17 Ga. 439 | Ga. | 1855
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
Of course, then, this waiver on the part of .the State, destroyed the materiality of the testimony. Indeed, it rendered it wholly inapplicable to the case. Nor was it forcing a trial, by making admissions which cannot be done in civil suits. But it is like striking out'a count in a writ or an indictment, to which, alone, the absent proof referred.
In view of the incalculable importance of time to the Courts, and the unparalleled exigencies of this busy-worldng age, when the habit of wine-bibbing even is discontinued, not so much from any moral conviction as to its danger or inutility, as from the simple fact, that men cannot afford, as formerly, “ to tarry long at the table !” I repeat, that in view of all this, we may concede, perhaps, that some degree of laches was imputable to the party. We are called _.upon by Counsel to rebuke, indignantly, the idea, that the profession are to become absolute drudges in hunting up papers belonging to the offices, &c. Let such appeals be addressed to those who lounge in castles of indolence. We confess ourselves incapable of appreciating them. Every body must learn to labor. This is the fundamental law of the universe.
-“Nought is sleeping,
From the worm of painful creeping
To the cherub on the throne.”
It is true, that our sturdy ancestors held it beneath the condition of a freeman to appear at the return day of the writ, or to do any other act at the precise time appointed. (3 Black. Com. 278.) But those good old days of ease and indulgence are gone forever. And it is a vain struggle to attempt to retain or revive them. *
Under all 'the circumstances, odious as the crime may be for which Daey has been convicted, and notwithstanding he escaped through a loop in the Statute, without having been tried upon the merits; still, shielded as he is under the immunity of the laws of the land, the judgment against him must be reversed and a new trial awarded.