Tbe State introduced two witnesses, A. H. Heslewood and A. Moye, each of whom testified that be bad bought whiskey from tbe defendant; tbe defendant introduced, one witness whose testimony contradicted that of Heslewood but did not contradict that of Moye. At tbe conclusion of tbe evidence tbe judge told tbe defendant’s counsel in tbe presence of tbe jury that be would instruct tbe jury to convict tbe defendant if they found beyond a reasonable, doubt that Moye’s testimony was true. This remark was repeated in tbe presence of tbe jury and in each instance tbe defendant duly excepted. This was not an *210expression of opinion as to tbe credibility of the witness or as to the defendant’s guilt, but the announcement of an intended instruction which was subsequently given as follows: “The witness, A. Moye, testified that he bought a pint of whiskey from the defendant and paid him $2.00 for it. This evidence is not contradicted. The court instructs you that if you believe the evidence of the witness, Moye, beyond a reasonable doubt, you should find the defendant guilty.” The defendant suggests that this instruction is erroneous; but there was no other evidence of this transaction and the evidence if believed was susceptible of only one construction, that is, that the defendant made the sale; and under such circumstances similar instructions have repeatedly been sustained. S. v. Vines, 93 N. C., 493; S. v. Winchester, 113 N. C., 642; S. v. Riley, ibid., 648; S. v. Woolard, 119 N. C., 779; S. v. Hill, 141 N. C., 769; S. v. Estes, 185 N. C., 752; S. v. Murphrey, 186 N. C., 113. The principle does not apply where the evidence, if true, is susceptible of more than one deduction. Fertilizer Works v. Cox, 187 N. C., 654. We are referred by the defendant to S. v. Hardy, 189 N. C., 799, in which upon assignments of error a new trial was awarded. There the instruction, “If you believe the facts as testified you will return a verdict of guilty,” was disapproved; but the evidence to which the instruction referred was apparently regarded as open to more than one construction. It is worthy of note that the State’s witness in that case did not say directly, but only inferentially, that the man he had met in the road was the defendant, and his subsequent testimony was not necessarily conclusive on that question. In any event, Hardy’s case cánnot reasonably be interpreted as conflicting with the long line of decisions which have upheld the principle now under discussion.
The judge’s remark that Moye’s testimony was not contradicted did not constitute reversible error. He simply directed the jury’s attention to the conflict between the testimony of Heslewood and that of the defendant’s only witness and' to the want of such inconsistency between the defendant’s witness and Moye. The plea put in issue the question of the defendant’s guilt and the credibility of the State’s evidence; but it could not “contradict” evidence which had not been introduced when the plea was entered. S. v. Murphrey, supra; S. v. Hardy, supra, p. 804.
We find nothing in the record which indicates the expression or intimation of an opinion by the presiding judge in violation of Consolidated Statutes, 564, or disregard of the rule which forbids the selection or “singling out” of one witness among many, where the evidence is conflicting, and making his credibility a pivotal or controlling circumstance. S. v. Rogers, 93 N. C., 523; Long v. Hall, 97 N. C., 286.
We find
No error.