86 Ga. 257 | Ga. | 1890
The plaintiff in error was indicted and found guilty of larceny, in that he was charged with taking and carrying away from a vessel belonging to the Ocean Steamship.Company, while in the port of Savannah, certain personal property. He moved for a new trial which was overruled by the court, and he excepted.
The first assignment of error in the motion for a new trial is, because the court allowed McDermot to testify as to an alleged confession made by defendant of larcenies committed at various times from the Ocean Steamship Company. It is manifest that in this ground
The second ground 'of the motion is, because Mc-Dermot was allowed to testify as to an alleged confession made by defendant to Ganey in ¡the presence of McDermot. It is not -stated in this ground, however, that objection to this evidence was made in the court below.
It is alleged in the bill of exceptions that the court committed error in allowing McDermot, a witness for the State, to testify as to an alleged confession made by the defendant of larcenies of goods committed at various times from the Ocean Steamship Company, admitting said confession in evidence over objection of defendant’s counsel, the objection being that general confessions of general offences , are not admissible in evidence and should not be allowed to prove, or tend to prove, a special offence. The bill of exceptions does not clearly show, however, that the grounds of the objection were urged at.the time and before the court admitted this evidence ; nor is the same shown in the motion for a new trial. But admitting that the objections were properly made and urged at the time and before the admission of this evidence; we see no error in admitting the same, because it is shown by the record that the particular larceny-for which the accused was indicted consisted of the taking of certain goods from the steamship “ .City of Augusta,” and that goods of the character found in defendant’s possession were upon this vessel at the time the larceny is alleged to have been committed. And it is further shown by the evidence that- the accused was a coal-heaver upon the vessel at that time; that goods of the kind stolen were on the vessel at the time; that subsequently a box of such goods transported upon this steamship was received by Mohr Bros., the consignees, and upon being opened, it
It is furthermore alleged as error that the court allowed the witness McDermot to testify to an alleged confession made by the defendant to one Ganey, in the presence of the witness, over defendant’s objection. ’What the objection urged at the time was, is not shown in the motion for new trial; but it is alleged in the bill of exceptions that the error was, because said confession was induced by promises made by said Ganey to the defendant. The record does not show what these confessions'wrere which the court admitted in evidence— whether they were material or immaterial. It is simply alleged in the bill- of exceptions that it was error because the confessions wei’e induced by promises made by Ganey to the defendant; so we decline to pass upon the question made in this assignment of error, as we cannot determine from the record whether the accused was hurt thereby.
In the eighth ground it is complained that the court erred in charging the jury that if they found that the crime of larceny was committed on the vessel on that day, and the goods taken therefrom were afterwards found in the possession of the prisoner, such facts would “raise the, presumption under the law of the prisoner’s guilt, and it is incumbent on the prisoner, the goods stolen having been found in his possession, to explain that possession to the satisfaction
The ninth ground excepts to a certain charge given by the court. A portion of the charge excepted to is correct law, while part of the same is not sound. This
• We find no error in the other charges of the court excepted to, nor do we think it was error for the judge to refuse to give in charge the requests asked by counsel for the accused, inasmuch as we find, in looking at the entire charge of the court, that the requests of the plaintiff in error were fully covered by the general charge to the jury. Judgment affirmed.