DocketNumber: 32748
Citation Numbers: 81 Ga. App. 345, 58 S.E.2d 480, 1950 Ga. App. LEXIS 892
Judges: MacIntyre
Filed Date: 2/28/1950
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
1. (a) In special ground 3 the defendant complains of the following remarks made by the solicitor-general in his argument to the jury: “Minus Hardison is either guilty or your sheriff is a liar and a rascal. Tell me if he is a liar and a rascal because I want to know it if he is. Minus Hardison is either guilty or the State Patrolmen are liars and rascals. Minus Hardison is guilty according to their evidence; your own grand jury of which Mr. W. E. Green was foreman say he is guilty.” The solicitor-general then began to read the names of the grand jurors and the defendant objected to this procedure, and before he could object further the court informed the solicitor-general that his time was up. The defendant says that the court should have then and there declared a mistrial. As we construe this assignment of error, the objection was to that portion of the solicitor’s remarks which we have italicized above and the reading of the grand jurors’ names. The solicitor’s remark was distinctly improper, but the court stopped the procedure of reading from the indictment by informing the solicitor that his time was up, and in the court’s certificate to the motion for a new trial makes this additional certification: “The Court further certifies as to ground 3 of the amended motion for new trial that after the episode referred to in that ground, the court proceeded immediately to charge the jury and that, while the charge of the court to the jury was not reported and is therefore not included in the record, the court did instruct the jury in the early part of the charge, directly after stating the issue raised by the indictment and the plea of not guilty as follows: T charge you that the fact that the defendant has been indicted by the grand jury raises no presumption or inference whatever against him. You will not take the fact that an indictment has been preferred against this defendant as having any evidentiary force or value whatever. The indictment
(b) As to the remarks, “Minus Hardison is either guilty or your sheriff is a liar and a rascal,” etc., as we interpret this ground of the. motion for a new trial, there was no objection made at the time to these remarks, but the defendant contends that the court should have declared a mistrial of his own motion. “ ‘Although it is the duty of the trial judge whether so requested or not, to check improper remarks of counsel to the jury, . . to remove any prejudicial effect they may be calculated to have against the opposite party,’ yet ‘ “a verdict will not be set aside because of such remarks or because of any omission of the judge to perform his duty in the matter, unless objection be made at the trial. A party will not be permitted to sit by and allow such conduct to proceed without objection and without calling the attention of the court to it, and after verdict take advantage of it as ground for new trial. It is as much his duty to object to improper argument as it is to object to improper evidence; and in the former case as well as in the latter, if he permits it without objection, he can not demand a new trial on the ground that the jury may have been affected by it” ’ (Italics ours.) Georgia Power Company v. Puckett, supra. [181 Ga. 386, 182 S. E. 284]. This Court, wishing to get a definite ruling on what is necessary in order to make an improper argument to the jury by the attorney of one of the parties a basis of review, certified the question to the Supreme Court, and that court, in Brooks v. State, 183 Ga. 466, 468 (188 S. E. 711, 108 A. L. R. 762), definitely answered the question as follows: ‘When an improper argument is made, the adversary must act, if redress is desired; if not, the incident is closed.
2. Special ground 1 complains that the solicitor-general introduced in evidence over the defendant’s objection the bench warrant, the bond given for the defendant for his appearing in court, a bond forfeiture, a rule nisi issued on such forfeiture and a writ of habeas corpus brought by the defendant. The defendant objected to this evidence on the ground that these papers did not have any direct bearing on the case of State v. Hardison (the case on trial). It seems that the defendant by his cross-examination of the sheriff both directly and by implication was attacking the conduct of the sheriff as being unbecoming and unworthy of such an officer and that he was making a serious attack upon the conduct of the sheriff. When the defendant thus brought into the picture such an attack upon the conduct of the sheriff the State tendered in evidence the papers objected to. We think that these papers together with the other evidence, part of which showed that the defendant had failed to appear for trial while out under the first bond, fixed by the sheriff, which was forfeited, and a bench warrant issued which ordered the defendant arrested and held in custody until the further order of the court, would throw light on the question of why the sheriff acted as he did under the circumstances. These papers were for the purpose of explaining the sheriff’s conduct. They would tend to explain why the sheriff had the defendant placed under guard while he was ill and in the hospital, in that under the bench warrant he was ordered by
3. In special ground 2 the defendant complains that during the argument before the court upon the question of the admissibility of the evidence with which we have dealt in division 1 of this opinion, the solicitor made the following statement: “They [the documentary evidence] have this bearing, Your Hon- or. Was Sheriff Beeland doing anything except what he had
4. The evidence authorized the verdict and the court did not err in overruling the motion for a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.