From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Harris, Solicitor, ex parte

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Jun 1, 1875
73 N.C. 65 (N.C. 1875)

Summary

In Ex parte Harris, 52 Ala. 87, 93 (1875), this Court noted that a commission from the governor filling a duly certified vacancy "is conclusive evidence of the title to office, until it is impeached on quo warranto," and that, in a quo warranto proceeding, "it is only prima facie evidence, liable, like other prima facie evidence, to be countervailed."

Summary of this case from State ex rel. Burkes v. Franklin

Opinion

June Term, 1875.

One who has been convicted of murder, and is under sentence of death, is a competent witness; and the Solicitor for the State is entitled to a habeas corpus to bring such condemned prisoner into Court, for the purpose of testifying before the grand jury.

Chapter 54, sec. 40, Bat. Rev. applies only to parties strictly so called, and not to the State.

( State v. Adair, 68 N.C. 68; State v. Garland, 7 Ired. 48, cited and approved.

PETITION for a habeas corpus, heard before Watts, J., at Spring Term, 1875, of NORTHAMPTON Superior Court.

Harris, Solicitor, for the petition, argued:


The Solicitor filed the following affidavit:

* * * "that Cornelius Williams is now in the jail of this county, having been convicted at Fall Term, 1874, of this Court, of the murder of one Samuel Presson; that said Williams appealed to the Supreme Court, and that the judgment of this Court was affirmed. That said Williams is now under sentence of death for the said murder, and that said Williams is a material witness for the State in a case of murder to be enquired into by the Grand Jury at this Term." * * Wherefore he prayed that the said Williams might be brought into Court to testify, c.

His Honor, after deliberation, gave judgment refusing the prayer of the petition. From this judgment the Solicitor appealed.


That the Constitution prescribes no disfranchisement as to witness. That the act of 1866 makes Williams a competent witness; and that the act of 1868, chap. 116, sec. 37, does not bind the State. See State v. Adair, 68 N.C. 68.


This case is governed by the decision of this Court in the State v. Adair, 68 N.C. 68, which is so directly in point, that his Honor must have overlooked it or he would have allowed the motion. It is there held that the act of 1868, Bat. Rev., chap. 54, sec. 40, applies only to parties strictly so called, and not to the State, upon the maxim that general statutes do not bind the sovereign unless expressly mentioned in them. State v. Garland, 7 Ired., 58. The prisoner by our existing law is a competent witness, and the State is therefore entitled to his evidence, which may be procured in the way prescribed by law. Neither the Court below or this Court has the right to presume that the officers of the law, chosen to represent the public justice of the State, will abuse that high trust by either an inhuman or injudicious exercise of their powers.

The case does not present a fit occasion for the animadversion contained in his Honor's judgment.

There is error.

PER CURIAM. Judgment reversed.


Summaries of

Harris, Solicitor, ex parte

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Jun 1, 1875
73 N.C. 65 (N.C. 1875)

In Ex parte Harris, 52 Ala. 87, 93 (1875), this Court noted that a commission from the governor filling a duly certified vacancy "is conclusive evidence of the title to office, until it is impeached on quo warranto," and that, in a quo warranto proceeding, "it is only prima facie evidence, liable, like other prima facie evidence, to be countervailed."

Summary of this case from State ex rel. Burkes v. Franklin
Case details for

Harris, Solicitor, ex parte

Case Details

Full title:J. C. L. HARRIS, Solicitor, ex parte

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Jun 1, 1875

Citations

73 N.C. 65 (N.C. 1875)

Citing Cases

Yancey v. Highway Commission

" This statement of the law has been cited with approval and without question in numerous decisions of this…

State v. Jones

The motion for judgment of nonsuit was therefore properly overruled. The objection that Council was…