182 Ga. 875 | Ga. | 1936
Lead Opinion
1. The preliminary evidence was sufficient to admit proof of statements of the deceased as dying declarations. Furthermore, the statements were not prejudicial to the movant, since they did not in any way tend to prove his guilt, showing only that the deceased was killed by Marvin Honea, about which there was no issue, and the complicity of the movant being dependent solely on other evidence.
2. Marvin Honea, who had been previously tried and convicted and was under a sentence, was introduced as a witness for the State, and on
3. The general grounds of the motion for a new trial are not insisted on. The court did not err in overruling the motion.
Judgment affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. As it plainly appears from the motion for new trial that the court had not for itself decided, as a matter of the first instance, that the statements of the declarant were so complete in every essential principle required by law as to constitute a dying declaration, it was error to admit the testimony over the objection that the proof did not establish a dying declaration, and to hold that the testimony offered would be admitted up to that time “for the present,” under proper instructions to the jury. If the proof to establish the alleged statements as dying declarations was incomplete, no proper instructions could lawfully have' been given which would not have confused and misled the jury as to what was necessary to constitute a dying declaration, with the probability that a jury, with, their great regard for the solemnity of dying declarations, would have been led to believe that the statements of the declarant represented the truth of the case. In ground 3 of the motion it is alleged that the court erred in failing to rule out the testimony of Dr. Hulsey relating to conversations of the deceased, at the conclusion of the cross-examination of the witness, upon the objection then and there made by counsel for the defendant, as follows: “By Mr. Powell: I renew my objection on the ground that it is not a dying declara
In Mitchell v. State, 71 Ga. 128 (2) it was held: “Dying declarations constitute one of the exceptions to the rule which rejects hearsay evidence. Their admission is founded on the necessity of the case and the reason that, being made in view of impending death and judgment, when the hope of life is extinct and the
In ground 4 it is alleged that the court erred in admitting the testimony of Mrs. David Lord, widow of the deceased, as follows: “After he [deceased] came from the operating room, my brother 'and I were there with him. We asked him about it, and he said he did not have time to raise his hands before he was shot down, and he thought he knew the boy that shot him, 'but he did not know his name.” Counsel for the defendant said: “We object on the same grounds as we objected to the testimony of the doctor, and on the ground it was not a dying declaration.” The court overruled the objection, and said to the jury: “Gentlemen, the court does hot rule this is a dying declaration, but leaves it to the jury under proper instructions to be given later. The testimony is given you under instructions. The court holds that the testimony is admissible for the present, to go to you with proper instructions to you, and it is for you to find whether or not it is a dying declaration.” From this assignment of error it clearly appears that there was no preliminary investigation by the judge, and he had not determined whether a prima facie case had been made; and yet, without having determined that a prima facie case of admissibility as a dying declaration had been made before the jury, he left the determination of the primal question of admissibility entirely to the jury.
Ground 5 alleges that the court erred in refusing to allow counsel for the defendant to ask Marvin Honea, the confessed slayer of the deceased and a witness for the State, on cross-examination, “Are you preparing to meet your God?” The court said: “I will not permit you to ask a question that is improper.” It is alleged that this refusal was tantamount to a denial of the defendant’s right to a thorough and sifting cross-examination of the witness, thereby preventing the defendant from determining the mental condition and attitude of the witness.