Citation Numbers: 268 N.C. 287, 150 S.E.2d 418, 1966 N.C. LEXIS 1183
Filed Date: 10/12/1966
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
From the record before us it appears that William G. Robinson, a member of the Mecklenburg County Bar, represented defendant Vance, and that T. O. Stennett, a member of the Mecklenburg County Bar, represented defendant Mixon. The State and defendant Vance introduced evidence; defendant Mixon, according to the record before us, introduced no evidence.
The State’s evidence shows these facts: On'20 January 1966 O. D. Ferrell was manager of a general merchandise store operated by S. W. & C. W. Davis Company on Highway #115 about eight miles
Joseph B. Whitener had stopped at the store to make a purchase. As he was getting out of his car he saw two colored men “barrelling out of the door of the store.” He went into the store, and Ferrell told him he had been held up.
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Dutton were passing the Davis store in an automobile. Joseph Whitener flagged them down, and told them of the robbery of Ferrell and that the two colored men were going down the road and to watch them. They did so, and further down the road they saw these two colored men get into a late model white Pontiac, license No. DR-1030. Two men were already in the car. They went back to the Davis store and gave Ferrell the license number of this automobile.
An investigation by the Mecklenburg County police showed that license plate No. DR-1030 was issued in the name of Frank Porter, 1112 Winifred Street, Charlotte. The car was a 1963 white Pontiac. Frank Porter informed the police that he had loaned the car to defendant Vance on 20 January 1966 and that Vance returned the car to him on 21 January 1966.
Defendant’s evidence shows the following: He is 32 years old. On 20 January 1966 he was driving Frank Porter’s Pontiac automobile in the vicinity of the Davis store on Highway #115. Junior Gills, Florence Massey, and another nicknamed “Skeets,” whose name he does not know, were in the automobile with him. Vance was going to the Florida Steel Company to pick up his pay check. The three passengers in his car were having a conference about a cash register and a game played by two or more men where one man buys an item and distracts the attention of the cashier while the other man walks up and takes the money from the cash register. At a service station near the Davis store he stopped to get some soft
The State’s evidence was amply sufficient to carry the case to the jury as to Vance, and to sustain the verdict of the jury as to him. We have carefully examined all defendant’s exceptions and assignments of error, and all are overruled. No prejudicial error has been shown. Defendant Vance’s counsel candidly states in his brief that after a diligent search of the record by him he is unable to find any prejudicial error which would warrant the Court in disturbing the trial below.
In the trial below we find
No error.