109 Ga. 526 | Ga. | 1900
J. T. Haines was by the grand jury of Muscogee county indicted for the offense of perjury, and at the May term, 1899, of that court, was placed upon trial under this indictment, and convicted. It appears, both from the allegations in the indictment and the evidence in the record, that on the ‘2d day of January, 1899, a commitment trial was had before .a justice’s court in Muscogee county, upon a State warrant which charged one Jarvis with the seduction of Lizzie Russell; and on that trial in the magistrate’s court J. T. Haines, plaintiff in error in this case, was introduced as a witness in behalf of the accused, Jarvis, and testified, in substance, before the magistrate, after being duly sworn, that he had carnal knowledge of Lizzie Russell at Wildwood Park in Columbus on Christmas night, 1896. The magistrate made a memorandum of Haines’s testimony during the trial, and, in a short while after the trial terminated, reduced his testimony to writing. Upon the trial in the superior court of the perjury case against Haines, the iState introduced the magistrate, J. E. Crenshaw, who testified in reference to the commitment trial, identified the Written statement he had made of Haines’s testimony, and swore that it was correct. The State then offered in evidence the written statement of Haines’s testimony, which was admitted over the •objection of counsel for the accused. After making proof of the testimony delivered by the accused in the magistrate’s court as ■charged in the indictment, the State then introduced Lizzie Russell, who, in positive terms, denied the truth of this evidence, ■denied seeing him at all at the time and place he stated,- and further denied ever having been illicitly intimate with him. ¡She admitted having been at Wildwood Park on Christmas day
Another ground in the motion for a new trial complains that the court erred in admitting, over objection of defendant, the testimony of J. E. Crenshaw, the same being objected to upon the ground that neither the indictment nor the certified paper showed that a legal oath had been administered to John T. Haines at the time he testified in the committal court. There was no demurrer offered to the indictment for want of proper allegations as to the oath. Even if there had been, we see no defect in the indictment in this particular; for it charges that John Thomas Haines appeared at the commitment trial as a witness in behalf of the defendant in a case which the indictment specified, “ and then and there was in due manner sworn to speak the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, as such witness aforesaid.” The certified statement of Haines’s evidence before the committing court was not offered to show that the oath was properly administered, but the testimony of Crenshaw himself was offered to this effect, and shows that, in point of fact, there was a legal oath administered before the testimony of Haines was delivered. Even if the testimony of Haines had not been taken down at all, it would not have affected the legality of the oath which he actually took.
Judgment affirmed.