State v. Smith
State v. Smith
Concurring Opinion
concurring. I concur in the opinion of the Court that there is no evidence inconsistent with the inno-
Opinion of the Court
after stating the case. Tbe only question presented by the exception is whether there was any evidence on the question of intent proper to be submitted to the jury. Mr. Justice Ashe, in State v. Massey, 86 N. C., 658, says: “In order to convict defendant -on the charge of an assault with intent to commit a rape, the evidence should show not only an assault but that defendant intended to gratify his passions on the person of the woman, and that he intended to do so at all events notwithstanding any resistance on her part.” This language has been since the decision of that case the guide followed by the courts in this State. In that case the question bearing on the evidence of intent was much stronger than here. The woman saw the man following, threatening if she did not stop to kill her. The Court held the evidence insufficient. In State v. Jeffreys, 117 N. C., 743, Massey’s ease is approved and may now be regarded as the settled law of the State. The case is easily distinguished from State v. Mitchell, 89 N. C., 521, and State v. Page, 127 N. C., 512. In both these cases there was evidence of actual violence. We can have no hesitation in adopting the language of a Judge of such elevated character, learning and jealous regard for the sanctity of virtue as Judge Ashe, when he says: “When the act of a person may reasonably be attributed to two or more motives, the one criminal and the other not, the humanity of our law will ascribe it to that which is not criminal.”
We do not deem it necessary to discuss the facts in this case, nor have we the right to assume the existence of any facts pertinent to the decision of the case other than those certified to us by the Court below. The record states the transaction in the language of the witness. It has ever been the province and duty of the Court to decide and declare the law, and of the jury to decide and declare facts. Whether there is any evidence tending to prove a fact in issue'has always been re
New Trial.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. The defendant, first ascertaining from the girl that her two brothers and her father were absent, in a field a half mile away, made a sudden and violent assault upon her, “grabbed her by her left hand and started to put his right to her neck.” The assault is unquestioned. What was his intent was an inference of fact which only a jury is authorized to draw. The defendant afterwards confessed that his purpose in going there was to procure sexual intercourse with the girl. The jury, from the violence and manner of the assault, the seclusion of the place, the avowed purpose of the defendant in going there, from his flight and possibly from their knowledge of the parties, might well
It is trae Judge Ashe has stated “tbat the defendant must have intended to gratify his passions on tbe person of tbe woman at all events and notwithstanding any resistance on her part.” Every larvyer since, who has represented a defendant charged with this dastardly offense, has relied upon this expression. There can be no doubt that tbe Judge so charged the jury in this case, for there is no exception to the charge. What Judge Ashe said is a correct statement of the law, but it does not mean that when the man desists from his purpose, there is no evidence that he did not intend to have intercourse “at all events and notwithstanding resistance on the woman’s part.” That would simply repeal the statute against assault with intent to commit rape, for if the defendant succeeds, the crime is rape.
What was the defendant doing when he suddenly and violently assaulted an unprotected girl, out of reach of help from her male relatives, of whose absence he had learned upon inquiry? Was he trying to persuade her to yield and to overcome her maiden reluctance by solicitation or was he attempting to have carnal knowledge of her “forcibly and against her will?” Was it an attempted seduction or was it “felonious gallantry ?” It was necessarily one or the other, for his purpose to procure sexual intercourse is admitted. It could be procured only with the girl’s consent or against her will; there is no other alternative, no middle ground. The jury of twelve men, to not one of whom he objected, and who were doubtless sensible and intelligent gentlemen, have found, beyond a reasonable doubt in the mind of a single member of the jury, that the assault was made with an intent on the part of the defendant to have sexual connection “forcibly and against the will of the woman.” The intelligent Judge, who
The grand jury by a vote of at least twelve of its members found that there was prima facie evidence of the defendant’s guilt. Thus two full juries at least, and the Judge, after seeing and hearing the witnesses, found that there was evidence. Are a majority of the lawyers who compose this Court, sitting out of sight and hearing of the witnesses, without knowledge of their character, or bearing on the stand, able to say that all those officers have so grossly erred- — not as to the law, but as to the facts, and that there was no evidence at all before them!
In vain shall we look for any decision in England, the home of the jury system, for a case in which an appellate court, sitting out of sight and hearing of the witnesses, has held in a criminal ease that there was no evidence when the jury unanimously held that there was enough to satisfy each of them beyond a reasonable doubt, and the presiding Judge has refused to disturb the verdict. It is an innovation of recent introduction here, even in civil cases, by judicial construction, for there is no statute to authorize it. The tendency of courts to “amplify jurisdiction” is gradually extending the doctrine until this jurisdiction is invoked in nearly every criminal case that comes up to any appellate court, and in almost certainly every appeal in which a railroad company is defendant. If the expansion of such jurisdiction is continued, instead of the “ancient mode of trial by jury,” the jury will become a mere advisory committee whose findings the appellate court may disregard at will. This is already nearly attained in some States. The evils of this assumption of jurisdiction are well stated by Judge Bynum in Wittowsky v. Wasson, 71 N. C., 451.
It cannot be said there was no evidence. There is more evidence here to sustain the charge than in State v. Garner, 129 N. C., 536, and fully as much as in State v. Page, 127 N. C., 512. In this case there was the forcible assault, there was the avowed intent to procure sexual intercourse, there was the lonely place remote from help, there was the inquiry as to nearness of relatives, there was the “stand off” by a determined woman with her dubbed hoe and the defendant’s flight from justice. There may have been other things which the jury were entitled to consider and which give much of its peculiar value to trial by jury. Suppose the girl was white and the defendant a negro ? Would that not be a matter to be
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