State v. . Potts

6 S.E. 657, 100 N.C. 457
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 6 S.E. 657 (State v. . Potts) 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. . Potts, 6 S.E. 657, 100 N.C. 457 (N.C. 1888).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

The prisoner, W. A. Potts, and Susan F. Lincke, are jointly charged in the indictment with the crime of murder, committed in June, 1887, upon the body 'of Paul Lincke, the husband of the last named. Upon their arraignment, in the Superior Court of Beaufort, they pleaded not guilty, and upon trial the prisoner Potts was, by the jury, convicted, and the said Susan F. acquitted of the charge, the first of whom, after sentence of death pronounced against him, appeals to this Court. The case comes before us in a very unusual and imperfect form, none of the facts developed in the evidence being set out, so that we can understand the character of the homicide, and its attendant circumstances, and the application to them of1 the rulings complained of, except in general terms. If there were any doubt left upon our minds as to the grade of the crime, or of its having been committed by a responsible agent, we should not be disposed to proceed, but to remand the cause, or direct the issue of a certiorari, to the end that the facts as depending on the evidence and the testimony, material to their support, and pertinent to the errors assigned, be sent up, instead of our having to consider and pass upon propositions of law merely speculative, and whose bearing is imperfectly understood, in a matter so serious and involving human life. But, *460 feeling no hesitancy in passing upon the prisoner’s exceptions presented in the record before us, we feel at liberty, in this case, to examine and decide them.

1st Exception. When called on to plead to the indictment, the prisoner answered, and proposed it should be so entered: “ I admit the killing, bht was insane at the time of the commission thereof; therefore, not guilty.” The preliminary portion of the answer was rejected, and the plea entered in the usual form, divested of the irrelevant and impertinent •surplusage; and this was entirely proper. The inquiry put to him required a direct and positive response, and this is contained in the plea, not guilty, under which every defence to the charge, in repelling, or mitigating and reducing the offence to a lower grade, was admissible.

The defendant, Susan F., proposed to enter a motion and plea in abatement, on the ground that one of the grand .jurors who found the bill was incompetent, he having a case at issue pending at the term in Court. We are relieved of the duty of considering the merits of this motion or plea (for it is designated by both names), for the reason that it was after pleading to the indictment, and not in apt time— State v. Watson, 86 N. C , 624—and became wholly unimportant by the verdict of acquittal.

2d Ex. The appellant objected to the order for the drawing of the jurors, to constitute the special venire, from the jury box, and its execution made by the Judge, for the reasons appearing to him sufficient to warrant it under section 1739 of The Code.

We see no valid reason assigned against the order, and the only variations' of the facts, proved and found by the Court, from the strict statutory provisions are, that the key, ■of which there was but one, which unlocks both apartments, was put by the chairman of the County Commissioners with •their clerk, the Register, for safe keeping, and he swears that it has been kept in his office ever since the last regular draw *461 ing of jurors, accessible to no one, and in that the apartments are marked, “Jurors drawn,” and “Jurors not drawn,”' instead of being numbered, number one and two. Those of' the special venire were drawn from the apartment labelled, “ Jurors not drawn.” The ruling is correct, and. the deviation fro.m a direction merely of the act is not a material matter, as its essential provisions for the security.of the-accused have been observed. State v. Martin, 82 N. C., 672.

3d Ex. The next exception is, to the ruling of the prisoner’s - challenge of a juror for favor, that he was indifferent and competent, and the same ruling applied to seven other similar challenges for cause.

The juror, on examination, stated that he had formed the-opinion that the prisoner was guilty on report merely, never - having heard the witnesses speak of the matter, and that while it would require evidence to remove the impression, yet he could, on hearing the .evidence from witnesses and the law from the Court, disregard the opinion formed and decide impartially.

The Court found as a fact that the juror was indifferent,, and this is conclusive and unreviewable in this Court. Branton v. O’Briant, 93 N.. C., 99; State v. Cole, 94 N. C., 958.

4th Ex. A juror, Challenged by the State for cause, that he was related to the prisoner by affinity within the ninth degree, was held to be disqualified to sit in the cause. The juror swore that “ he believed he was nearly related to the prisoner by marriage; that his wife was kin — he did not know in what degree — it might be fifth cousin. The Court found that the juror was related to the prisoner within the-ninth degree. The ruling upon the sufficiency of the cause-of challenge is sustained in State v. Perry, Busb., 330; State v. Baldwin, 80 N. C., 390, and other authorities. But a further and complete answer to the exceptions, referable to all the jurors is, that there were twelve peremptory challenges-remaining to the prisoner, and he could have stricken from. *462 the list a juror obnoxious to him, in'the exercise of the right of peremptory challenge, and a satisfactory and impartial jury was obtained, and this right to an impartial jury is all that is secured to the prisoner. This is ruled, without reference to older cases in our reports, in State v. Hensley, 94 N. C., 1021: State v. Gooch, Ib., 987. (1021) and in State v. Jones, 97 N. C., 469.

The remaining errors assigned, grew out of instructions asked and refused, and instructions given to the jury in place of them. The principal defence set up for the prisoner, was an alleged want of mental capacity b > commit a criminal act, brought on by excessive use of alcoholic stimulants. The testimony of witnesses introduced by the State, who had long known the prisoner, one of whom saw him on the night of the homicide, and another the morning after, as to his habits and condition, was to the effect, that, while he drank freely, there were no indications of a disordered mind, other than such as is common to drunken men, and all concur, that, in their opinion, he was not insane.

The prisoner excepted to any expression of the opinion of the witnesses, because they were not experts, as to the prisoner’s mental condition. Ever since the delivery of the able and lucid opinion of Gaston, J., in Clary v. Clary,

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6 S.E. 657, 100 N.C. 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-potts-nc-1888.