117 Ga. 247 | Ga. | 1903
The evidence and the controlling question in these two cases being the same, they were argued together in this court.
Both defendants requested the court to charge that if “ the defendant made representations that he believed to be true, and were afterwards proved untrue, you could not convict the defendant unless it appears beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant knew his-representations to be untrue.” This was not given, and in a note the judge states that the necessity for knowledge of the representations being untrue was given in the general charge. There are-many decisions of this court which hold that a failure to give a. request is cured by covering the same point in the general charge. But where the error is sought to be cured in this way, it must appear that there was nothing elsewhere in the general charge which detracted from that portion which is relied on as a substitute for the special request. In this case we find that the jury were incidentally instructed that the defendant must have known that the representations were false; but at the same time the judge,, in making a synopsis of all the facts necessary for the State to-establish, omitted. therefrom any statement that the defendant must have known that the representations were untrue, and concluded by saying, “ if you find these facts, it would be your duty to convict.” I We think that the failure to charge as requested was-not cured by a general charge wherein, at one time, the jury was instructed that knowledge of the falseness of the representations was necessary, and, at another, instructed that it was their “ duty to convict” if certain facts were proved, omitting therefrom the requirement on the part of the prosecution to prove that Crawford knew that his statement was untrue. “ A specific charge which is legal and adjusted to a distinct matter in issue, . . and which •may materially aid the jury, should be given as requested, although in principle and in more general, and abstract terms it may be covered by other instructions given by the court. ” Metropolitan R. Co. v. Johnson, 90 Ga. 501 (5); Thompson v. Thompson, 70 Ga. 692 (2); East Tenn. R. Co. v. Smith, 91 Ga. 176; Belt v. State, 103 Ga. 12 (4); Snowden v. Waterman, 105 Ga. 385 (5); Roberts v. State, 114 Ga. 450.