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State v. Cody

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Sep 1, 1896
26 S.E. 252 (N.C. 1896)

Summary

In S. v. Cody, 119 N.C. 908, 26 S.E. 252, the defendants were convicted of burglary, sentenced, and appealed to the Supreme Court. Before the appeal was called for argument, they had escaped from custody and were at large.

Summary of this case from State v. Williams

Opinion

(September Term, 1896.)

Practice — Amendment of Indictment — Special Venire — Escape of Prisoner Pending Appeal — Dismissal of Appeal.

1. Where a prisoner convicted of a capital felony escapes from custody and is at large when his appeal is called for hearing, this Court may in its discretion either dismiss the appeal or hear and determine the assignments of error or continue the case.

2. It is not error in the trial judge when ordering a special venire to direct the sheriff to summon only freeholders who have paid their taxes for the preceding year, who had not served on the jury within the last two years, who had no suits pending and at issue in the court, and who were not under indictment in the court.

INDICTMENT for burglary, tried before Boykin, J., at Fall Term, 1894, of MADISON. The defendants were convicted and appealed. Before the appeal was called for trial they had escaped from custody and were at large. The case was continued from term to term, and they are still at large.

Attorney-General for the State.

J. M. Gudger for defendants (appellants).


In S. v. Anderson, 111 N.C. 689, it is held, approving S. v. Jacobs, 109 N.C. 772, that "where a prisoner who had been convicted of a capital felony escapes from custody and is at large when his appeal is called for trial, this Court may, in the exercise of a sound discretion, dismiss the appeal, or hear and determine the assignments of error, or continue the case," and in that case the appeal was dismissed. In the present instance we have heretofore pursued the latter of the three courses indicated, having continued the cause till this the fifth term. The prisoners not yet having returned after the lapse of (909) more than two years indulgence, we now adopt the first course and dismiss the appeal. Besides, upon looking into the record, we find there were only two assignments of error, neither of which is a valid objection. The first is that when the court ordered a special venire the judge directed the sheriff "to summon, as far as possible, only freeholders, men who had paid their taxes for the preceding year, who had not served on the jury within the last two years, who had no suits pending and at issue in the court, and who were not under indictment in the court." The order was unobjectionable, for the classes named were subject to challenge for cause, and the venire as far as possible should consist of men qualified to serve. To encumber the venire with those thus specified would simply restrict the number of legales homines from whom the jury was to be taken. The very object of a special venire is to get a body of men less liable to these and other causes of challenge than would be tales jurors picked up in the court-room.

At the instance of the defendants and with their consent in open court, acting under the advice of their counsel, an amendment was made in the indictment. They subsequently pleaded to the indictment and went to trial without objection, till after verdict. This action is binding on them, and it would be a fraud on the court if it was not. McCorkle v. State, 14 Ind. 38; Shiff v. State, 84 Ala. 454. We would not, however, be understood as calling in question the decision which deny the right of the court, either of itself or on motion of the solicitor ( S. v. Sexton, 10 N.C. 184), to make amendments, except in certain cases, and then only as to matters of form and not of substance. 1 Chitty Cr. Law, 292; Cain v. State, 4 Black (Ind.), 512; Hawthorn v. State, 56 Md. 530.

APPEAL DISMISSED.

Cited: S. v. McDowell, 123 N.C. 767; S. v. Dixon, 131 N.C. 813; S. v. Register, 133 N.C. 750; S. v. Keebler, 145 N.C. 561, 562; S. v. DeVane, 166 N.C. 282.

(910)


Summaries of

State v. Cody

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Sep 1, 1896
26 S.E. 252 (N.C. 1896)

In S. v. Cody, 119 N.C. 908, 26 S.E. 252, the defendants were convicted of burglary, sentenced, and appealed to the Supreme Court. Before the appeal was called for argument, they had escaped from custody and were at large.

Summary of this case from State v. Williams

In S. v. Cody, 119 N.C. 908, which was another conviction for a capital felony and an escape, the Court reaffirmed the above ruling, and dismissed the appeal.

Summary of this case from State v. Devane

In S. v. Cody, 119 N.C. 908 (conviction, for burglary, of three men), the appeal was also dismissed, on authority of S. v. Jacobs and S. v. Anderson. All three cases were cited and approved in S. v. Dixon, 131 N.C. 813, where it is said: "One who thus dismisses himself abandons his appeal and has no ground to invoke a review of the trial by the appellate court."

Summary of this case from State v. Keebler

In S. v. Cody, 119 N.C. 908, 56 Am. St., 692, the Court said: "It is not error in the trial judge, when ordering a special venire, to direct the sheriff to summon only freeholders," and in the present case the judge ascertained that fact himself instead of leaving it to the sheriff to determine.

Summary of this case from State v. Register
Case details for

State v. Cody

Case Details

Full title:STATE v. GEORGE CODY ET AL

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Sep 1, 1896

Citations

26 S.E. 252 (N.C. 1896)
119 N.C. 908

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