95 Ga. App. 859 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1957
1. Where, upon the trial of one charged with exceeding the speed limit, the solicitor, in his closing argument to the jury, states that the jurors know from general experience that when a man bails out and runs away from an automobile he has some whisky—that there is usually some whisky involved, when the defendant has not been charged with violating the liquor law and no evidence relating to whisky is introduced, and the defendant has not placed his
Charles Bailey was tried and convicted under an accusation charging him with unlawfully operating an automobile on the public streets and highways of Troup County in excess of 75 miles per hour in a 50-mile-per-hour zone. He was sentenced to 12 months “in the penitentiary” but allowed to serve the sentence on probation on the payment of a $500 fine and the surrender of his driving license for a term of six months. His motion for new trial, based on the usual general grounds and three special grounds, was denied, and he assigns error on that judgment. In special grounds 2 and 3 of the motion for new trial, error is assigned on an improper argument of the solicitor for the reason assigned in special ground 2 that it placed the defendant’s character in issue when he had not elected to' do so, and in special ground 3 that this argument injected extrinsic, prejudicial facts into the case of which there was no evidence. The gist of the alleged errors is shown by the following quotation from these grounds as to what occurred upon the trial:
“During the argument to the jury by Mr. Fleming [the solicitor], Mr. Weldon [counsel for the defendant] objected to the statement by the solicitor about any whisky, since the defendant is charged only with the' offense of speeding. The Court: ‘What
Judgment reversed.
The defendant denied every material fact stated by the deputy sheriff.