170 Ga. 859 | Ga. | 1930
The grand jury of Oconee County returned a bill of indictment against Raymond Cooper, Weyman Bradberry, and Harvey Bradberry, jointly charging them with the murder of Dock Elder. Weyman Bradberry was put on trial, and the jury returned a verdict of guilty, without recommendation, and the court sentenced the defendant to be put to death by electrocution. The defendant made a motion for new trial, which was overruled, and he excepted.
The verdict was authorized by the evidence. The evidence for the State tended to show that the three young white men, indicted here, including the plaintiff in error, met and conspired to put to death the deceased, Dock Elder, an old negro, for the purpose of obtaining the money that he carried. They went to the home of Elder about midnight on November 10, 1929, and called him on the pretense that their automobile was broken down and they wanted him to assist them in repairing it. He took his lantern and went with the three men down the road toward where the automobile was said to be. Elder and Raymond Cooper were in front, and Harvey and Weyman Bradberry were in the rear. When they had reached a point several hundred yards from the house, near a bridge, on a signal given by one of the defendants, who said, “Hard-knot, aint you going to do it?” Harvey Bradberry hit Elder in the head with a chop-ax, and Weyman Bradberry jumped on him and cut his throat. Then they searched him, got two pocketbooks from his person, and went back to the house. Thinking that the wife of the deceased, Frances Elder, knew who they were, they decided to “shut her mouth.” Cooper stood in the door, and Harvey went into the house and killed the woman, and then came out and got in the ear, and they left. Weyman Bradberry was sitting in the car at that time. The sheriff and his deputies found, hidden in or near the yard of the defendant’s father, the pocketbooks taken from the body of the deceased, containing $190, and more money was found behind the cotton house. The State intro
Complaint is made in ground 1 of .the amendment to the motion for new trial that the court erred in admitting in evidence the testimony of Hubert Crane, a negro boy, and a witness for the State, as follows: “I got up the next morning and saw the blood by the daylight and struck a match and looked, and she was right
Grounds 3 and 4 of the motion for new trial will be considered together, as they relate to the same subject. It is contended that the evidence admitted as to the condition of the body of Frances Elder was erroneous and harmful to the defendant, for the reason that it threw no light upon the killing of Doc Elder, and that it caused a violent prejudice in the minds of the jury against the defendant; that-even if the jury had been authorized to convict the defendant of the murder of Doc Elder, they could not and would not give due consideration to the sentence they should impose on the defendant, that is, whether they should recommend a life sentence or not. As pointed out in the preceding division, the evidence was material and admissible, and the assignment of error on its admission is without merit.
Ground 5 assigns error on the admission of the testimony of the sheriff, Crowlejr, as to certain confessions made by the accused after the sheriff had arrested him and put him in the sheriff’s
Grounds 6 and 7 involve the same question, and they will be considered together. Movant complains that a mistrial should have been granted, because, as he contends, the solicitor-general in opening the case declared that he expected to connect the killing of Frances Elder with the defendant, Weyman Bradberry. A careful reading of the brief of evidence shows that the accused was one of the principals in the killing of Frances Elder, and that after Doc Elder was killed the conspirators, .including the accused, decided that they must kill Frances Elder in order to “shut her mouth;” that Harvey Bradberry, one of the joint conspirators, actually struck the blow, and took the same knife with which the accused had killed Doc Elder, and the same hatchet which had struck Doc Elder and went into the house and killed Frances Elder. It appears' from the testimony of A. T. Crowley that when he searched Weyman Bradberry, he got the same knife from his pocket. According to the testimony of R. A. Saye, the accused admitted that he and those jointly indicted with him discussed killing Frances Elder, that Harvey Bradberry went in the house, and that the accused sat in the car in front of the house, and was ready to go. The sheriff testified as follows: “One of them made a statement that after Doc Elder was killed [one] said We have got to go up there and shut Frances’s mouth’ and I think it was
Ground 8 complains that Dewitt Daniel, one of the jurors who rendered the verdict complained of, was disqualified for the reason that he was prejudiced and biased in advance of the trial. There were affidavits of two or three witnesses who claimed that Daniel, prior to his being drawn as a juror in this case, said: “I haven’t a damn bit of sympathy for them [meaning Weyman and Harvey Bradberry and Raymond Cooper]. They should be taken to the bridge where they killed Doc Elder, and their damned throats cut and thrown off the same bridge they threw him off,” and other similar statements. The juror, on the hearing of the motion for new trial, denied having made the statements attributed to him; and there were a number of affidavits in which the affiants deposed that the juror, Daniel, was a man of splendid character and a good citizen. In such circumstances the trial judge was authorized to find that the juror in question did not make the statements attributed to him, and that he was a fair and impartial juror, he having qualified on voir dire. In such cases the trial judge has a discretion, and, as held in Hall v. State, 141 Ga. 7, 9 (80 S. E. 307. “The discretion of a trial judge who passes upon the alleged prejudice and bias of a juror, from conflicting evidence on a motion for new trial, will not be interfered with unless it is manifestly abused. And see the cases cited, supporting that rule. So we reach the conclusion that the trial judge did not abuse his discretion in the instant case in denying the motion for new trial on the foregoing ground.
