4 Ga. App. 390 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1908
The defendant, who bears the unique alias, of “Bee Hive,” was indicted along with two other negroes, Lockett Walker and Red Henderson, for a robbery alleged to have been committed upon Lewis Clark. This defendant was severally tried and convicted; and his case is now in this court upon exceptions to the overruling of a motion for a new trial, based chiefly on the ground of newly discovered testimony. The testimony of the State established that the three defendants, together with two other unidentified negroes, “held up” the prosecutor and robbed him shortly before midnight of the Saturday immediately preceding last Christmas. The showing as to the newly discovered testimony begins with an affidavit by the defendant and his counsel, stating that they did not know of the new testimony “before the trial,” and that by the exercise of ordinary diligence they could not have discovered it. It may be noted that this affidavit does not show that the testimony did not become known to them pending the trial and at a time when it could have been made available; also that the affidavit states the mere conclusion that client and counsel used diligence to discover the testimony, without giving any of the particulars upon which the conclusion is based. The next affidavit presented is that of the joint defendant Lockett Walker, who testified on the trial that he never saw the defendant Bee Hive at all on the night of the robbery, and that he saw the prosecutor only for a moment early that evening when he waited on him as a customer in a barroom in which he was working. In this affidavit he swears, that he saw “Lewis Clark [the prosecutor], Red Henderson, and Bud Williams, gambling in a room of Bud Williams on Sunday morning, December 22, 1907; that Lewis Clark gambled away some of his money in the game.” Next an affidavit from Ella Carter is submitted. She says, that she saw Lewis Clark
Judgment affirmed.