{
  "id": 11272238,
  "name": "STATE v. VES WINGLER, Alias U. G. WINGLER",
  "name_abbreviation": "State v. Wingler",
  "decision_date": "1922-12-13",
  "docket_number": "",
  "first_page": "747",
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    "name": "Supreme Court of North Carolina"
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      "cite": "171 N. C., 791",
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  "last_updated": "2023-07-14T19:54:19.408476+00:00",
  "provenance": {
    "date_added": "2019-08-29",
    "source": "Harvard",
    "batch": "2018"
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  "casebody": {
    "judges": [],
    "parties": [
      "STATE v. VES WINGLER, Alias U. G. WINGLER."
    ],
    "opinions": [
      {
        "text": "Stacy, J.\nIn 1891 tbe defendant, Ves \"Wingler, married Candace Miller, tbe daughter of Natban Miller, of Wilkes County. These two people lived together as man and wife for two years and seven days. At first they resided with tbe defendant\u2019s mother; and then they moved to themselves and lived in a log cabin, situate on tbe mountain side about 17 or 18 miles from North Wilkesboro, N. 0. At that time tbe only way of getting in and out of this country was by a wagon road and \u201cby walk-ways which lead across ridges and hollows and creeks.\u201d Here a child was born to this union, and apparently they were contented, if not happy, in their poor and humble home.\nOn 10 May, 1893,-Candace Wingler, wife of the defendant, died under rather peculiar and suspicious circumstances.' A coroner\u2019s inquest was held six days thereafter, and again on 23 May, 1893, the coroner\u2019s jury was reassembled, additional evidence was offered for its consideration; the body of the deceased was exhumed and on examination by Dr. J. M. Turner was made in the presence of the jury. The coroner\u2019s jury finally rendered a verdict that the deceased met her death by accidentally falling out of the loft of the defendant\u2019s cabin and striking her head against the stone hearth and hitting her shoulder and neck against the ear and sharp wire bail of a pot in the fire place. This was the defendant\u2019s version, given at the trial, as to how she received her fatal injuries.\nIn 1894, about ten months after Candace Wingler\u2019s death, the defendant married Melyina Wingler, the 16-year-old daughter of John Wing-ler. With his second wife, the defendant has since lived in the same community and raised another family. The child by his first wife was cared for largely by her grandmother, Mrs. Ann Miller.\nIn April, 1922, Ves Wingler swore out a warrant against one of John Shepherd\u2019s boys, charging him with an assault upon his 9-year-old daughter by striking her in the face and knocking out some of her teeth. He was not arrested, but is now a fugitive from justice. Two days thereafter, John Shepherd made an affidavit before a justice of the peace, upon which the warrant and subsequent indictment of the defendant were based, charging that the defendant had admitted to him, in the presence of others, at the time of his first wife\u2019s death, that he, the defendant, had killed her.\nTbe defendant contended that his wife had climbed into the loft of their cabin to put away a pot of soap which she had made, and that she fell through an opening for a distance of eight or ten feet, striking her head against the stone hearth, crushing her skull and causing her death. The defendant further testified that, upon discovering his wife\u2019s condition, he ran out of the house and over the hill with.a call for help from his neighbors, relatives, and friends.\nThe State contended, and offered evidence tending to show, by those who responded to the defendant\u2019s distress signal and who saw his wife before her death, that the deceased was a strong, vigorous woman; that she had a number of bruises on her body, that her skull was crushed on the back and left side; that her right shoulder showed a deep gash near the neck; that her right arm and the fingers of her right hand were cut; that her tongue was cut about two-thirds in two; that her thighs were bruised in two places, in front and behind, and that she was very bloody. There was evidence also to the effect that blood was found in the yard, on the steps, in the house, and the prints of a woman\u2019s bloody hand was seen on the wall; that a bloody mattock lay on the floor, the blade of which was about the size of the gash in her shoulder; that there was no hole or opening in the loft through which her body could have passed; that when this circumstance, among others, was called to the defendant\u2019s attention by his mother and sister in the presence of, John Shepherd (who gives this evidence), he said: \u201cYes, I killed her with the mattock; but, in the name of God, don\u2019t tell it. Tell that she fell out of the loft and killed herself. . . . For God\u2019s sake, open a place and tell she fell through there,\u201d and then, turning to John Shepherd, he exclaimed: \u201cJohn, God damn you, if you ever tell it, I will kill you.