State v. Ellsworth

The defendants were indicted under section 996 of (691) The Code in the following bill of indictment: " . . . That the defendants did unlawfully, willfully and feloniously break and enter the storehouse of M. H. Lowery and others, doing business as M. H. Lowery Co., then and there situate, and in which said house there was at the time money, meal, flour, meat, dry goods and other personal property, in the night-time, and with intent unlawfully, willfully and feloniously to commit the crime of larceny," etc. The defendants moved to quash, and also in arrest of judgment, because the intent "to commit the crime of larceny" was not sufficiently charged. The solicitor followed a decision of this Court which is exactly in point, and the judge properly denied the motion. S. v.Tytus, 98 N.C. 705. This case has been cited with approval in S. v.Christmas, 101 N.C. 755.

A witness testified that the defendant left a horse there tied to a tree and did not come back, and the next day the owner of the horse came for him. The defendants excepted, because this tended to show another substantial crime, but it was not used for that purpose, and was simply a circumstance which incidentally came out in narrating the conduct of the defendants and connecting them with the crime. However, the court, out of abundant caution, subsequently withdrew this evidence from the jury and told them not to consider it. This cured the error, if any. Wilsonv. Mfg. Co., 110 N.C. 94, and numerous cases there cited; also,Crenshaw v. Johnson, ibid., 277; S. v. Apple, 121 N.C. 584; Watersv. Waters, 125 N.C. 591, and other recent cases. Another witness testified that the day he met the defendants was the day before he heard about the safe being broken open. This was not evidence to show that the safe had been blown open, which was amply shown by direct and uncontradicted testimony, but was evidence of the witness to fix the time of the occurrence to which he was testifying. (692)

Nor was there any sound objection to the testimony, "The front door had been broken open with a chisel." This was not a matter of opinion, but the witness was testifying to the impression made on the wood by the chisel, and was subject to cross-examination; nor was it a *Page 474 very material point whether the door was broken open by a chisel or other instrument. It was as competent for the witness to say that the impression on the door-facing was made by a chisel as to say that a track was made by a man or a horse. There was no conflicting evidence that the room had been broken into and the safe drilled into and broken open by some explosive, and gold coin and other contents abstracted. Those matters were not contested. The point in the case was to show beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendants were the perpetrators of the crime.

The above points are all that are presented in the brief of the learned and able counsel of the defendants.

There are other exceptions in the record, but, on careful examination, they do not require discussion.

No error.

Cited: S. v. Peak, post, 713; S. v. Ellsworth, 131 N.C. 773; Moore v.Palmer, 132 N.C. 977; S. v. Mitchell, ibid., 1036; Medlin v. Simpson, 144 N.C. 400; Bedsole v. R. R., 151 N.C. 153; S. v. Shuford, 152 N.C. 810;S. v. Lane, 166 N.C. 336.

(693)