Summary
In S. v. Bradburn, 104 N.C. 881, the indictment was robbery, "near the highway," The facts were, that defendant and prosecutor went up the railroad and took a path to a point 20 steps from the railroad and 30 steps from the county road running parallel to the railroad.
Summary of this case from State v. NicholsonOpinion
(September Term, 1889.)
Larceny — Robbery — Intent.
Secrecy is not an indispensable element to the felonious intent necessary to constitute the crimes of larceny or robbery.
INDICTMENT for robbery, tried at Fall Term, 1889, of CATAWBA, Shipp, J., presiding.
Attorney-General for the State.
F. L. Cline for defendant.
There was a verdict of guilty, and from the judgment thereupon the defendant appealed.
The only question discussed in this Court by the defendant's counsel is whether there was sufficient evidence of a felonious intent. The argument is based upon S. v. Deal, 64 N.C. 270, and S. v. Sowls, 61 N.C. 151, where it is said that secrecy is an indispensable element in larceny, with an intimation that it is also necessary in robbery. These views have been overruled by S. v. Powell, 103 N.C. 424, in which the subject is treated at some length.
The defendant and another enticed a boy of twelve years of age into the woods near the highway, knocked him down with a club and took his money. After a dispute over the spoils the defendant proposed to kill the prosecutor and put him on the railroad track, for the purpose of concealing the crime. If these facts do not constitute robbery we are at a loss to understand how such an offense can ever be proved.
Affirmed.
Cited: S. v. Nicholson, 124 N.C. 824.