State v. Turner
State v. Turner
Opinion of the Court
Tbe prisoner was convicted and sentenced to the State’s Prison as accessory before the fact to Henry Walker, who had been convicted of burglary with assault with intent to murder L. Banks Holt at Grraham.
The first exception is to the refusal of the motion to remove the cause to another county for trial. Revisal, 427, provides that the Judge shall not remove any cause, whether civil or criminal, unless he “shall be satisfied that the ends of justice demand it.” His action is not reviewable. State v. Smarr, 121 N. C., 672.
The second exception is to the admission of the question, “What seemed and what was the relation between Henry Walker and the prisoner?” It was competent to show that these relations were friendly and intimate, and being a matter of common observation and experience, it was not a matter requiring that the witness should be an expert in order to express his opinion. It was a fact based on observation, as much so as the state of the weather, whether the temperature was cold or warm, whether a person was angry, is insane, and similar matters. This is because no better evidence can be had than the observation of eye-witnesses, and the jury must draw their conclusion from the evidence. 1 Elliott Ev., sec. 671, prop. 4; Blake v. State, 73 N. Y., 586; McKee v. Nelson, 4 Cowen, 355. The opinion of witnesses in such matters is the result of many observations, which cannot be detailed to the jury. 1 Elliott Ev., 547.
The third and fourth exceptions are that the Court did not charge the jury that there was no evidence tending to show that the prisoner had any motive to commit the crime. The Judge was not asked to so charge. Patterson v. Mills, 121 N. C., 258, and cases there cited. Besides, it was not ■ necessary to prove motive' for the commission of crime — State v. Adams, 136 N. C., 617; State v. Wilcox, 132 N. C., 1143 — -though when circumstantial evidence is relied on to
The prisoner files a motion here for a new trial for newly-discovered evidence, on the ground that Henry Walker,- who was one of the witnesses against the prisoner, on the scaffold retracted his evidence. As he at the same time withdrew his confession of his own guilt made after his conviction and denied all knowledge of the crime of which he had been convicted upon evidence which was conclusive to the jury that convicted him, to the trial Judge and to the Governor, such hearsay retraction as to the prisoner should not carry more weight with the Court than his sworn statement at the trial and cross-examination, especially in view of the evidence of other witnesses that the prisoner took the key out of the door, by use of which Walker entered the house, and that the key was found in the lock on the outside of the door after the shooting; that Mr. Holt had refused to sign the petition for her husband’s pardon, and her attempt to flee when arrested, even if we could consider the motion. But this Court has uniformly held that under the Constitution it has no power to entertain such motions in criminal cases, and has no desire to assume a function which can be more efficiently performed by the Executive. The authorities and the reasons governing us are too recently set forth in State v. Lillis-ton, 141 N. 0., 863-869, to require their repetition here. The jury did not act solely upon the testimony of Walker, for it acquitted the co-defendant of the prisoner, who was also implicated by his testimony.
This Court is created by the Constitution, and has no powers not therein stated. If “inherent right” is invoked, it cannot go beyond that possessed by the courts at common law.
No Error.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting: I am aware that it is becoming in a Jiidge, who has once expressed his dissent from the decision of a question, to acquiesce and regard the decision as settling the law. I should not depart from this course in the present case but for my deep conviction that, by following what, with the utmost deference, I think an erroneous precedent, we are depriving a person charged with a grave crime of an opportunity to have her cause submitted to a jury with the light thrown upon the accusation, to which she is entitled.
The defendant was convicted of a most atrocious crime upon the testimony, principally, of a self-confessed burglar and, but for an accidental failure to accomplish his purpose, a murderer, under sentence of death. While there is in the record some testimony the truth of which cannot be
This Court, in a number of cases, the last being State v. Lilliston, 141 N. C., 857, has held that while, in a civil action, it has the power to grant a new trial for newly-discovered evidence, it has no such power in a criminal case. The cases in which the motion has been made were reviewed in Lillistons case. I confess that, after examining them, I am unable to see or to understand wherein the distinction is found which permits and, upon this record, would make it our duty to grant this defendant a new trial if she had been cast in a civil action, involving the title to a tract of land or personal property of an insignificant value, denies the power to do so when she stands convicted of a crime followed by a sentence of imprisonment at hard labor for life. It is not claimed that any statute confers the power in one case and withholds it in the other. The Constitution confers the jurisdiction to hear and determine civil and criminal appeals in exactly the same terms. I am impressed with the fact that in almost every case in which the motion has been denied for want of power the Court has thought proper to say that there is no merit in the case made out by the affidavits, and that, upon the showing made, the motion would not be granted in a civil case. I cannot but think that the learned Judges felt that it was well to strengthen the position by the last reason. I say this with all possible
In Starnes’ case, 97 N. C., 424, usually relied upon to sustain the denial of power, the facts as disclosed are that at February Term, 1886, the motion was denied upon the authority of Jones’ case, supra. At the next term of the Superior Court of Union County, when the prisoner was called to the bar for sentence, as the law then required, he made the motion in that Court, filing affidavits to sustain it, The Judge found, among other facts, that the newly-discovered testimony was “cumulative merely,” and for that reason, “in deference to the adjudication of the Supreme Court,” denied the motion, and the prisoner appealed. Smith, G. J., says: “Without stopping to inquire whether, at this late stage in the proceeding, and after an unsuccessful appeal to the Supreme Court upon alleged errors, in law such an application can be entertained in the Superior Court, to whose jurisdiction the cause has been remitted, we proceed, as did the Judge who assumed the right to act upon the application, to consider the case upon its merits, as if made in due and apt time and to a court having jurisdiction.” The learned Chief Justice, not willing to send the prisoner to his death upon the mere denial of power to grant relief, proceeds to carefully analyze the affidavits and rest his judgment upon the elementary proposition that a new trial will not be granted for newly-discovered evidence which is “cumulative merely.” He concludes his opinion with a strong commendation of “the zeal, ability and persevering energy” of counsel assigned by the Court without fee. Their zeal was rewarded by a pardon for their client upon the ground that the newly-discovered evidence disproved his guilt.
The jury acquitted the other woman, Eannie McOain, and convicted the defendant. It is not proper for me to comment
Reference
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- STATE v. ANNIE TURNER
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