15 Ga. App. 365 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1914
This court said in the headnote of the decision in Taylor v. State, 14 Ga. App. 492 (81 S. E. 372): «On the trial of one indicted for the commission of a felony, other than one of those enumerated in section 1062 of the Penal Code, it is the duty of the court, whether' so' requested or not, to inform the jury that
If the judge presiding at the trial of one accused of a felony, where under the law the jury may recommend that he be punished as for a misdemeanor, informs the jury of their right áo to recommend,'and clearly indicates to them in unmistakable language that the recommendation will not be effective unless it meets with his
In the case now under consideration it is contended that the instruction given by the trial judge was not in accordance with the ruling in the Taylor case, supra. The judge after advising the jury of their right to recommend, etc., said: “In the event that recommendation is approved by the court, a misdemeanor punishment would be inflicted, instead of a felony punishment.” While this perhaps was not in strict verbal accord with the rule in the Taylor case, supra, that the judge should inform the jury that “their recommendation would not be binding upon the trial judge, nor effective unless approved and acted upon by him,” it is nevertheless in substantial compliance with that ruling, since we must assume that a jury is composed of men of some intelligence; and to men of sufficient intelligence to qualify as jurors the plain significance of such a charge as that given in the instant case was obvious. The use of the words “instead of a felony punishment” emphasized the futility of the recommendation unless it should be approved by the judge. If any fuller instructions had been desired, a written request therefor should have been made.
Where the testimony which must have been accepted by the jury in order to justify a verdict of guilty is clear, definite, and positive, and sufficient to plainly establish the guilt of the accused, a defect in the charge of the court which could not have affected the result reached by the jury would be immaterial. In this case the jury recommended that the defendant be punished as for a misdemeanor, and from an inspection of the evidence in the record it is clear that the language of the trial judge in the charge complained of did not cause them to resolve any doubts as to the guilt of the accused in favor of the State; for the testimony of the witness upon whose evidence the verdict rests malms a case of guilt so plain and unequivocal that it is manifest that the recommendation was made solely in the exercise by the jury of their discretion in favor of clemency, as authorized by section 1062 of the Penal Code; and this is all that the defendant could have asked for if the charge had in so many words instructed the jury that such a recommendation would be ineffective unless approved by the trial judge. The ruling announced in the second headnote requires no elaboration.
Judgment affiñnecl.