Gossett was convicted of a violation of §343 of the Penal Code, which reads as follows: “Any person who shall intentionally point or aim a gun or pistol, whether loaded or unloaded, at another, not in a sham battle by the military, and not in self-defense, or in defense of habitation, property or person, or other instances standing upon like footing of reason and justice, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.” The defendant’s motion for a new trial was overruled, and he brings error. Besides the general grounds, his motion contains numerous assignments of error. The-evidence was in sharp conflict on the question of the defendant’s guilt, the prosecutrix and one witness swearing that at the time alleged in the accusation the defendant pointed and aimed a pistol at the prosecutrix, and three other witnesses, who were present on the occasion referred to, testifying that the defendant did not point and aim a pistol at the prosecutrix. If there was a preponderance on either side, it was in favor of the defendant. But the jury, in the exercise of their exclusive right, discredited the defendant’s witnesses, as well as his statement, and accepted the testimony of the prosecutrix and the other witness as the truth.
There are several special assignments of error which relate only to one subject-matter and can be considered together. In opening
In the case of Dowda v. State, 74 Ga. 12, the Supreme Court commended the practice of an opening statement by the solicitor-' general of what he expected to prove in behalf of the State, on the ground that it gave to the accused information of the facts that he was expected to meet. This commendation, however, could properly apply only to a statement of facts which the solicitor-general really expected to prove, and which, under the rules of evidence, he would be allowed to prove. It certainly could not apply to allegations which could not be supported by evidence, or which, even though true, could not, under the riiles of law, be admitted
Of course, what we have said as to the statement of the solicitor applies also to the testimony which he introduced in proof of his statement. If the statement was improper for the reasons stated, the testimony in support of it was for the same reasons inadmissible. The solicitor should have been stopped by the court, and the jury should have been cautioned not to consider the statement of these irrelevant matters; and the testimony relating to these matters should have been excluded. ■ Ordinarily the fact that testimony which was admitted was merely irrelevant would not be sufficient ground for new trial; but when such testimony is not only irrelevant but tends to prejudice the jury against the defendant in a ease where his guilt of the offense for which he is on trial is not clearly made out by competent evidence, the defendant has not had that fair trial to which he is entitled under the law, and which justice demands. In this case we think the defendant should be tried alone for the offense with which he is charged, and the issue of his guilt or innocence of this offense should be determined alone by relevant testimony. To charge a man who is on trial for the offense of intentionally pointing a pistol at another with being immoral, brutal, cruel, and drunk, places upon him a heavy and unfair burden; and if his guilt of the offense for which he is being tried is in doubt, the jury would probably be inclined to solve the doubt against him.
The other special assignments of error are without merit.
Judgment reversed.