State v. Orr

132 S.E.2d 334, 260 N.C. 177, 1963 N.C. LEXIS 662
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 18, 1963
Docket2
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 132 S.E.2d 334 (State v. Orr) 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. Orr, 132 S.E.2d 334, 260 N.C. 177, 1963 N.C. LEXIS 662 (N.C. 1963).

Opinion

HiggiNs, J.

The defendant contends that the trial court committed error (1) by overruling his motion to dismiss; and (2) by giving the jury conflicting instructions as to the quantum of proof necessary to convict. All other exceptions and assignments of error are abandoned.

The prosecuting witness, a woman 57 years of age, testified for the State, detailing circumstances sufficient to go to the jury and to sustain its verdict. The victim was well acquainted with the defendant. She made complaint to the members of her family and to the sheriff at the first opportunity. The story she told them immediately after the alleged assault was in substance the same as her testimony at the trial.

The defendant left the community on the day of the alleged assault. He was arrested ten months later in Knoxville, Tennessee. While in custody he told the investigating officer that on December 3, 1961, he went to the home of the prosecutrix, stayed a short time, left, but after seeing her husband and daughter leave the house, he “then walked back up to Roscoe’s house and stayed there awhile and then left and went . . . home; that after he had been at his home awhile someone . . . told him-something was in the air, and he left and went to Detroit. . . . He said he would tell his story in court; *179 that he had rather not say anything concerning the offense he was ■charged with at that time.”

In passing on the motion to dismiss, we must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the State. State v. Tessnear, 254 N.C. 211, 118 S.E. 2d 393; State v. Gay, 251 N.C. 78, 110 S.E. 2d 458. The credibility of witnesses and the proper weight to be given their testimony must be decided by the jury — not by the court. State v. Kelly, 243 N.C. 177, 90 S.E. 2d 241. The evidence in the case was sufficient to require the court to submit the issue of guilt to the jury. The motion to dismiss was properly denied.

Inasmuch as the defendant has raised the question of conflicting instructions, we here repeat the parts of the charge material to decision on the assignment of error:

“Now, upon the defendant’s plea of not guilty to the charge the burden is upon the State to satisfy you beyond a reasonable doubt of each and every element of the offense charged. There is no burden upon the defendant to prove anything. The burden rests entirely upon the State.
“In criminal eases in our State, and in all the States of the United States, there is a presumption of innocence upon a plea of not guilty. The defendant is presumed innocent and that presumption remains with him throughout the trial until such time as the State has offered competent evidence which is sufficient to satisfy you beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant is guilty.
“Now, I want to call your attention to the phrase ‘reasonable doubt,’ so that we might understand at the outset what is meant by it, because in my charge I will use the phrase a number of times. A reasonable doubt, members of the jury, is not a vain, imaginary or fanciful doubt, but it is a sane and rational doubt. When we say you must be satisfied of defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, it is meant that you must be fully satisfied, or entirely convinced, satisfied to a moral certainty that the defendant is guilty of the charge against him. So I charge you, gentlemen of the jury, that you will bear in mind throughout your deliberations that the burden of proof rests upon the State to satisfy you beyond a reasonable doubt of each element of the offense charged.”

After reciting the substance of the State’s evidence, the court charged:

*180 “Now, upon this evidence, members of the jury, and upon this charge as contained in the bill of indictment, the State says and contends that the defendant did forcibly have carnal knowledge with the prosecuting witness, Mattie Orr, against her will, and they say and contend that the evidence offered here should foe sufficient to satisfy you beyond a reasonable doubt that he is guilty of the charge as contained in the bill of indictment. . . .
“The defendant, on the other hand, says and contends, through his plea of not guilty, that you should not be satisfied by the greater weight of the evidence that this is so.
“The defendant says and contends that the evidence offered ■by the State is not sufficient to satisfy you beyond a reasonable doubt of any of the three elements of the charge contained in the bill of indictment, and he says and contends that, even if the evidence might be sufficient to establish one of the elements, that it is not sufficient to establish all three, and that therefore you should not be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that he is guilty as charged in the bill of indictment.
“So, members of the jury, the Court instructs you that if you are satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that on the occasion on December 3, 1961, that the defendant did, forcibly and against her will, and they have been defined to- you, carnally know the prosecuting witness, as that has been defined to you, then it would be your duty to return a verdict of guilty as charged in the bill of indictment. If the State has not satisfied you of each of those elements beyond a reasonable doubt, then, gentlemen, it would be your duty to return a verdict of a lesser degree of the crime, as I will define that to you, or a verdict of not guilty.” * * *
“Gentlemen of the jury, it has been called to my attention that somewhere in my instructions to you I used the phrase ‘by the greater weight of the evidence.’ That is incorrect, it is improper in a criminal action. It was a slip of the tongue on the part of the Court, which is a hangover from the trial of civil actions. It has no application in this case, and what the Court intended to say in the place of that phrase, if he did use it, is ‘beyond a reasonable doubt,’ because that is the application that has to be used in criminal actions. So, in your consideration of whether or not you find the defendant guilty of anything, you will use the greater weight of the evidence, and let the State have the burden of satisfying you by the greater weight of the evidence upon all these facts.”

*181 Finally, just before the jury retired, the court concluded:

“Gentlemen, please, if I have slipped up again and say ‘by the greater weight of the evidence,’ I will say to you it is a hangover from many weeks of civil court, and I do intend for you to understand that I meant beyond a reasonable douibt, and that is the theory you will apply in your consideration of all the evidence.”

It is fundamental that evidence must satisfy a jury of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt before conviction of crime is authorized. A finding of guilt by the greater weight of the evidence cannot be sustained in a criminal prosecution. A charge that a jury may convict on the greater weight of the evidence is error.

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Bluebook (online)
132 S.E.2d 334, 260 N.C. 177, 1963 N.C. LEXIS 662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-orr-nc-1963.