50 Ga. App. 171 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1934
The defendant, Maybelle Campbell, was indicted and tried for the offense of murder. The'court instructed the jury with reference to a finding and verdict of murder, voluntary manslaughter, and justifiable homicide, and not guilty because of accident. The jury returned a verdict as follows: “We the jury find the defendant guilty of involuntary manslaughter and fix her punishment at not more than seven or less than five years.”’ (Italics ours.) This verdict was returned into open court by the jury as their verdict, and was read by the solicitor-general; whereupon, the court, the jury not having dispersed nor any judgment having been attempted to be entered on the verdict, instructed them as follows: "In my charge to you in this case I charged you relative to two offenses, and one was murder; and I further charged you that if you should not believe, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant was guilty of murder, and yet did not believe that she was justified, if you found that she inflicted a mortal wound on this deceased, and did not believe she was acting under the fears of a reasonable pérson in inflicting those wounds, if she did inflict any wounds on the deceased, and you did not believe beyond a reasonable doubt that it was the result of misfortune or accident, that you should next inquire into the question of whether the defendant was guilty of voluntary manslaughter. I charged you that if you should determine she was guilty of voluntary manslaughter, it would be your duty to render such a verdict, and fix the punishment, and I will be glad if you would retire to your jury-room, and announce to the court if this verdict you rendered here speaks the verdict you intended to find, or if you intended to render a different verdict. You can retire to your room and consider that. In giving you the charge, I did not give you any instructions touching in
The defendant relies strongly in his position upon the case of Register v. State, 10 Ga. App. 623 (74 S. E. 429), which we find is based almost upon a state of facts identical with those in the present case. However, for reasons that we will attempt to point out, we do not think it is controlling here. In the Register case the facts were as follows: “On the trial of an indictment for murder the judge gave the jury instructions relating to the law on murder, voluntary manslaughter, and justifiable homicide in self-defense. He did not instruct them on the law of involuntary manslaughter. The jury, after deliberation, returned a verdict finding the accused guilty of 'involuntary manslaughter/ and this verdict was read and published in open court as their verdict. There was no intimation by any member of the jury that the instructions of the judge on the law of the case had been misunderstood, no further instructions -were asked, no member of the jury dissented from the verdict, and nothing occurred tending in any manner to show that the entire jury did not deliberately intend the verdict published in court as their unanimous finding.” The judge refused to receive the verdict which they had attempted to return,
The trial judge in the case at bar charged on the law of murder, voluntary manslaughter, justifiable homicide, and accident. As in the Register case, supra, he did not charge on the law of involuntary manslaughter. It is to be noted, however, that the verdict rendered by the jury in the Register case was: “involuntary manslaughter.” The judge in that case refused to receive this verdict or allow it to be filed, and directed the jury to return to their room for further deliberation, stating to them that the court could not receive the verdict which they had attempted to return, for the reason that the court had not charged them upon the law of involuntary manslaughter. In the case at bar the trial judge did not tell the jury that he could not receive such a verdict, but did tell the jury that he had charged on two offenses, namely, murder and voluntary manslaughter, and then said to the jury: “I will be glad if you will retire to your room and announce to the court if the verdict you rendered here speaks the verdict you intended to find, or if you intended to render a different verdict. You can retire to your room and consider that. In giving you the charge, I did not give you any instructions touching involuntary manslaughter. The questions were, murder or voluntary manslaughter or acquittal.” These instructions, of course, were given before the jury had dispersed or there had been any attempt to enter a judgment on the first verdict. The jury then brought in a verdict finding the defendant guilty of voluntary manslaughter, with the same punishment as contained in the
In the case of Mitchell v. State, 34 Ga. App. 505 (130 S. E. 355), the following language from the case of Nemo v. Commonwealth, 2 Grat. (42 Va.) 558 is quoted approvingly (the jury in that case having rendered an improper verdict as to punishment, and the court having erroneously entered judgment thereon) : “The verdict itself was manifestly illegal; the jury having ascertained a term of imprisonment shorter than that prescribed by law. But in rendering a judgment for a different and longer term, the court departed from the settled practice in criminal prosecutions, and assumed the peculiar province of the jury. . . The proper course would have been to have sent the jury back with proper instructions, to reconsider their verdict. . . It would be dangerous in criminal cases to authorize that to be done in one mode which the law requires to be done in another. . .
It is true that the judge also told the jury that he had not charged them on the law of involuntary manslaughter, but there is no complaint in the record before us that it was error to fail to give such instructions, nor is it complained in the record that the recharge given by the court was an expression or intimation of an opinion as to what their verdict should be. The judge did instruct the jury that he had charged only the law on murder and voluntary manslaughter; and this was correct. These were the issues to be tried by the jury as he saw them. We know that there is a diversity of opinion in our courts with reference to the right of a jury to in effect disregard the instructions of the trial judge and return a verdict in a criminal case for an offense not covered by the charge of the court. It was said in the Register case, supra, ““To refuse to receive the verdict in a criminal case on the ground that the verdict is for a grade of offense charged in the indictment but not covered by the instructions of the court, and without evidence to
Judgment affirmed.