State v. . Miller

116 S.E. 416, 185 N.C. 680
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 21, 1923
StatusPublished

This text of 116 S.E. 416 (State v. . Miller) 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. . Miller, 116 S.E. 416, 185 N.C. 680 (N.C. 1923).

Opinion

Criminal action. The prisoner was prosecuted for the murder of one John Sutton. The homicide occurred on 29 September, 1922, about 7 p.m. The deceased, believing the prisoner had stolen corn from his field, got Arthur Sutton, his cousin, to take him in his car in pursuit of the prisoner, who was driving a one-horse wagon along the public *Page 716 highway in the direction of Kinston. The car soon overtook him, and the deceased went to the side of the wagon and asked the prisoner what he had in it. The answer was, "It is none of your business." The deceased then pushed back some hay that was in the wagon, laid his hands on some corn that had been underneath the hay, and asked the prisoner where he got it. The prisoner said, "From Dary Williams," and the deceased replied, "No, you got it out of my field." The deceased then directed Arthur Sutton to drive on to Kinston and get an officer. After Arthur left, the deceased got in the wagon with the prisoner and told him to go on. The deceased sat in the wagon at the left of the prisoner. After the car had gone the prisoner, with the deceased by his side, went on towards Kinston. After going about two or three hundred yards on the road they got into the highway leading towards Kinston and went about one hundred and fifty or two hundred yards further when the prisoner drew a pistol from his pocket and fired four shots at the deceased. Three shots took effect and death followed almost instantly. Soon afterwards the body of the deceased was found in the road. The deceased at the time had on overalls and had no weapon about his person. When his body was examined by the corner a knife was found in the pocket of the deceased, but it was not open.

After the homicide the prisoner escaped and was afterwards arrested in Baltimore and brought back to Kinston for trial. Sheriff Taylor testified that the prisoner made a voluntary statement and admitted that he had shot and killed the deceased with a pistol. In this statement the prisoner said that after the deceased got into his wagon they engaged in an "argument," and that the deceased had his knife and "made a grab at him and he shot him, and he fell off the wagon." He also said that the deceased "whacked him across the shoulder" and cut his shirt, but not his flesh.

After the homicide was committed the prisoner drove his wagon back of Duff Humphrey's house in the woods, where it was afterwards found. In the wagon there were about eighteen gallons of whiskey and a small quantity of corn.

The prisoner was convicted of murder in the first degree, and from the judgment and sentence of death he appealed to the Supreme Court. The gravity of the judgment pronounced has called for (682) a close and careful scrutiny of the entire record, to the end that the prisoner's exceptions be judicially determined *Page 717 and his legal rights fully protected. Such inspection we have endeavored to bestow, and have been unable to discover in the trial any error that will warrant referring the case to another jury or interfering with the judgment of the court.

The circumstances attending the homicide are free from complication. The prisoner was driving his wagon on the highway; he was overtaken, or met, by the deceased and charged with larceny; the deceased got in the wagon and took a seat on the left side of the prisoner; an "argument" followed and the prisoner fired four shots in rapid succession, killing the deceased, whose body soon thereafter was found in the road. No novel question is presented and no extended discussion is required.

Exceptions 1, 4, 5: The prisoner's objection to evidence tending to show the contents of the wagon-bed — hay, whiskey, and a little corn — is without merit. When the deceased and Arthur Sutton overtook, or met, the prisoner the deceased displaced a part of the hay and found corn which he said had been stolen from his field. If evidence, when offered, is competent for any purpose it should not be excluded; and here the evidence objected to was competent, not only on the question of the prisoner's motive in firing the fatal shots, but on the question of his premeditation and deliberation. It tended to disclose conditions, all of which were known to the prisoner, and some of which were known to the deceased during the time that intervened between their meeting and the commission of the homicide. S. v. Goff, 117 N.C. 756; S. v. Rose, 129 N.C. 575; S. v.Wilcox, 132 N.C. 1143.

Exceptions 2, 3: Arthur Sutton testified that after going in search of the officer, he returned to the scene of the homicide and examined the body of the deceased, not very closely, it is true, and found that he was not armed; and C. T. Savage testified that when he went there he found nothing. To the admission of these statements exceptions were entered of record.

The prisoner told the sheriff that the deceased while in the wagon assaulted him with a knife; that the deceased "had his knife and made a grab at him, and he shot him." He did not say the deceased had a pistol. The court was alert to permit the jury to consider any evidence of an assault upon the prisoner by the deceased with a knife, and instructed them in the law both of manslaughter and of self-defense. Since the prisoner did not pretend that the deceased had a pistol, in what way could the admitted evidence be prejudicial? In any event, it was immaterial; and, as Chamberlayne pertinently (683) remarks, "Even where the higher court feels that error has been committed in admitting certain evidence, it will not, as a rule, find prejudice where the evidence admitted was entirely irrelevant, i. e., *Page 718 immaterial. It is obviously difficult to predicate prejudice upon the admission of irrelevant evidence entirely without probative effect." Modern Law of Ev., sec. 174. And substantially the same proposition has been approved in our decisions time after time. Carter v. R. R., 165 N.C. 249;Penland v. Barnard, 146 N.C. 379; Hosiery Mills v. Cotton Mills,140 N.C. 452.

Exceptions 7, 8: Exception was taken to his Honor's definition of deliberation and premeditation, which was in these words: "Deliberation means to think about, to revolve over in one's mind; and if a person thinks about the performance of an act and determines in his mind to do that act, he has deliberated upon the act. Premeditation means to think beforehand, think over the matter beforehand; and where a person forms a purpose to kill another and weighs this purpose in his mind long enough to form a fixed design to kill at a subsequent time, no matter how soon or how late, and pursuant to said fixed design kills said person, this would be a killing with premeditation and deliberation. . . . In order to constitute deliberation and premeditation, something more must appear than the prior existence of actual malice, or the presumption of actual malice, which arises from the use of a deadly weapon. Though the mental process may require but a moment of thought, it must be shown so as to satisfy the jury beyond a reasonable doubt that the person had weighed and balanced the subject of killing in his mind long enough to consider the reason or the motive that impelled him to act, as to form a fixed design to kill in furtherance of such purpose or motive."

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89 N.C. 481 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1883)
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Phifer v. Commissioners of Cabarrus County
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State v. Davis.
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State v. Rose.
40 S.E. 83 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1901)
State v. . Johnson
113 S.E. 617 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1922)
State v. Hagan.
42 S.E. 901 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1902)
State v. . Jones
124 S.E. 121 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1924)
State v. Hunt.
47 S.E. 49 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1904)
Hosiery Co. v. Cotton Mills.
53 S.E. 140 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1906)
State v. . Fleming
163 S.E. 453 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1932)
State v. Spivey.
43 S.E. 475 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1903)
Carter v. Seaboard Air Line Railroad
165 N.C. 244 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1914)
State v. Merrick
171 N.C. 788 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1916)
State v. Kincaid
183 N.C. 709 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 S.E. 416, 185 N.C. 680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-miller-nc-1923.