State v. Parrish

111 S.E.2d 314, 251 N.C. 274, 1959 N.C. LEXIS 570
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 25, 1959
Docket366
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 111 S.E.2d 314 (State v. Parrish) 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. Parrish, 111 S.E.2d 314, 251 N.C. 274, 1959 N.C. LEXIS 570 (N.C. 1959).

Opinion

PabkeR, J.

Before pleading to the bill of indictment, defendant moved that the case be remanded to the Recorder’s Court of Vance County for trial, for the reason that the Recorder’s Court of Vance County ’had first taken cognizance of the case, and that said Recorders Court had jurisdiction thereof to the exclusion of the Superior Count. The trial court denied) this motion, 'and defendant assigns this as error.

Counsel for the State land the defendant agreed upon the case on appeal.

In reference to the above motion, these facts .appear from the agreed case on appeal, and from a stipulation entered into between counsel for the State and defendant:

Prior to the convening of the 4 May 1959 Special Criminal Term of the Superior Court of Vance County, a warrant was pending for trial in the Recorder’s Court of Vance County charging defendant with the same offenses with which he is charged in the indictment upon which he was tried and convicted in the case sub judice. Defendant gave bond for his appearance in the Recorder’s Court of Vance County to answer the charges in the warrant issued against him, had requested a jury trial in that count, and had made the required deposit for a jury. Ait 3:35 p. m. on 4 May 1959, without any notice to defendant, the State before trial of the case against defendant in the Recorder’s Count of Vance County entered a nolle prosequi upon the record of the Recorder’s Court of Vance County. At 3:45 p. m. on 4 May 1959 the Grand Jury of the Superior Count of Vance County returned the bill of indictment in this case.

The Recorder’s Court of Vance County and the Superior Count of Vance County bad concurrent jurisdiction of the offenses charged, the jurisdiction to be exercised by the Court first taking cognizance thereof. Chapter 158, Section (d), Public-Local Laws of North Carolina, Session 1911, as amended by Chapter 614, Public-Local Laws of North Carolina, Session 1911; G.S. 7-64.

Defendant very properly makes no contention that he was placed in jeopardy in the Recorder’s Court of Vance County. S. v. Clayton, *277 ante, 261, 111 S.E. 2d 299, decided this day, is directly in point, and upon the authority of that case defendant’s assignment of error to the refusal of the trial court to remand the case to the Recorder’s Court of Vance County for trial is overruled.

Defendant assigns as error the refusal of the trial court to allow his motion for judgment of nonsuit made at the close of the State’s evidence: defendant offered no evidence.

The State’s evidence tends to ,show the following facts: Thomas D. Peck has been a resident of Henderson for 25 years. He knows the defendant. About 9:00 a. m. on 26 February 1959, he saw defendant ■at the east ride of Harriet Cotton Mill No. 1 on Harriet Street standing between the street and the mill’s premises. He was one of a group of 10 or 15 'or more persons gathered in the area at the east end of the mill on Harriet Street. Some of the group were on the mill side of the street, and others were on the other side, to the right and left of Peck, when he drove his 1950 Pontiac automobile through the group to see an employee about coming to work. Defendant watched Peck as he drove by. Peck stopped ¡at Marcus Davis’ house, and blew his horn. Davis did not come out, iso Peck turned around, and came back through the group. Peck testified: “My car was hit by a couple of heavy objects one foot above the rear glass and right rear fender. On the top of the car was a couple of dents which took the paint off. The blow that hit on the side flattened out a piece of chrome that ran along the rear fender. It chipped the paint off and made an indentation into the metal of the car. When I stopped my car I saw rocks andl bricks out in the street, several of them. It was then that my car was hit a foot above the rear glass and on the right fender. I did not see the objects that struck my car. The one on top made a couple of dents and took paint off. It would be bard to estimate the depth of the indentation. The one that -hit the car on the side flattened out the piece of chrome that runs parallel to the ground along the fender of my 1950 Pontiac. It was flattened out about an inch and a half. I stopped .the car about 25, maybe 50 feet from the group 'andl got out to inspect the damage, but I didn’t see all of the injuries until I parked the car back in the mill lot. I .saw the one on top then .and it was then I knew it had been hit on top. When I stopped the car on Harriet Street I saw some rocks and bricks, maybe three of them. They were off to the ride of my car. Mr. Ollie Harris was with me in the seat 'beside me. I w.as driving so I don’t know what Parrish was doing when my car was struck.” On cross-examination Peck testified: “The rocíes I saw in the street were approximately 50 feet from where my car was struck.” On redirect examination, he testified: “The rocks *278 were lying in the area where I was hit in relationship (bo itfoe crowd, that is,'fthey were in front of the crowd I’d estimate I was less than 10 feet from the persons in that crowd on both sides, when my oar was.struck.”

Harold U. Watkins, a police officer of Henderson and a witness for the State, testified: “When Mr. Peck’s car came back up the. street Mr. Parrish darted quickly between two cars parked end to' end in front of one and behind the other. By darted I mean from the side of the automobile next to the street or in the street. He moved fast. He was moving faster than walking but not exactly running, a fast gait, away from the street, toward the mill fence. He moved toward the mill fence which put him on the opposite side of the vehicle from the side he was on. He ducked momentarily land ¡as Mr. Peck’s car passed he threw a rock about the size of my fist. I saw it in his hand, I saw it leave his band and traveling through the air. I did not see it .hit the car but I heard a thump. I saw Mr. Peck apply his brakes and stop bis automobile. . . . After he threw the rock Parrish walked on back up to Alexander Avenue toward W. E. Ramsey’s store, in front of the mill. Mr. Peck stopped beside where we were parked and we told him we saw what happened. I didn’t see the rock after it struck the automobile, land I don’t know where Parrish got it. The first I saw it was in his hand. He was about 20 feet at most from .the car when he threw the rock. The others in the crowd stayed on the street side of the parked cars when Parrish ducked behind them.”

Ollie Harris, who was riding with Peck, testified 'as a witness for the State: “I don’t know what hit his oar, but something hit it. I •can’t say which side of the oar it hit. I didn’t get out. I say two somethings hit the oar.” He testified on cross-examination: “I am sure the car was struck two times, one on the right and one on the left.”

This is said in S. v. Stephens, 244 N.C. 380, 93 S.E. 2d 431: “We are ¡advertent to the intimation in some of the decisions involving 'circumstantial evidence that to withstand a motion for nonsuit the circumstances must be inconsistent with innocence and must exclude every reasonable hypothesis except that of guilt. We think the correct rule is given in S. v. Simmons, 240 N.C. 780, 83 S.E. 2d 904, quoting from S. v. Johnson, 199 N.C. 429, 154 S.E.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 S.E.2d 314, 251 N.C. 274, 1959 N.C. LEXIS 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-parrish-nc-1959.