144 Ga. 166 | Ga. | 1915
Will Jackson and Marcus Gibbs were jointly indicted for the murder of D. Manigo. It is charged in the indictment that the accused feloniously killed the decedent by cutting him with a knife. Gibbs was put upon trial, and a verdict of guilty was returned. A motion for a new trial was overruled, and he excepted. The motion complains of a ruling of the court which permitted a witness for the State to testify, over objections duly made: “Willie [Jackson] said, ‘ There is no use of any questions. I can tell you who was it. It was my nephew, Marcus Gibbs.”’ We think the objection that this testimony was hearsay and incompetent was good and valid, and that its admission was error. From other testimony in the case we gather that the decedent, at the time the fatal wounds were inflicted upon him by cutting and stabbing, was in his
What we have said above is applicable to the other ground of the motion complaining of the admission of testimony.
Judgment reversed.