State v. . Shoemaker

8 S.E. 332, 101 N.C. 690
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 S.E. 332 (State v. . Shoemaker) 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. . Shoemaker, 8 S.E. 332, 101 N.C. 690 (N.C. 1888).

Opinion

The following is so much of the case on appeal as is necessary to present the grounds of the defendant's exceptions:

The prosecutrix, one Mrs. Annie McClure, testified in substance, that the defendant was abusing and cursing his wife; that they (the *Page 536 defendant and his wife) were running towards her, and when within a short distance of where she was, about forty steps from the public road, the defendant halted and turned towards her and said: "Yes, there is another d____d negro whore who will go to town tomorrow and get out another warrant against me." That the defendant cursed here and called her a whore. The language was in a loud tone of voice and could have been heard a long ways off. Defendant's wife was a short distance off. The presecutrix [prosecutrix] also testified that she was an innocent woman and never had illicit intercourse with any man.

On the cross-examination the defendant's counsel asked the witness "if she did not tell one H. L. Hunter (when on a visit to her (691) house at a certain time), while talking to him about this occurrence, that the defendant had called her a negro, and upon being told by said Hunter that it was not an indictable offense to call a woman a negro because it was not slander according to law, and she then told Hunter that the defendant had called her a whore; and furthermore, in the same conversation with said Hunter, did she not speak of some former prosecutions against the defendant, J. F. Shoemaker, saying that her object was to drive him from the neighborhood, and saying, `I think that we willdown him this time?'"

To this interrogatory the prosecutrix answered that she "had never had any such conversation with Hunter; that it was true, however, that Hunter did make a visit to her house at that time, and that he tried to `pick' her and other members of the family about a suit which he had against the Plummers, and he talked a good deal about the suit and the Plummers, and advised us to break with the Plummers; but he said nothing in my hearing about this occurrence with the defendant, Shoemaker, although he might have talked about it to other members of the family without my hearing him. Ideny that he had any such conversation with me."

H. L. Hunter was introduced by the defendant, and testified that a few days prior to the August Term of the court he visited the house where the prosecutrix, Annie McClure, lives, and that in a conversation between them, which was relative to this difficulty between her and the defendant, Shoemaker, she said to him that Shoemaker called her a negro, and the witness then told her that did not amount to slander and was not indictable, and she then said to the witness that the defendant had called her a whore. She went on to speak of some former prosecutions against the defendant which she said had failed, and then said "she thought they woulddown him this time, and she wanted to drive him out of the neighborhood." *Page 537

On the cross-examination the witness testified that he did have (692) something to say about the Plummers in that same conversation with the prosecutrix, but he denied that he advised her to break with the Plummers, and that he had said they were a bad people.

The defendant himself and one John Lytle testified, and their evidence tended to contradict the prosecutrix.

After the close of the defendant's testimony the State resumed the examination of witnesses, and recalled Mrs. Annie McClure, who testified that she did not have any conversation with the defendant's witness Hunter, at the time spoken of by him, or at any other time, relative to the difficulty between her and the defendant Shoemaker; that nothing was said between them about the language which Shoemaker had applied to her. The solicitor for the State then asked the witness what was the conversation between her and the witness Hunter at the same time and place about the Plummers. This question was objected to by the defendant's counsel, and admitted by the court, and the defendant's counsel excepted. The witness answered, that in the conversation referred to, the witness Hunter tried to "pick" her with regard to a suit he had with the Plummers, and also that he advised her to break with the Plummers and cut their acquaintance, as they were not proper persons to associate with.

Two witnesses testified that the character of the prosecutrix, Mrs. Annie McClure, is good, and two witnesses testified that the character of the defendant Shoemaker is bad, and two witnesses testified that the character of the witness H. D. Hunter is good.

The following prayer for instruction was offered and asked for by the defendant's counsel, viz.: "That even taking the testimony of allthe State's witnesses to be true, no case has been proved within themeaning of the statute, and that the defendant is entitled to anacquittal; that, in order to make a case, it must be shown that (693)the language must have been heard by some third person."

This prayer for instruction, taken as a whole, was refused by the court, although the defendant was given the benefit of the concluding proposition of the prayer; that is to say, that the language used by the defendant must have been heard by some third person in order to constitute a case of guilt.

The counsel for the defendant excepted to this ruling of the court.

The court instructed the jury on the law (in substance), that the statute controlling this case was intended for the protection of innocent females only; that an innocent woman, within the purview of the statute, is a woman who has never had illicit sexual intercourse with a man; that it devolved upon the State to establish the fact of the innocency of *Page 538 the woman whose character is alleged to have been slandered by the defendant to the satisfaction of the jury and beyond any reasonable doubt. (The court here recapitulated the testimony in the case bearing upon the character of Mrs. Annie McClure, the prosecutrix.) The court furthermore instructed the jury that the language charged, or alleged to have been used by the defendant in this and all similar cases, must be such as to amount to a charge of incontinency.

The court, after recapitulating all the testimony in the case, instructed the jury that if "they were convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that the prosecutrix is an innocent woman, and furthermore that the prosecutrix had sworn to the truth; that at the time and place described by her the defendant had called her a `damned negro whore' in the presence of a third person (his wife), that this language amounted to a charge of incontinency, and they ought to convict the defendant; but that the jury must be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt on both of these issues before they could convict. Is the prosecutrix an (694) innocent woman? If so, did the defendant call her a damned negro whore, as she has testified? That the defendant had testified that he did not say anything of an insulting nature on the occasion in question to the prosecutrix, but that he did answer back to a negro woman (as he supposed) that she was a `damned black bitch.'

He denies this charge.

The defendant is an interested witness. The law does not say, however, that an interested witness must not be believed, but it does say that the jury must scrutinize his testimony with greater severity, for the reason that he is an interested witness, than they would otherwise do; that being an interested witness his testimony does not stand on the same high and unsuspicious level or plane where otherwise it might stand."

On motion of defendant's counsel, a motion for a venire de novo was entered.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Springer v. Swift
239 N.W. 171 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 S.E. 332, 101 N.C. 690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-shoemaker-nc-1888.