159 Ga. 775 | Ga. | 1925
Lee Cnrrie was convicted on an indictment charging him with the murder of Burley Phillips. His motion for a new trial was overruled, and he excepted. The case has been before this court on three former occasions: Curry v. State, 150 Ga. 736 (105 S. E. 361); Currie v. State, 153 Ga. 178 (111 S. E. 727); Currie v. State, 156 Ga. 85 (118 S. E. 724).
At the commencement of the last trial the defendant formally admitted in open court that “the defendant, Lee Currie, killed Burley Phillips, and that he killed him in Toombs County, Georgia.” J. W. Kirby, who lived about 3-1/2 miles north of Claxton, testified that about 10 or 11 o’clock on the morning of Friday, February 20th, the defendant, Currie, called at witness’s house and gave him a hat (referring to the hat identified by another witness as the hat of Burley Phillips), on which was some blood, which Currie told witness he had found between Claxton and Pembroke. R. N. Kirby who lived in Bulloch County about 15 miles north of Claxton, testified that about 9 or 10 o’clock Friday morning, while going from his home to Claxton, he met Lee Currie on the road opposite the residence of J. W. Kirby, traveling in a new automobile, ,and there was “ some blood and other stuff . . at different places on the car on the side and in the caralso that Currie had an extra hat which he gave to J. W. Kirby. Currie explained the presence of the blood by saying that he had killed a hog, for which he had been charged $11, and that he had put the hog in the ear and afterwards had thrown it in the river. S. A. Screws testified : The body of Burley Phillips was found on Tuesday morning. Witness saw Lee Currie in an automobile that morning at Durden’s store, close to witness’s shop, before the body was found. Witness noticed some blood on the fender and side of the car, which Currie explained by saying that on Friday morning he had run over and killed a yearling. George Smith testified that Lee Currie, traveling in an automobile, came to witness’s house between 2 and 3 o’clock, which was after the body had been found that morning, and told witness that he (Currie) got the car in Milledgeville, and gave witness a pipe (which was identified by another witness as the pipe of Burley Phillips). W. D. Sutton testified: About sunrise on Friday morning Lee Currie passed witness’s house, traveling
The defendant moved to exclude the above-stated testimony of each of the witnesses named, on the ground that it was irrelevant, illegal, and prejudicial in view of the admission which the defendant had made in open court at the beginning of the trial, as hereinabove indicated. The court overruled each of the motions and allowed the evidence to remain for consideration 'of the jury. These rulings were alleged to be erroneous in certain grounds of the motion for new trial. The court did not err in refusing to rule out the testimony. It was- relevant as tending to show, in connection with other evidence, that the defendant committed the crime, and the mental attitude of the defendant at the, time the crime was committed. It was the right of the State to introduce all competent evidence tending to show the commission of the homicide by the defendant, and the circumstances under which it was committed, in order to enable the jury to pass upon the guilt or innocence of the accused, and for their consideration, in the event of a conviction, in determining whether or not the defendant should be recommended to the mercy of the court, which would avoid capital punishment. It was not the right of the defendant to cause the court to reject evidence as to the circumstances of the killing, by "making a formal admission in open court that he had killed the deceased in the county of the jurisdiction. See 1 Wharton’s Criminal Evidence (10th ed.), 48, § 24C, and cases cited in note 1 on page 49; 16 C. J. 562, § 1089; State v. Jones, 89 Iowa, 183 (56 N. E. 427); People v. Frederick, 106 Cal. 559 (39 Pac. 944). The ruling made does not conflict, as contended, with the ruling in Hendrick v. Daniel, 119 Ga. 358 (2) (46 S. E. 438), holding: “It is not error to exclude evidence as to matters about which there is no dispute.”
The judge refused certain timely written requests to charge the jury relating to the law of voluntary manslaughter, and on the contrary instructed the jury in effect that voluntary manslaughter was not involved in the case. The refusal of such requests, and the charge as given, prohibiting the jury from considering the offense of voluntary manslaughter, are made grounds of the mo
The charge which was given, as referred to in the preceding division, contained the further statement: “Nor do I present to you the law of justifiable homicide; it is not involved or injected into this case under any theory of the testimony.” It is insisted in the motion for new trial that the evidence referred to in the preceding division was sufficient to authorize a verdict of justifiable homicide, and that the court erred in excluding this defense from the consideration of the jury. The assignment of error upon this portion of the charge is not insisted upon in the briefs of the attorneys for the plaintiff in error, and consequently will be treated as abandoned.
