152 Ga. 214 | Ga. | 1921
Joe (Buster) Bonner was tried under an indictment charging him with the offense of the murder of A. S. Jones. Upon the trial he was found guilty, no recommendation of mercy being made. He made a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and he excepted.
Considering all that Bonner, according to the testimony of the sheriff, said to the latter, the accused made a confession. Tt was not a mere incriminatory statement. His confession showed that the crime of murder was committed, and that he was present participating in the commission of the crime. Accepting the testimony of the sheriff as true, the defendant said that Jim Sims told him Mr. Jones had some money and he wanted to get it that night, and for defendant to meet him back down there, so they would go and kill him and get it. And the statement by the accused' which we have quoted above shows that he was present at the time when Jones was killed. The language of the defendant in making the confession is not altogether clear, and is evidently that of an illiterate and ignorant man, but it contains the unequivocal statement that Sims had proposed to -him that they should go to Jones’s house that night, and for the defendant to meet him “back down there, so they would go and kill him and get it ” (the money). It can scarcely be contended, in the face of this statement to the effect that defendant Went “back down there,” and from the place thus designated on to Jones’s house that night, and stood there while Sims hit the deceased with an axe, that he was not fully aware of Sims’s purpose in going to Jones’s house. And if he joined Sims, as he himself admits that he did, and stood by while Jones was killed under those circumstances, whether he struck a blow himself or not, he was guilty of the crime of murder, and his statement in regard to it is a confession.. And regarded in that light it affords direct evidence of the commission of the crime, and the case did not rest entirely upon circumstantial evidence; and consequently the court did not err in omitting to charge, in the absence of a request to do so, upon the law of circumstantial evidence.
Judgment affirmed.