\u201d\nThe State\u2019s witness, John Shepherd, in explanation of why he withheld this evidence from the officers of the law for so long a period, stated that he was afraid the defendant would kill him, or do him great bodily harm, if he told it; but that, after he had been converted and professed religion, in the spring of 1922, the matter bore upon his mind to such an extent that he felt compelled to give the authorities the information he had, and thus relieve himself of the burden he had been carrying for so many years. This witness further stated that on one occasion, when the defendant was drunk, he told him that he killed his first wife in order to get rid of her and to marry Melvina 'Wingler, but added: \u201cIf you ever tell it I will kill you.\u201d\nThe defendant, on the other hand, contended that the testimony of John Shepherd was false in its entirety; that it was born of a malicious and revengeful spirit,. occasioned by the attempted arrest of his boy at the instance of the defendant. There was further evidence on behalf of the defendant tending to impeach the character and reputation of the principal witnesses for the State, and there was evidence in rebuttal offered by the State, derogatory of the defendant\u2019s character and standing in the community.\nUpon this circumstantial evidence and alleged confession of guilt, the jury returned a verdict of murder in the second degree, and the court imposed an indeterminate sentence of not less than 25 years nor more than 30 years at hard labor in the State\u2019s Prison.\nThe only material exception presented for our consideration is the one directed to the following portion of his Honor\u2019s charge: \u201cIn this case, gentlemen of the jury, the court charges you that there is no evidence of manslaughter in the case, and your verdict will be either guilty of murder in the first degree, murder in the second degree, or not guilty, as you may find and be satisfied from the evidence in the case.\u201d\nThe principle here invoked by the defendant, and which he alleges was violated by this instruction of the court, is stated by Hoke, J., in S. v. Merrick, 171 N. C., 791, as follows: \u201cIt has been held with us in numerous cases, and the position is in accord with authoritative decisions elsewhere, that where in an indictment for murder the law in this State permitting a verdict for a lesser grade of the crime, if there are facts in evidence tending to reduce the crime to manslaughter, it is the duty of the presiding judge to submit this view of the case to the jury under a correct charge, and his failure to do so will constitute reversible error,\u2019 though the defendant may have been convicted for the higher offense,\u201d citing a number of authorities.\nThe foregoing, of course, is a correct statement of the law, but a careful perusal of the present record convinces us that this principle is not applicable to the facts of the instant case, and that the defendant\u2019s exception must be overruled. There is no evidence upon which a verdict of manslaughter could have been based, hence the rule as stated does not apply. Indeed, the defendant\u2019s own testimony positively runs counter to any inference of manslaughter. He testified that the deceased had given him no offense, and that there was no occasion or cause for her murder. S. v. Johnson, 161 N. C., 264; S. v. Bowman, 152 N. C., 817; S. v. Teachey, 138 N. C., 598.\nThere are several other exceptions relating to the admission and exclusion of evidence, but none apparently of sufficient merit to warrant an extended discussion. The weight and credibility of the testimony was for the jury, and it has found the facts at variance with the defendant\u2019s contention. The State\u2019s evidence, if believed in its entirety, would have justified a more serious verdict. But the jury, in the discharge of its duty, has acquitted the defendant of the capital offense.\nThis is a remarkable case in many respects. Its opening scene is one of romance; it then moves on from suggested intrigue to ultimate tragedy. So far as our records disclose, it is without a parallel in the judicial history of the State. It seems to stand alone and apparently is sui generis.\nThree decades ago, Yes Wingler, with axe in hand, cut from the virgin forests of Wilkes County the logs and the timbers with which he built upon the mountain side a crude and humble hut for himself and Candace Wingler, his wife. Here this couple started life together in a rough, rugged, mountain home \u2014 a log cabin, in fact \u2014 but to the deceased it was at least a stable and a manger. The only means of getting in and out of this country at that time was by a wagon road and by walkways which led across ridges and hollows and creeks. In winter there was a scene of leafless branches, snow-covered peaks, and frozen brooks; and that was poverty. But the defendant and his wife were not da,unted by the dangers of the inaccessible hills, nor by the frightful stories of the mountain coves. They started life with high hopes and with a faith that knew no fears, waiting and praying for the dawn of a better day.