7 Ga. App. 366 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1910
The defendant was indicted for the offense of assault with intent to murder, and upon his trial was found guilty of stabbing. A motion for new trial, based wholly upon the general grounds, was overruled; and exception was taken.
1. The charge of the learned trial judge is unexceptionable. It is a remarkably full and lucid exposition of every principle of law involved in the ease. Therefore, it can not be said that the verdict is contrary to law because, superinduced by any error of the judge in his instructions.' It appears from the record that there was some objection to a portion of the testimony which the court permitted to be submitted, but those objections, even if well taken, are not properly presented for our consideration. But though the trial was free from any error which could have affected the jury, we think that the judge erred in overruling the motion for new trial; because there is absolutely no evidence in the record which would authorize the conviction of the defendant of assault with intent to murder, stabbing, or even of a mere assault. We fully recognize the rule which gives the jury the exclusive right to determine the 'credibility of the witnesses, and have no desire whatever to interfere with their exclusive prerogative in selecting even a single fact or circumstance in proof before them as the basis for their finding, even though in doing so they may disregard, as not equally credible, or as of less weight, the positive testimony of a number of witnesses to the contrary. We have several times decided that in the case of a mere conflict in the testimony, the verdict should stand if there is any evidence to support the finding. In such a case the jury’s prerogative of selection is paramount and exclusive. But a verdict rendered without any evidence to support it is for that reason contrary to law. The action of the jury in such a case is not a selection, but the creation of a hypothesis not supported by the proved facts. ■ To support the verdict it is proper to indulge the presumption that every fact and circumstance tending to show the guilt of this defendant was preferred by the jury, rather than that any fact or circumstance tending to mitigate his offense or justify him was believed by them. In other words, if there was anything in the record of the evidence which would authorize the verdict rendered, this court could not interfere.-
Although Wagnon had not at that time been summoned' as a member of the posse, still if we treat him as an officer, and hold that Wright and Wagnon might have arrested the defendant on the railroad for the offense of using profane language in the presence of a female, in that he told the negro woman to whom he was talking that he was “not going a damned step,” the uncontradicted evidence shows that they were not seeking to arrest the defendant for that transaction. According to the testimony of the chief marshal, Mr. Chivers, the defendant was arrested on the complaint of George Bell. He does not dispute that he told Byland Taylor a few minutes before the arrest that George Bell wanted him to arrest the defendant. He was looking for the defendant at the time, and it was almost immediately before he found him and before the difficulty ensued. Mr. Chivers says, “I went to supper, and when I came back from supper a negro came to me, and he told me Terrell Dorsey had raised a fuss with him and he wanted a case made against him, and I went to work to get Mr. Wagnon and Mr. Wright to assist me, and we found Terrell Dorsey in Mr. McWhorter’s store, and Mr. Wright and myself walked in together, and I went up to Terrell and told him I would have to put him under arrest. He asked me, for'what? I told him it didn’t matter about that, that I would tell him what the trouble was later on. And I got hold of his right arm, and I said to Mr. Wright to get hold of his other arm. And when I said that, he shoved me through a glass show-case, and I struck him with my billie. And about that time Mr. Wagnon was there and had his gun out and I asked him to shoot him. Anyway, we had a right smart scuffle and fighting, and got outside on the sidewalk, arid there was a shot fired outside. When that shot was fired, that negro Terrell Dorsey broke loose from the crowd.” On cross-examination the marshal testified, that the defendant was not doing anything when they went into McWhorter’s store to arrest him, and that he had not seen him do anything himself, and that he went to arrest him because a negro named George Bell had made a case against him for a matter which occurred twenty minutes or half an hour before they went to arrest him. He testified that the negro cut him twice behind the ear after he had hit him over the head with Ms
The testimony is too lengthy to be inserted as a whole in the opinion. There is no dispute, however, that the defendant was standing quietly in Mr. McWhorter’s store, and that when these officers told him it was their purpose to arrest him, he asked the nature of the charge against him. He had the right to this information. A prisoner arrested by virtue of a warrant has the right to be informed as to the contents of the warrant; and certainly the right of one whom it is sought is to arrest without a warrant, to be informed of the nature of the charge against him, is not less than that of one whose arrest is demanded by the utmost fox’
2. The instructions of the trial judge upon the right of one-whom it is sought to arrest illegally were full and correct, and the-verdict is contrary to law, in that it is contrary to the charge of. the court. • "We can only surmise that the learned judge overruled the motion for new trial because he was of the opinion that the defendant was shown to have violated some ordinance of the town of Buckhead, or because there was testimony that the defendant, was guilty of violating the statute which forbids intoxication iu public streets and highways and other public places. The evidence-fails to support this view. As the court very properly instructed the jury, it had to be shown that the defendant had been guilty of some offense which authorized his arrest at the time of the difficulty-in question. The State’s evidence failed to show that the defendant’s intoxication was demonstrated in the presence of the officers, by any of those acts (mentioned in the statute) which are sufficient, to raise the inference that the law in question has been violated, at the time that the officers went to McWhorter’s store to make the-arrest in question. In order to make the offense it must have appeared that the defendant was doing some act which indicated that his intoxication was offensive, and therefore contrary to public-decency. One may be intoxicated without violating the statute, provided he is guilty of no act which violates public decency. One-
There was no evidence that there is any ordinance of the town •of Buckhead forbidding disorderly conduct or classifying the acts which constitute disorderly conduct; and as no ordinance was introduced, the State failed to prove that the acts testified to have been •done by the defendant were disorderly conduct. Municipal ordinances and their terms and scope are not a matter for judicial •cognizance. Where a right of any kind is claimed by virtue of a municipal ordinance, and more especially where it is sought to impose a penalty, the fact that such an ordinance was passed must be proved. In the absence of evidence that a specified act has been forbidden by a municipality, no presumption can be indulged that such act is illegal. Judgment reversed.