4 Ga. App. 142 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1908
The plaintiff in error was indicted for disturbing divine service, and the indictment was transferred to the city court of Monticello, where he entered a demand for trial upon the minutes. He was not tried at the term at which the demand was made. At the next term he was put upon trial twice. The first trial re^ suited in a mistrial, the second in a conviction. He thereupon asked that the results of that trial — the verdict and judgment— be set aside, and that he be granted another trial. The motion for new trial was granted in vacation, and, at the March term, 1907, the indictment, over the objection of the defendant, was nol prosed. At the September term, 1907, of Jasper superior court, the present
There was no merit in the exceptions attempted to be taken to the striking of the plea of former jeopardy. Disturbing divine worship is not the same offense as disturbing a Sunday school, and the “same-transaction test” can not be applied. It is true, the same act may be alleged in the two charges, and the same act may operate to disturb divine service and to disturb a Sunday school, and the act may be done at the same place, and both offenses belong to the same genus; but acquittal of disturbing a congregation of persons assembled for divine worship is no more a bar to prosecution for the same act which may have disturbed the Sunday school than an-acquittal for carrying a pistol concealed would be a bar to prosecution for having the identical pistol at a public gathering. See Sutton v. Washington, ante, 30 (60 S. E. 811). The most that can be said as to a prosecution for divine worship and one for disturbing a Sunday school, even if the same act is relied upon in both cases, is that the offenses are similar in nature; they are not identical. Their very name implies a difference. We -have said this much upon the motion to discharge upon demand, and upon the plea of former jeopardy, merely to show that the plaintiff in error was not hurt by the failure of the. judge to certify the exceptions pendente lite. The demand exhausted itself and was fully complied with when the State gave the defendant a trial at the second term thereafter. That there was a new trial was on the defendant’s own motion, and the case proceeded de novo. We think that under such circumstances the defendant would have to proceed to have a new demand granted him; but this opinion is obiter, just as the expression that the demand would probably stand over and be operative to secure a trial at the next term, if a new trial had been granted on the previous motion, used by Judge Bleckley in Brown v. State, supra, was likewise obiter. The exact point, as far as we are aware, has never been decided. The nearest approach to it is .the intimation (which was again obiter) in Silvey v. State, 84 Ga. 44 (10 S. E. 591).
(a) The evidence for the State, though largely circumstantial and contradicted by evidence for the defendant, authorized the conviction of the defendant.
(&) The charge of which complaint is made in the 4th ground of the motion (that “the defendant enters this trial with the presumption of innocence in his favor, — this presumption being thrown around the defendant by the law, — and it remains with the defendant throughout the trial, and until the State, by competent evidence, overcomes this presumption and establishes the guilt of the prisoner, beyond a reasonable doubt, the burden of proof being upon the State to establish each of the material allegations of the indictment to a moral and reasonable certainty and beyond a rea^ sonable doubt”) is not inapt, nor is it erroneous as intimating an opinion on the part of the court, or because it is argumentative or tends to support the contention that the State had carried the burden of proof. It is not, for any reason, erroneous.
(c) An instruction similar to that of which complaint is made in the 5th ground of the motion was approved by this court in the recent case of Parker v. State, 3 Ga. App. 340 (59 S. E. 823). While we have frequently held that attempted definitions of reasonable doubt are more apt to confuse a jury than otherwise, still it can not be said that to tell the jury that “the evidence should be such as would control and decide the conduct of reasonable men in the most important affairs of life, and not a mere conjecture, a trivial supposition, a bare possibility of the innocence of the accused,” was erroneous, by reason of shifting the burden of proof from the State to the defendant, or because.it was misleading or calculated to impress the jury that he should satisfy them beyond a reasonable doubt of his innocence. Nor did this charge discredit the evidence and statement of the defendant in the minds of the jury and cause them to look upon the same with suspicion, or intimate judicial disapproval of an acquittal, as insisted by his counsel. See citations in Parker v. State, supra.
(d) The court did not err in not charging the jury upon the subject of positive and negative testimony. The question in this •case was specially one of the identification of the person who fired
Judgment affirmed.