DocketNumber: 16146.
Citation Numbers: 47 S.E.2d 65, 203 Ga. 430, 1948 Ga. LEXIS 334
Judges: Candler, Wyatt
Filed Date: 3/19/1948
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
1. The evidence fully authorized the verdict, and therefore the general grounds of the motion for new trial are without merit.
2. Special ground 4 of the amended motion for new trial, makes the point that the venue of the crime was not sufficiently shown. Ed Burton, a witness for the State, after relating the circumstances of the alleged homicide, and after testifying as to the cause of death and the condition of the victim's body, testified as follows: "That happened in this county, Jenkins County, State of Georgia, on the 14th day of April, last year, 1946." From this testimony the jury was authorized to find that the alleged homicide was committed in Jenkins County, Georgia, and this ground of the motion is without merit. Womble v. State,
3. Where, as here, the defendant in her statement to the jury, admitted that the deceased was "stuck" while she and the deceased were engaged in a friendly scuffle, but claimed that it was not intentional, the case is not one depending wholly upon circumstantial evidence, so as to require a charge upon the law of such evidence. Duren v. State,
4. Special ground 6 complains of the following charge: "Now, I charge you that the contention of the defendant in this case is that this occurrence was an accident." It is contended that this charge was erroneous and incorrect, since she at no time ever admitted or contended that the deceased was killed accidentally. The defendant, in her statement to the jury, stated: "That Sunday it happened me and Mary [deceased] were playing and I didn't do it, not intentionally. . . We got to the foot of the bed and me and her was still playing right on, me and her was playing, and she put her arms around my neck and I had the knife in my pocket and I kinda leaned back over the foot of the bed like this [indicating] and she had her arms around my neck, and when the knife stuck in her she said. ``Oh, Cora Lee, I'm cut, you all *Page 431 carry me to the doctor.'" The court therefore correctly charged the contention of the defendant and properly charged on the subject of accident.
5. The court properly instructed the jury that the defendant, by her plea of not guilty, entered upon the trial with the presumption of innocence in her favor, and that the presumption remained with her throughout the entire trial and until met and overcome by evidence offered by the State which satisfied their minds and consciences of the guilt of the defendant of the crime charged in the indictment beyond a reasonable doubt. The complaint made in special ground 7, that the court did not fully instruct the jury on the burden of proof, is therefore without merit.
6. After the jury had retired and had considered the case for some time, they returned to the courtroom, and requested a further charge on the law of malice and a rehearsal of the testimony of a certain witness. The court asked counsel for the defendant if he had any objection to the testimony being repeated and he stated that he did. After giving a further charge on the law of malice, the judge stated to the jury: "All right, the defense objects to the testimony of Eugene Williams being repeated, so you will just have to remember that the best you can." It is contended in special ground 8 that this statement was hurtful and prejudicial to the movant because the court should not have put the burden on his counsel, in the presence of the jury, of refusing to allow the testimony to be repeated, and that the quoted charge emphasized that the testimony was being withheld by the defendant. A trial judge may, in his discretion, on request from the jury, recall a witness and allow him to restate what he swore when he was previously on the stand, or he may require the official court stenographer to read the testimony of a witness. Strickland v. State,
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur, except Wyatt, J., who took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
Briefly stated, the evidence introduced by the State made out substantially the following case: The homicide occurred at the home of Sally Bennett on Sunday afternoon, April 14, 1946, *Page 432 around 6 o'clock. Earlier that afternoon the defendant left the home of Catherine Jackson, with whom she was living, stating to her that she was going after some dirt. She had a paring knife, belonging to Catherine Jackson, in the front pocket of her dress, with the blade sticking up. There was evidence that the defendant and Sally Bennett went to the home of the deceased three different times during the day; however, the defendant stated that she was there only one time. The deceased was stabbed under the left breast, and as a result there was a considerable loss of blood and subsequent death. The arresting officer testified that he made a search for the defendant and found her at her home. He asked her for the knife with which she killed the deceased, and she replied that it was in the house, and together with the officers went into the house and got it off a dresser. The defendant stated to the officers at that time that she and the deceased were playing over the back of a bed and the knife accidentally "went in her;" that the knife stayed in her pocket. There was evidence that there was no bed in the room referred to immediately after the homicide.
The defendant, in her statement to the jury, stated: "That Sunday it happened me and Mary [deceased] were playing and I didn't do it, not intentionally. . . We sat down on the porch of Sally Bennett's house and Mary didn't ever set down, she caught me by the hand and pulled me out of the chair and said come on, Cora, you know you are my boy friend. I told her, ``Yea.' Well, I still had the knife in my pocket. I got up and me and Mary went to playing. Mary had on some high-heeled shoes and I had on some low-heeled shoes, and she allowed to me, said, ``Cora, wait and let me pull off my shoes.' Well, I waited and when she pulled her shoes off me and her went back to playing, and were played around out there on the porch a little while and got on the inside of Sally's room and we still played. We got to the foot of the bed and me and her was still playing right on, me and her was playing, and she put her arms around my neck and I had the knife in my pocket and I kinda leaned back over the foot of the bed like this [indicating] and she had her arms around my neck, and when the knife stuck in her she said, ``Oh, Cora Lee, I'm cut, you all carry me to the doctor, *Page 433 do something for me.' I didn't ever leave the house. May Bell and Sally and Lillie Bell Carter, they went on and got the man, Wade Jackson's brother, to carry her to the doctor. I stayed there with her until they came back. The last thing I hope do for her was to help them put her in the car and carry her to the doctor. I left from Sally's house then and I went on to my house and I stayed there until the sheriff came and got me."
Duren v. State , 158 Ga. 735 ( 1924 )
Strickland v. State , 167 Ga. 452 ( 1928 )
Lee v. State , 176 Ga. 215 ( 1933 )
Blocker v. State , 185 Ga. 322 ( 1938 )
Womble v. State , 107 Ga. 666 ( 1899 )
Green v. State , 122 Ga. 169 ( 1905 )
Bowen v. State , 181 Ga. 427 ( 1935 )
Morman v. State , 110 Ga. 311 ( 1900 )
Strickland v. State , 115 Ga. 222 ( 1902 )