenty dollars." I asked, "To whom did you sell it?" He answered, "To the captain of a vessel." I asked if he knew his name; he replied that he did not. I asked if he could tell me where the vessel was lying. He answered. "At or near the old New York steamship wharf, in Wilmington." This is a wharf near against the wharf of Worth Worth. I said "Robert, it could not have been possible you sold that watch for $20?" He said, "Yes sir." I said, "Did you know it was a gold watch?" He said he did not know it, but thought it was, that Richardson told him if he could get $20 for it to sell it; that it was a galvanized watch; he had won it gambling. I asked, "Robert, are you telling me the truth? that was a fine gold watch, and I prized it highly. It was a present; can't you put me in the way of recovering it?" He said, "Captain, I sold it." The prisoner lived about a mile from me. I saw him here about election time in August, a few days before. He worked about the river. The pay of a deck hand is $16.50 per month.

Upon cross examination the witness testified as follows:

The prisoner worked for me last Spring, (1874,) a short while. He worked for me some every year since 1870. He had not worked for me regularly for the last two years. He worked more for me in 1871. William Richardson, the colored man to whom the prisoner referred, has worked for me regularly for the last two years; he has not lost ten days. When my boat would come up the river, I usually sent some of the hands, when there was nothing else to do, to my house to saw wood. Richardson was up at Fayetteville the night my house was robbed. He frequently chopped wood at my house. He claimed to stay at Allen Harris', near the flour warehouse, one hundred yards from my house. I had Richardson arrested and put in jail for this same charge. The prisoner was arrested *Page 350 first, and on the same evening I had Richardson arrested. All I had against Richardson was the prisoner's statement. Both were put in jail. I had before this caused the arrest of two other men, Abram Williams and Adam Jessup, who were both discharged. William Richardson was used as a witness. I had twelve boat hands under me. I carried the watch before the war. Richardson had as good a chance to see my watch as the prisoner. I have stood with this watch in my hand, timeing [timing] boat hands in rolling barrels. I would not swear the prisoner ever saw the hands of the watch, or the engraving of the hunter on the case. I have never seen my watch since it was stolen.

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Related

State v. . Ratts
63 N.C. 503 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1869)
State v. . Davis
63 N.C. 578 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1869)

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Bluebook (online)
73 N.C. 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mcdonald-nc-1875.