141 Ga. 98 | Ga. | 1913
Bart Cantrell, Jim Cantrell, and Sylvia Hawkins were jointly indicted, charged with the murder of Arthur Hawkins, Bart Cántrell as principal and the other two as accessories before the fact. Bart pleaded guilty, 'and such plea was entered on the indictment. Subsequently and on the same day Jim was separately placed on trial, and was found guilty as charged. He moved for a new trial, which being refused, he excepted.
The headnotes 1 to 7 inclusive require no elaboration.
Complaint was made in the motion'for new trial that “The court erred in not instructing the jury that the bill of indictment, upon which the plea of guilty was entered by Bart Cantrell, before judgment of the court was pronounced, was not a conviction;” and also erred in giving the following charge: “The defendant Jim Cantrell could not be placed upon trial before the conviction of the principal, Bart Cantrell. It is contended on the part of the State that the principal as alleged in the bill of indictment, Bart Cantrell, has pleaded guilty to the offense of murder as charged in the bill of indictment. If that is true, the record will be out before you; and if the record shows that he has pleaded guilty to that offense,, then ,1 charge you that you may consider the charge against the defendant on trial of being an accessory before the fact.” This instruction was alleged to be erroneous on the ground that it assumed a plea of guilty, without sentence being pronounced, to be a conviction. “An accessory is one who is not the chief actor in the offense, nor present at its performance, but is some way concerned therein, either before or after the act committed.” Penal Codej § 44. “An accessory before the fact is one who, being absent at the time of the crime committed, doth yet procure, counsel, or command another to commit a crime.” Penal Code, § 45. “An accessory before the fact, except where it is otherwise provided, shall receive the same punishment that is prescribed for the principal in the first degree.” Ib. § 46. Thus the crime of being an accessory before the fact involves: (1) the commission of the offense by the principal, and (2) that the accused, being absent at the time of the commission of the crime, procured, counseled, or commanded the principal to commit it. These are the two elements of the crime. When these elements are established in the manner provided by law, the guilt of the accessory is shown. The question of whether an accessory can be tried and convicted before the con
It will thus be seen that it is not an inflexible rule that an accessory can not be convicted until after judgment and sentence has been pronounced upon his principal. The practice of trying the accessory after a verdict of guilty, or the entering of a plea of guilty without the rendition of a judgment or sentence thereon, has been recognized in this State. A verdict of guilty is apparently treated as a sufficient conviction of the principal, though no sentence has been pronounced thereon. In Thornton v. State, 25 Ga. 301, it was held that one “convicted of murder but not sentenced is a competent witness for the State on the trial of another ,. . indicted as accessory before the fact in the murder.” It is true, in that case the objection specifically raised was that the principal was incompetent to testify; and it was held that he was not rendered incompetent at common law until after judgment, even if there was such disqualification at all under our law; but the accused in that case was found guilty of murder and sentenced to death, and the judgment was affirmed. If it had been considered that the
The truth is that the keeping up of the distinction between principals in the first and second degree and principals and accessories before the fact, where they are all punished alike, is an archaic technicality and, as Mr. Bishop declares "a crystalized blunder.” The introduction, on the trial of one person, of the conviction of another, and giving it weight as proof of the fact of guilt of the person so convicted, is somewhat an anomaly, because the trial of the principal, if separately conducted, is as to the other defendant res inter alios acta. But the ruling has become permanently established by the authorities, that, upon the trial of one indicted as an accessory, the conviction of the principal is admissible, not only to show the fact of conviction, but also as prima facie evidence of the guilt of the person so convicted. It is not, however, conclusive, and evidence may be introduced by either party, in addition thereto, as proving or disproving the guilt of the alleged
■ It "may be argued that the principal could withdraw his plea of guilty and thus in effect grant himself a new trial after the verdict against the accessory had been rendered. But the statute provides that if the principal can not be taken the accessory may be tried. So that the principal, by his voluntary act, may cause the accessory to be subjected to trial before he himself is ever tried. Moreover, if a verdict of guilty should be rendered against the principal, he might move for a new trial and carry his case by writ of error to a reviewing'court, or he might sometime move for a new trial on extraordinary grounds, or move in arrest of judgment. There would always be possibility that the principal might obtain another trial; and yet it would hardly be contended that the person charged with being an accessory could postpone indefinitely his own trial in order to await the time when the principal should cease his efforts to set aside his conviction. If the principal should be acquitted after the trial of the accessory, this might furnish ground for a motion for a new trial, somewhat similar to the ground of newly discovered evidence. The word "conviction” is sometimes used to mean a verdict of guilty, or a plea of guilty, and sometimes is used to include also the judgment. The construction is not always uniform, but is dependent upon a construction of the particular law or statute under consideration. Section 49 of the Penal Code and other cognate sections, as well as decisions of this court, seem to recognize that under this statute the expression "conviction” does not necessarily include a sentence. See also 2 Words & Phrases, 1584.
The motion for a new trial contains the following ground:
Without setting forth the evidence in the récord, it is sufficient to say that we have most carefully considered it, and have no hesitancy in adjudging that it is sufficient to authorize the verdict.
The court did not err in refusing a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.