Before the judge concluded his charge to the jury, a written request to charge was presented to him by the attorneys for the defendant. The paper consisted of several paragraphs which were separately numbered 1 to 10, inclusive. Some of them had reference to the law as related to insanity, others to the law as related to voluntary manslaughter, and one to the authority of the jury in a capital case, in the event of a conviction, to recommend the prisoner to the mercy of the court. The 6th ground of the motion for new trial sets out a full copy of the requests to charge, and complains of the refusal of the judge to charge as requested. In the 7th, 9th, 10th, and 11th grounds of the motion for new trial complaint was made of the refusal of certain alleged requests to charge, which were identical with certain of the paragraphs of the paper above referred to as set out in the 6th ground of the motion for new trial. As to each of these the judge, in his order approving the ground of the motion for new trial, stated that “no such written request was separately presented to the court to charge. The language therein quoted as having been requested was contained in the general request to charge in language, form, and substance as" set out in the 6th ground.” The paragraphs of the request which related to insanity were as follows: (1) “I charge you that if you find from the evidence the mind of the defendant at the time of the killing was diseased, that his mental faculties had become deficient to such an extent that he had no controlling mental
The court did not give instructions in the exact language as requested, but, after defining murder and charging generally with reference thereto, the following instructions were given:
“Then if the State establishes the things that I told you that go to constitute murder, then the defendant has the right, without specially pleading it or setting up or filing any special defense along that line under this plea of general issue of not guilty, [to] introduce evidence upon the trial of the ease with reference to his mental irresponsibility. Now then, gentlemen, the burden is on the State to make out its prima facie case beyond a reasonable doubt, as I have told you, and it is the law that where it is established the defendant then would be presumptively of sound mind and responsible in law for his acts, and the burden is on the defendant where he asserts by evidence and contends before the court and jury that he ought to be acquitted and discharged because of mental
“ On the other hand, if a man does not know the difference between right and wrong, if he is an idiot, a lunatic, or afflicted with insanity,
By comparison of the request with the charge as given on the
The 10th paragraph of the requests to charge was as follows: “If you find the defendant guilty of murder, the punishment shall be death unless you recommend him to the mercy of the court, or that he be imprisoned for life; either recommendation is left entirely with you; you may consider all the facts which have developed in the case in making up your minds on this feature; you may also consider the alleged insanity or imbecility of the defendant, either independently or in connection with the other evidence in the case; but you are not limited or circumscribed in any respect. The law limits you with no rule for the exercise of your discretion. The matter is left entirely with you.” The judge refused to give to the jury the requested charge, but instructed them as follows: “In this case, gentlemen, the law says that the punishment for murder shall be death unless the jury trying the case within their discretion recommend that the punishment shall be life imprisonment. . . If you find he is guilty and in your discretion you wish to recommend life imprisonment, then the form of your verdict would be, ‘We, the jury, find the defendant guilty, and recommend life imprisonment/ ” After the jury had been out considering the case all night they requested to be brought into court for further charge. A juror stated: “I think there is probably one or two of the jurors who wish to know as to'whether or not, if the defendant is guilty of cold-blood murder, if they have the right to recommend mercy; if they have the right or privilege of recommending mercy.” The court responded: “All I can say to you, gentlemen, is clear and explicit, the charge that I undertook to deliver on yesterday. It will be impossible for the court to answer in exact terms of the question about cold-blooded murder. Murder I have defined to you as the unlawful killing of a human being, by a person of sound memory and discretion, with malice aforethought, either express or implied. And I have defined malice, both express and implied, express malice being the deliberate intention unlawfully to take human life, and implied malice being where there is no considerable provocation for a killing, but where all the facts and
Another ground of the motion for new trial was: “Because the jury was allowed to separate, as shown by the affidavits of A. S. Odom and Mrs. C. 0. Carr allton, which are hereto attached as exhibit A and B, said separation being unknown to the defendant or to his attorneys who attended and handled the trial of the case.” In exhibit A the deponent stated that after all the evidence bad been submitted to the jury and before the verdict had been reached, and while the jury “was .quartered” at a named hotel, two of the jurors left the room in which the jury was quartered and went out at the back door of the hotel into the back yard, where they disappeared from view and remained out for at least thirty minutes before returning to the hotel; that the two jurors were not aceom
At the hearing of the motion for hew trial there were other affidavits in support of the ground just stated, and counter-affidavits offered by the State. Some of the affidavits that were introduced at the hearing referred to a separation of the jury during the night, caused by six of them occupying one bedroom in the hotel, and the other six with the bailiff in charge occupying a different room in the hotel. The separation -thus referred to in the last-mentioned affidavits was not made a ground of the motion for new trial. By a counter-showing there was evidence denying the charge that two of the jurors separated from the jury. This authorized the judge to find that there was no separation by two of the jurors, and consequently that the charge of misconduct by such jurors was not sustained. Belatively to the one juror who was alleged to have separated from the others, that juror, whose name was T. J. Ainsworth, testified: “That said jury was stopping at the Godwin House, and that it was necessary for deponent to go to the toilet, the toilet in the house being in use at the time, and that M. L. Clarke, the bailiff in charge of said jury, asked one Aldin Odom to show deponent' the toilet, and that said Odom walked with deponent a short distance and showed him said toilet, deponent returning
The .evidence ivas sufficient to authorize the verdict, and the judge did not err in refusing a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.