State v. Needham

71 S.E.2d 29, 235 N.C. 555, 1952 N.C. LEXIS 463
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 21, 1952
Docket4
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 71 S.E.2d 29 (State v. Needham) 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. Needham, 71 S.E.2d 29, 235 N.C. 555, 1952 N.C. LEXIS 463 (N.C. 1952).

Opinion

*557 JOHNSON, J.

The crucial exception presented by this appeal tests the sufficiency of the evidence to carry the case to the jury over the defendant’s motions for judgment as of nonsuit, made in apt time under the provisions of G.S. 15-173.

The gist of the State’s case as gleaned from the testimony of the witnesses called by the Solicitor is in substance as follows :

For eight years or more the defendant, father of nine children, had been engaged in illicit relations with the wife of the deceased, mother of four children. The defendant began visiting the Lawson home when the family lived on the Napier farm about four miles from Pilot Mountain. About 1943 the Lawson family moved to the Jim Hill place, which adjoins the defendant’s farm. It was then that the association between the defendant and the deceased’s wife became more intimate and -constant. The wife of the deceased testified she started having intercourse with the defendant two or three months after the family moved to the Hill place. She said: “I got to know Mr. Needham when he kept coming there and all drinking together. Sometimes he furnished the liquor and sometimes my husband.” The family stayed at the Hill place three years, and then moved to the Carson place where they remained a year. Mrs. Lawson said the defendant came to see her three or four times a week while she and the family were living at the Hill and Carson places.

From the Carson place the family moved to Sid Johnson’s at German-ton in Stokes County, a distance of some 20 miles from Needham’s home. The wife of the deceased testified Needham “didn’t like us moving to the Johnson place because it was too far,” but he “came about every week-end and sometimes during the week. . . . Tie wanted us to move to the Boyles place near where he lived. . . . He said a good way to get us out would be to burn the house to get us away from down there. . . .”

After one year at the Johnson place the family moved to the “mountain at Pinnacle” about 1948. (Distance from defendant’s home not given.) The deceased’s wife said the defendant kept coming “to see us about the same as when we lived at the other places,” but he “wanted us to move to the Boyles place.”

The family made the last move in January, 1951, — this time to the Nelson place, where the fire occurred. Needham continued to visit the Lawson home “two or three times a week” down to the time of the fatal event.

The evidence discloses that during all this time the deceased knew about the illicit relations between his wife and the defendant. She testified: “My husband knew about the relationship between Needham and me.” The deceased and the defendant appeared to be on friendly terms, except at times when they were drinking. On such occasions they quarreled, threatened each other and slapped each other, but as the wife put it, there *558 was “no serious injury.” Needham frequently brought liquor and sometimes groceries. “He kinda wanted to be boss.”

The tenant house on the Nelson place in which the Lawsons lived was located 300 or 400 feet west of State Highway No. 66 in Stokes County. There was a “front yard or driveway going all the way from the highway to the house. . . . nothing to interfere with . . . view of the house from the highway,” except a pack house located between the highway and the house. “. . . woods extend close to the north side of the house and out near the highway. There are two tobacco barns located across the road ■ (highway) from the house. . . . There was a well behind the house very close to the house . . . The woods behind the house were about 50 feet from the well . . .”

The house “was a five room, one-story frame house. . . . Approaching the house from the front there were three bedrooms on the right-hand side, and on the left-hand side there was a living room or front room, and the kitchen was directly behind the front room. There was no hall in the house. There were two outside doors. One entering from the front porch into thé front room and the other from the kitchen out onto the back porch.” There was no outside door leading from the back bedroom. To get out of that bedroom it was necessary to go through the kitchen. “There were three doors in the kitchen — one opening into the west bedroom, one outdoors, and one into the front room.”

Only the two younger Lawson children, a girl 16 and a boy 10, were living with the family, and both were visiting away from home the Sunday afternoon of the fire.

The defendant came to the Lawson home the Saturday before the fire. Lawson’s wife testified: “He came in a blue Eord . . . about 3 o’clock. . . . He brought about a quart of liquor in a half gallon can. . . . We were curing tobacco at the barn . . . across the road. . . . We all lay behind the barn on a quilt.”

Early the next morning the three rode off in Needham’s car to get whiskey and groceries. They returned about 8 o’clock with a quart of whiskey, some groceries, and a half gallon of kerosene oil. Needham’s car was left parked in the yard near the pack house. Mrs. Lawson had built a fire in the stove to cook breakfast and it was still burning when they returned. They started drinking early.

Later in the morning Walter Inman, Curt Shelton and Claude Gordon arrived on the scene.

Inman testified the three of them went to the Lawson place in Gordon’s pick-up truck, taking about half a gallon of whiskey. They arrived around 10 or 11 o’clock. Inman said: “. . . I was drinking right smart. The three of us went into the house taking liquor with us. We found Claude Needham and Mr. and Mrs. Lawson there . . . setting in the *559 kitchen at the table. I started passing around the liquor. ... I drank about a cup full of liquor, and was drunk and went in the front room and went to sleep ... on the floor beside the couch.” Later “some kind of noise woke me up. I jumped up and turned around, couldn’t think where I was. I had been pretty drunk, and whirled around to leave when I saw a whole lot of smoke and a little fire in the kitchen. I saw a man through the smoke in the kitchen standing up with something in his hand and heard him say, ‘G— damn, G— damn.’ I don’t know whether it was a stick, or pine knot or what it was in his hand, but it was on fire and he started cursing and then he turned and his arms obstructed a view of his face. I couldn’t tell how far in the kitchen the man was. I don’t remember who it was or what size man it was but he was cursing and I thought he was trying to burn the house up and I left there. I ran out the front door and into Curt Shelton who was setting in the swing in the front porch. I told him Claude Gordon was trying to burn the house up.” Then, according to Inman, both men ran around the side of the house, Shelton tried to get in the house at the back, and then both men ran off into the woods,- where they remained 15 or 20 minutes while the house burned. Inman further said: “When I went out the front door and saw Curt Shelton (in the swing) ... I didn’t see nobody else in front of the house. I didn’t see any automobile in the yard at the house. . . . When I went out the door and started around to the right, I didn’t see nobody leave the house and didn’t see nobody going in the direction of the road and the tobacco barn. . . .”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 S.E.2d 29, 235 N.C. 555, 1952 N.C. LEXIS 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-needham-nc-1952.