113 Ga. App. 413 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1966
The defendant appeals from the judgment of the trial court refusing to allow his demand for trial or order it spread upon the minutes of the court.
On August 22, 1963, in the Superior Court of Walker County, the defendant was indicted separately for the murder of two persons, Orville Steele and Carolyn Newell. He made a motion for change of venue on each indictment, and the denial of those motions was finally affirmed by the appellate courts on February 10, 1964. Blevins v. State, 108 Ga. App. 738 (134 SE2d 496), certiorari denied by the Supreme Court of Georgia on February 10, 1964. On March 30, 1964, there was a pre-trial hearing before the trial court on the indictments. The defendant was then tried and convicted of the Newell murder and that conviction was reversed by the Supreme Court. Blevins v. State, 220 Ga. 720 (141 SE2d 426). On re-trial the defendant was acquitted of the Newell murder on May 20, 1965. This appeal relates to the indictment for the Steele murder.
We do not agree that the defendant’s motion for change of venue is still pending under the rule applied in Blevins v. State, 108 Ga. App. 738, supra, that “whether or not a fair and impar
The defendant contends that at the pre-trial hearing on May 20, 1965, before the defendant was tried for the Newell murder, the court made a statement which he considered to mean that, when the State made its election as to which of the two indictments it would try first, no demand for trial on the other indictment would be proper or in order until after the indictment first tried had been finally disposed of; and that ■ therefore he had no reason to make a demand for trial on this indictment until after his acquittal on the other one on May 20, 1965, and that he made the demand at the earliest opportunity, and at the first term after that final judgment.
The colloquy between the court and counsel pointed out by the defendant in the transcript of the pre-trial hearing could not be reasonably interpreted to have the meaning contended by the defendant. And we know of no authority holding that the time for exercising the right to make a demand for trial on one indictment is extended while the trial of another indictment against the same defendant is pending.
The defendant argues that the trial court’s refusal to allow him to file his demand for trial, which he made after the time had passed when he had the absolute statutory right to do so, amounted to a denial of his constitutional right to a speedy trial; and that the provisions of the statute that he can enter a demand for trial later than the term at which the indictment was made or the next succeeding regular term thereafter only by special permission of the court is in violation of State and Federal constitutional provisions guaranteeing criminal defendants a speedy trial. Art. I, Sec. I, Par. V, Constitution of the State of Georgia (Code Ann. § 2-105); Amendments VI and XIV, Constitution of the United States (Code §§ 1-806, 1-815). The defendant first filed this appeal in the Supreme Court of Georgia, and that court ordered the appeal transferred to this Court. Blevins v. State, No. 23188, October 7, 1965. It is not for this court to pass upon the con
The right of a defendant in Georgia to a speedy trial in a capital case is recognized and implemented by the statute providing for a demand for trial and for an acquittal if the defendant is not tried within the time provided after the demand. Code Ann. §§ 27-1901.1, 27-1901.2, supra. The statute makes the demand for trial one device, but not the only one, by which the defendant can assert his right to a speedy trial. When the defendant does not demand trial in accordance with the statute, or the trial judge does not grant him special permission to file a demand after the time for filing as a matter of right has passed, the defendant is not without remedy. The right to a speedy trial has been recognized by other statutory provisions for a hundred years. Code §§ 27-2001, 27-2002. If the defendant believes the State has delayed beyond a reasonable time in bringing him to trial, he can make a motion that he be tried, or that the indictment be dismissed for want of prosecution, and call upon the court to apply Code § 27-2001 and deny the State a continuance unless it shows sufficient cause for it.
Judgment affirmed.