\nIt matters not on what plane of life one labors, nor how large or small the number of his acquaintances, the man who toils and yet knows that in the circle of his influence there is at least one life in which there is sunshine where but for him there would have been shadow; that there is at least one home in which there is cheer where but for him there would hav.e been gloom; that there is at least one heart in which there is hope where but for him there would have been despair, that man carries with him as he goes one of the richest treasures on this earth. This was the goal for which Yes Wingler was striving thirty years ago. But, alas, another story is told. He soon grew weary of his wife, and for some reason, not clearly disclosed by the record, he took her life in a cruel and heartless manner. Evidence of the crime was concealed at the time; he married again, raised another family, and, after the lapse of twenty-nine years was, arrested, tried, convicted, and sentenced to the State\u2019s Prison. Though justice sometimes treads with leaden feet, if need be, she strikes with an iron hand. Yerily, the wages of sin is death, and sin pays its wages.\nThe supreme tragedy of life is the immolation of woman. With a heavy hand, nature exacts from her a high tax of blood and tears. The age of knighthood has passed and is gone, but let us hope that the spirit of chivalry may never die. No civilization can last where women are permitted to be butchered like sheep in the shambles. Surely there is no pleasure to be derived from the punishment of the wicked, but it would seem that this defendant ought to welcome an opportunity to expiate his crime and to make some atonement for it. No doubt, in his own conscience, he has already suffered the agony of remorse. How, through the many years, has it been possible for him to banish from his mind the vision of the woman who, in the days of her youth, put her hand in his, with a promise to forsake all others and to follow him? At the altar she vowed, in substance, that \u201cwhither thou goest, I will go; and where thou lodgest, I will lodge; thy people shall be my people, and thy God my God.\u201d Can the defendant ever forget that momentous hour when this woman, with heroic courage, took immortality by the hand and went down into the valley of the shadow of death that his child might live? And then, can he for a moment cease to hear her screams of terror as she fled from his murderous hand?\nThe fates decreed for Candace Miller a hard lot and a cruel death, but\u2014\n\u201cOl\u00ed, can it be the gates ajar Wait not her humble quest?\u201d\nThere is no error appearing on the record, except the great error of the defendant in murdering his wife; but this is a mistake which is beyond our province or power to correct.\n\u201cRepose upon her soulless face,\nDig the grave and leave her;\nBut breathe a prayer that, .in His grace,\nHe who so loved this toiling race\nTo endless rest receive her.\u201d\n\u2014McNeill.\nThe trial and judgment of the Superior Court will be upheld.\nNo error.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "Stacy, J."
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "Attorney-General Maiming and Assistant Attorney-General Nash for the State.",
      "John R. Jones and T. G. Bowie for defendant."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "STATE v. VES WINGLER, Alias U. G. WINGLER.\n(Filed 13 December, 1922.)\n1. Instructions \u2014 Evidence \u2014 Criminal Law \u2014 Homicide\u2014Murder\u2014Manslaughter.\nWhere the defendant is being tried for homicide and the State has introduced evidence of his admission of the crime and circumstantial evidence tending to show his guilt, a defense solely upon the ground that the deceased was killed by an accident to herself wherein the defendant was not at all involved, does not present any evidence coming within the definition of manslaughter, and the trial judge commits no error in refusing to charge the law relating thereto. 8. v. Myriclo, 171 N. C., 791, cited and distinguished.\n2. Trials \u2014 Evidence\u2014Questions for Jury.\nThe weight and credibility of the \u00e9videnee are matters within the province of the jury to determine, under a proper instruction by the court of the law thereto applicable.\nAppeal by defendant from McElroy, J., at August Term, 1922, of Wilkes.\nCriminal prosecution, tried upon an indictment charging the defendant with the murder of his wife.\nTbe defendant was convicted of murder in tbe second degree, and from tbe judgment pronounced tbereon be appealed, assigning errors.\nAttorney-General Maiming and Assistant Attorney-General Nash for the State.\nJohn R. Jones and T. G. Bowie for defendant."
  },
  "file_name": "0747-01",
  "first_page_order": 803,
  "last_page_order": 808
}
