State v. . Plyler

69 S.E. 269, 153 N.C. 630, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 146
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 17, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 69 S.E. 269 (State v. . Plyler) 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. . Plyler, 69 S.E. 269, 153 N.C. 630, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 146 (N.C. 1910).

Opinion

Indictment charging Charles B. Plyler, George Mayhew and John McManus with the murder of Carter Parks.

The defendant McManus was acquitted. The court below has now under advisement a motion to set aside the verdict as to defendant Mayhew as being against the weight of the evidence.

The defendant Plyler was convicted and sentenced to death. From the judgment of the court he appeals.

The facts are fully stated in the opinion of Justice Brown. 1. The prisoner excepted to the refusal of the court (632) below to remove the cause for trial to some adjoining county.

As admitted in the brief of the learned counsel for the prisoner it has been repeatedly decided by this Court that a motion to remove is almost always a matter within the sound discretion of the nisi prius judge and not reviewable here. Pell's Revisal, sec. 426, and cases cited.

We find nothing in the record which takes this case out of the general rule.

2. The prisoner excepts to the ruling of the court permitting the introduction of evidence by the State tending to prove that not long before the homicide the deceased had been called out on the piazza of his residence at night, shot at and wounded, as contended by prisoner, by an unknown person. The prisoner's contention is evidently based upon the theory that there is no evidence connecting the prisoner with this particular affair. Upon that theory the authorities cited by the learned counsel support the objection to the evidence. *Page 516

In this case, however, there is abundant evidence, which, if believed, tends to prove not only that the deceased was shot on the occasion in question, but that the prisoner either did the shooting himself or was present in person aiding and abetting it.

The witness Richardson testified that the prisoner, just before the shooting occurred, said to witness, "You go back over there to Carter's house and get him on the porch and get him drunk; I am going to get him." The same witness said he was at deceased's house the night when the shooting occurred, and that he recognized defendant outside by his voice. Again, he testified that on another occasion, while defendant was talking to him about Carter, he (defendant) said: "Pace, I ain't afraid of nobody. I shot one man, and I am the very damned frog that muddied the pond."

In addition to this, the record shows other matters tending to connect the defendant with the first shooting, amply sufficient to convict him of the crime if he had been indicted for it.

It early became necessary for the protection of society that courts should permit the evidence of circumstances to establish the guilt of persons accused of crime. For this purpose many independent (633) facts are permitted to be proven, which taken collectively point to a certain conclusion. It has been well said: "Where the particular fact offered to be proved is equally consistent with the existence or nonexistence of the fact sought to be inferred from it, then the evidence can raise no presumption either way and should be excluded."Rodman, J. S. v. Vinson, 63 N.C. 335; S. v. Brantley, 84 N.C. 769.

If there was nothing to connect the prisoner with this particular shooting testified to by Richardson, it would be a collateral fact from which no inference could reasonably be drawn injurious to the prisoner and would therefore be incompetent. But when his extraneous crime has been brought home to the prisoner, then the fact becomes competent, because it is much more consistent with his guilt than it is with his innocence, of the crime of shooting the same person a short while after. S. v. Alston,94 N.C. 932; 1 Wharton Crim. Law, secs. 631-670. A previous attempt by the prisoner to assassinate his victim is very potent evidence of the quoanimo, the motive, and of a fixed purpose to take the life of the deceased.

There are a number of illustrative cases cited in Lawson on Presumptive Ev., 589, directly in point, some of which we cite: V is indicted for shooting at P with intent to kill. Proof that V at a previous time had shot at P is relevant. S. v. Voke, R. R., 531.

A was indicted for poisoning his wife by giving her laudanum. The *Page 517 fact that A had on a former occasion given her laudanum, which made her sick, is relevant. Johnson v. State, 17 Ala. 622.

In Rex v. Dorset, 2 C. K., 306, defendant was charged with having willfully set fire to a haystack. The fact that, on a previous day, the rick was seen to be on fire and the defendant to be near it, was held relevant. While the cases cited by counsel for prisoner recognize the general rule that evidence of a distinct substantive offense can not be admitted in support of another offense, they also recognize the exceptions, within which the fact sought to be proved in this case clearly falls.

3. The prisoner excepted to evidence of a declaration made to P. P. W. Plyler, who testified that prisoner came to his house about 1 o'clock on the night that he gave himself up to the officers (634) and said he wanted to talk some about the case. He said "he did not do the shooting, but he knew who did it, and did not want to tell it for fear of what the man would do to him if they did not put him where he could not get to him; that he said he would kill him if he told, and he was a dangerous man."

This was both relevant and competent. The fact that the defendant went at 1 o'clock and waked witness and wanted to talk about the shooting, was conduct on the part of the defendant which the jury was entitled to consider along with the other evidence.

"Everything calculated to elucidate the transaction is admissible, since the conclusion depends upon the number of links, which alone are weak, but taken together are strong and able to conclude." S. v. Bradham,108 N.C. 794.

Other declarations of the prisoner were introduced, over his objection, which we think were clearly competent, but it is unnecessary to notice them more particularly.

4. The prisoner introduced a witness, Starnes, and asked him this question: "State whether or not, in your opinion, Charlie Plyler could have walked from the barn the straightest line to the scene of the killing while you were going the distance to where you heard the gun fire." This was excluded by the court. He was then asked if it were possible for any man to have done it. This was also excluded.

One of the points made by prisoner in his defense is that he could not have walked from his premises where he was seen at a certain hour to the scene of the homicide in time to have fired the gun that is supposed to have killed deceased.

Evidence of the distance, character of the earth's surface, thickness of the woods, etc., was offered and received to establish prisoner's contention.

It was not proper, therefore, for the witness to pass on that *Page 518 contention. The rule in opinion evidence is that if all the facts are before the jury or can be placed there, then it is not competent for the witness to express his opinion upon such facts, as the jury can equally well draw the inference for themselves.

"If the jury can judge for themselves on this matter equally (635) as well as the lay witness, it is obvious that it would be a waste of time to ask for any testimony from him or from a dozen or a hundred other persons no more capable than he of adding to the jury's own information." Greenleaf Evidence, 526.

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State v. . Phillips
46 S.E.2d 720 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1948)
State v. . Stiwinter
189 S.E. 868 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1937)
State v. . Coffey
187 S.E. 754 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1936)
State v. . Birkman
152 S.E. 630 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1930)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 S.E. 269, 153 N.C. 630, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-plyler-nc-1910.