Appellant was indicted for felony escape from lawful confinement while serving a nine-year sentence for burglary and aggravated assault of a police officer. He entered a plea of not guilty and was brought to trial before a jury. The state presented evidence of the circumstances of the escape and appellant was identified as one of the escapees. Appellant was then sworn as his own sole witness and testified that, although he had been convicted and sentenced in Clayton County for the burglary and aggravated assault offenses, he had been “boarded out” in the Forest Park jail. According to appellant, conditions and food for the prisoners at the jail were so poor that, when he awoke one night and saw the bars cut and a window open, he followed three other prisoners out. Appellant went to his mother’s house where he was arrested three days later.
At the close of the evidence, the trial court announced that, in view of appellant’s testimony under oath admitting every element of the crime of escape, appellant was “hereby found guilty and the jury is discharged.” The judge then pronounced sentence and remanded appellant to the custody of the sheriff. Defense counsel’s objection that “we have not waived our right to a jury trial” was overruled, the court stating: “Your client has pled guilty under oath in this court and when he does that he has waived his right to a jury trial.” On appeal, it is urged that the trial court erred in discharging the jury without allowing it to determine appellant’s guilt or innocence.
1. Two fundamental doctrines of criminal jurisprudence are involved in the instant case. The first is the constitutional right to have a public and speedy trial by jury unless that right is waived. Ga. Const., Art. I, Sec. I, Par. XI (Code Ann. § 2-111);
Ballew v. State,
In applying these principles, we must recognize the extent of the authority and power of a jury in a criminal case. Both the Constitution and the statutory law of this state express the maxim that the jury shall be the judges of the law and the facts in the trial of all criminal cases. Ga Const. 1976, Art. I, Sec. I, Par. VIII (Code Ann. § 2-108); Code Ann. § 27-2301. Early on, our Supreme Court stated in this regard that “[t]he Jury are judges of the law in criminal cases, in this: that they have the legal right to acquit the prisoner, although the Judge may charge them, that if certain facts be proven, he is guilty according to law; and although they may find those facts to be proven. But the Judge is their safe and reliable adviser as to the law.”
McGuffie v. State,
This concept of “jury nullification” has been moderated somewhat as to the
judicially sanctioned
authority of the jury to judge the law applicable to a case on trial. It is now accepted that “the province of the court [is] to construe the law applicable in the trial of a criminal case, and of the jury to apply the law so construed to the facts in evidence. While the impaneled jurors are made absolutely and exclusively judges of the facts in the case, they are, in this sense only, judges of the law.”
Berry v. State,
“[T]he jury is entitled to believe a part of the testimony of a witness and disbelieve other parts.”
Williamson v. State,
Therefore, even though the defendant offers no evidence and the state’s case
appears
to authorize only a verdict of guilty, “a verdict is never demanded in a criminal case in the sense that the court may direct a guilty verdict.”
Poole v. State,
2. Appellant’s enumeration contending that a subsequent prosecution of the same offense is barred under Code Ann. § 26-507 (a) (2) because his trial was terminated improperly after the jury was impaneled and sworn is premature and presents nothing for review on this appeal. See
Patterson v. State,
Judgment reversed.
