State v. Satterfield

Decision Date10 October 1934
Docket NumberNo. 218.,218.
Citation176 S.E. 466,207 N.C. 118
CourtNorth Carolina Supreme Court
PartiesSTATE. v. SATTERFIELD.

Appeal from Superior Court, Wayne County; Parker, Judge.

Rufus Satterfield was convicted of murder, and he appeals.

Affirmed.

Criminal prosecution tried upon indictment charging the defendant with the murder of one Herbert Grice.

The evidence for the state tends to show that about 9 p. m., Sunday, October 22, 1933, Herbert Grice was shot and killed at his home in Goldsboro. He had been sitting with his wife and three children in their sitting room, when he heard his dog bark, and in going out to investigate the cause of the barking, was greeted with a load of buckshot and felled either in the doorway or on the front porch. He died immediately. The shot was fired from a point in a cotton patch a distance of about forty feet from the Grice house. Here, there was a "trampled up place" on the ground, and, in the line of fire, fresh wadding from a 12-gauge gun was found. There was also on or near the trampled ground matches broken and splintered in a manner characteristic of a habit of the defendant. There were tracks leading to this point, and others away from it, indicating a "pin-toed" person in rapid flight, the toes of the shoes only making impressions upon the ground. The defendant is "pin-toed."

Lonie Fields testified that shortly before the shooting, she and her seven year old daughter saw a man get out of an automobile near the Grice home and go in the direction of the cotton patch. He had a shotgun inhis hands. "He looked like that man over there" (pointing to the defendant).

Dorothy Fields, the little child, positively identified the defendant as the man she saw get out of the automobile with a shotgun "folded up in his arms" and go in the direction of the cotton field.

On cross-examination, this witness said the defendant had been pointed out to her in the courtroom that morning by her mother as the man they saw on the night of the homicide; that it was a dark night and she had never seen the defendant before. Upon this admission, the defendant moved to strike out the testimony of the witness. Overruled; exception.

There was other evidence to the effect that, for quite awhile, the defendant had been paying undue attentions to the wife of the deceased--this as furnishing a motive for wanting to get rid of him--and also that he had borrowed a gun from Redmond Dortch and sent him word, on the day after the homicide, not to say anything about it, as he forgot to mention the fact to the sheriff when being questioned about the case.

The sheriff testified that he saw the defendant on the night of the homicide; "he appeared to be nervous * * * told me he did not have a shotgun, but he thought there was one around home, an old one around home somewhere, but he did not know where it was and had not seen it for years."

The sheriff also testified that Lonie and Dorothy Fields had stated to him practically the same things as detailed in their testimony.

Redmond Dortch testified that the defendant returned his gun on the day after the homicide, with the statement: "I am sorry i did not get a chance to clean it. I meant to clean it for you." Both barrels had been shot and there was new rust on it. "He did not say anything to me, when he returned the gun, about having been doing any hunting of any kind."

The defendant offered evidence tending to establish an alibi. He denied the testimony of the state.

After the argument had begun, the solicitor was allowed to offer additional evidence, discovered only the night before, "and bearing upon the presence of the defendant in the neighborhood where the crime was committed and the car he was operating at the time." Objection; overruled; exception. The court stated he would allow the defendant any reasonable time to investigate this additional evidence. Exception.

Motion in arrest of judgment. Overruled; exception.

Verdict: Guilty of the felony and murder in the first degree whereof he stands charged. Judgment: Death by electrocution.

Defendant appeals, assigning errors.

Dickinson & Bland, Scott B. Berkeley, and Paul B. Edmundson, all of Goldsboro, for appellant.

Dennis G. Brummitt, Atty. Gen., and A. A. F. Seawell, Asst. Atty. Gen., for the State.

STACY, Chief Justice (after stating the case).

Only the inculpatory evidence has been stated, as the principal exception relied upon by the defendant is the refusal of the court to sustain his demurrer to the evidence or to dismiss the action as in case of nonsuit under C. S. § 4043. State v. Fulcher, 184 N. C. 663, 113 S. E. 769; State v. Cohoon, 206 N. C. 388, 174 S. E. 91. With respect to the defendant's alibi, it is sufficient to say he was given the full benefit of all exculpatory matters before a jury of the vicinage. State v. Steen, 185 N. C. 768, 117 S. E. 793. The evidence was such as to require its submission to the twelve. State v. Beal, 199 N. C. 278, 154 S. E. 604; State v. Lawrence, 196 N. C. 562, 146 S. E. 395; State v. McLeod, 198 N. C. 649, 152 S. E. 895.

Counsel for the defendant assailed the state's case with force and vigor, pointing out the apparent contradictions in the testimony and the equivocation of some of the witnesses; but these were matters bearing upon the weight of the evidence or its credibility, and not upon its competency. The jurors alone are the triers of the facts. State v. Beal, supra. In passing upon the sufficiency of the evidence, raised by demurrer or motion to nonsuit, the court is required merely to ascertain whether there is any competent evidence to sustain the allegations of the indictment. State v. Marion, 200 N. C. 715, 158 S. E. 406; State v. Carlson, 171 N. C. 818, 89 S. E. 30; State v. Rountree, 181 N. C. 535, 106 S. E. 669.

Nor was there error in limiting the jury to one of two verdicts--murder in the first degree or not guilty. State v. Spivey, 151 N. C. 676, 65 S. E. 995; State v. Ferrell, 205 N. C. 640, 172 S. E. 186; State v. Myers, 202 N. C. 351, 162 S. E. 764; State v. Sterling, 200 N. C. 18, 156 S. E. 96; State v. Jackson, 199 N. C. 321, 154 S. E. 402. It is provided by C. S. § 4200 that a murder which shall be perpetrated by means, inter alia, oflying in wait, as was the case here, shall be deemed to be murder in the first degree. State v. Keaton, 206 N. C. 682, 175 S. E. 296; State v. Newsome, 195 N. C....

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