Ground 9 complains of the following charge of the court: “Now the court leaves it to you to say whether or not any confession was made in this case; and if so, was it freely and voluntarily made? If there was no confession made, or if a confession was made not freely and voluntarily, or if it was induced by another by the slightest hope of benefit or remotest fear of injury, then you can not consider such confession in determining your verdict in this case,” etc. The entire charge of the court on the subject of con
Complaint is made in ground 11 that the court erred in charging the jury, on the subject of confessions: “Now proof beyond a reasonable doubt of the corpus delicti (that means that the crime charged has been committed — the person named in the indictment has been murdered), proof of that may be, but is not necessarily, sufficient corroboration of a confession.” The solicitor-general in opening the case made statements to the effect that he expected to prove the murder of Frances Elder (for which the defendant was not on trial); and when the State had rested its case, and counsel for defendant moved for a mistrial (which motion the court overruled), the solicitor-general made this statement prior to the court’s ruling, while arguing on the motion, “The evidence shows that the motive and the reason that they killed Frances Elder was to shut her mouth; that this defendant went up there and sat in the car for the purpose, so if anything happened they could get away,” this being said in the presence of the jury. It is insisted that the court should have charged further and explained to the jury that the killing of Frances Elder by some one other than the defendant could not be more than a circumstance, and not a part of the corpus delicti; that the statement of the solicitor-general could not but make the jury think that the corpus delicti meant the killing of both Doc Elder and Frances Elder; and that the omission so to explain to the jury was confusing and harm
Ground 12 assigns error on the refusal of a request to instruct the jury as follows: .“Drunkenness of the defendant may be looked to by the jury to throw light upon the state of the defendant’s mind at the time of the killing, upon the question of malice.” It is contended that the jury had a right to consider drunkenness of the defendant upon the question of whether he was guilty or innocent; and that, the court having charged the code section stating when drunkenness might be a complete defense, this request should have been charged in connection therewith, to determine whether or not the defendant actually had any form of malice. It is further contended that the jury in a murder case may, for any reason satisfactory to itself, recommend a life sentence in the event of conviction; and while they might have thought the defendant guilty, the charge requested would have made it plain to them that though such drunkenness might not be enough to acquit the defendant, still drunkenness might be less than that and at the same time warrant the jury in recommending a life sentence, such recommendation being purely a jury question. This ground is without merit. The evidence shows that when the crime was planned to take the life of Doe Elder, the accused, so far as the record discloses, was sober, and there was no evidence to show that the accused was drunk at the time the crime was actually committed, the only evidence on this question being that of witnesses who testified that in his confession the accused stated that he had taken certain whisky. Even if the defendant was drunk at the time of the commission of this homicide, it is well settled in this State that voluntary drunkenness is no excuse for crime. Penal Code (1910), § 39. In Estes v. State, 55 Ga. 30 (3), it was held: “A person, sober enough to intend to shoot at another, and to actually shoot at and
We have examined the record in this case carefully, and are satisfied that the accused had a fair and impartial trial according to the laws of this State; and the trial judge being satisfied with the verdict of the jury, and no error of law appearing as having been- committed on the trial, the judgment overruling the motion for new trial is Affirmed.