State v. Whitfield

Decision Date28 February 1885
CourtNorth Carolina Supreme Court
PartiesSTATE v. THOMAS WHITFIELD.
OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

INDICTMENT for larceny, tried before Meares, Judge, and a jury, at February Term, 1885, of NEW HANOVER Criminal Court.

The defendant was indicted and charged with the larceny of some salted bacon sides, the property of J. M. Hardwick.

In selecting the jury, after exhausting all of his peremptory challenges, the defendant offered to challenge two jurors upon the ground that they had served on the jury in this court within the past two years. These jurors had been drawn on the special venire on the day previous to serve as jurors on the day of this trial, in pursuance of Ch. 300, §1, of the Laws of 1883. The Court overruled the challenges, and the defendant excepted.

The State offered evidence to prove that the store of J. M. Hardwick, situated in the city of Wilmington, was broken open and robbed of two salted bacon sides, weighing over forty pounds, and some other articles.

H. Terry, a witness for the State, testified that he was a policeman, and at about 4 o'clock on the morning of December 12, 1884, he entered the lot whereon Hardwick's store was located, for the purpose of waking another policeman, who slept there, and discovered that there was a lamp burning in the store, and that the back door was open, and that a man was in the store; that he had a good view of the man's features and dress, except his pants, and that he was of a “gingerbread” color, with square shoulders, side whiskers from one-half to three-quarters of an inch in length, chin clean shaved, wore a black coat, checked shirt, and that he supposed he would weigh about one hundred and forty pounds; that he had often seen him before but did not know his name, and was certain that the prisoner was the man; that he pursued this man, but could not catch him, and that he returned and awakened Hardwick, the owner of the goods in the store. The solicitor then asked the witness, if at this time, he gave the same description of the man whom he had seen in the store to Hardwick, which he had just given on the stand? The prisoner objected, but His Honor permitted the question to be put, and the prisoner excepted. The witness answered that he had.

This witness further testified that the next morning he accompanied Hardwick down the street to attempt to find the person whom he had seen in the store the night before, and that after going some distance he saw the defendant, and at once pointed him out to Hardwick and told him that he was the man they were looking for; that he arrested the defendant, and that his personal appearance and clothing were precisely similar to the description he had before given to Hardwick, and the same as he had sworn to at the trial.

The defendant objected to that portion of this evidence which related to the description and appearance being the same.

J. M. Hardwick was then introduced for the State and corroborated the witness Terry. After objection, the witness was allowed to testify that at the hearing before the committing magistrate, the prisoner requested that one _______ Hall, a woman, should be summoned as witness for him.

The State introduced evidence that the witness Terry was a man of good character.

The defendant introduced evidence tending to prove an alibi.

There was a verdict of guilty, judgment, and appeal by the defendant.

Attorney General and Mr. E. C. Smith, for the State .

Mr. J. D. Bellamy, for the defendant .

MERRIMON, J.

The defendant having challenged peremptorily as many jurors as the statute applicable in such cases allowed him to do, challenged two other jurors for cause, and assigned as ground of challenge that each of them “had served on the jury in that court within the past two years,” and were disqualified under the proviso of The Code, §1733, which provides “that it shall be a disqualification and ground of challenge to any tales juror that such juror has acted in the same court as grand, petit or tales juror within two years next preceding such term of the court.”

We are of opinion that the Court properly disallowed the ground of challenge assigned. The two jurors had been drawn upon the special venire the day before they were so challenged, as required by the statute (acts 1883, ch. 300, sec. 1,) applicable to the Criminal Court of the city of Wilmington. They were not tales jurors, but of a special venire, drawn and summoned before they were required to serve. They were different in their type from talesmen, and the statute cited makes a distinction between the two classes. They did not come within the terms of the proviso quoted above, nor within the mischief to be remedied by it. But if they had been talesmen, this objection was not good, because it did not appear that they had acted as jurors within two years. To render them disqualified they must have acted within that time. State v. Thorne, 81 N. C., 555; State v. Brittain, 89 N. C., 481.

The witness Terry, a policeman, had sworn very positively to facts and circumstances that...

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49 cases
  • State v. Levy
    • United States
    • North Carolina Supreme Court
    • 16 Abril 1924
    ...115 N. C. 29, 20 S. E. 166; State v. Sherman, 115 N. C. 733, 20 S. E. 711; State v. Hargrave, 100 N. C. 484, 6 S. E. 185; State v. Whitfield, 92 N. C. 831; State Brittain, 89 N. C. 481; State v. Whitley, 88 N. C. 691; State v. Cooper, 83 N. C. 671; State v. Howard, 82 N. C. 623; State v. Ra......
  • Burnett v. Wilmington
    • United States
    • North Carolina Supreme Court
    • 16 Marzo 1897
    ...statements previously made by him. State v. George, supra; March v. Harrell, 46 N. C. 329; State v. Mitchell, 89 N. C. 521; State v. Whitfield, 92 N. C. 831; McRae v. Malloy, 93 N. C. 154; State v. Rowe, 98 N. C. 629, 4 S. E. 506; State v. Rhyne, 109 N. C. 794, 13 S. E. 943; Sprague v. Bond......
  • State v. Levy
    • United States
    • North Carolina Supreme Court
    • 16 Abril 1924
    ...115 N.C. 29, 20 S.E. 166; State v. Sherman, 115 N.C. 733, 20 S.E. 711; State v. Hargrave, 100 N.C. 484, 6 S.E. 185; State v. Whitfield, 92 N.C. 831; State Brittain, 89 N.C. 481; State v. Whitley, 88 N.C. 691; State v. Cooper, 83 N.C. 671; State v. Howard, 82 N.C. 623; State v. Ragland, 75 N......
  • State v. Rose
    • United States
    • Missouri Supreme Court
    • 29 Mayo 1917
    ...Thorne, 81 N.C. 555.] This ruling was subsequently cited with approval by the same court in State v. Brittain, 89 N.C. 481, and State v. Whitfield, 92 N.C. 831. 4529, Kirby's Digest, Laws of Arkansas, provided that the term of service of any person summoned to serve on a petit jury in the c......
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