81 Ga. App. 638 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1950
1. In special ground 2 of the amended motion for a new trial the defendant contends that the court erroneously admitted in evidence the following testimony of the witness Dow Padgett: “I hardly believe I would know Mr. Harden, the defendant in this case. I have seen him one time in my life before, and that was about three weeks ago. I seen him around the place there. As to what section of the county it was, it was down there at what we call the Oscar Weitman place. As to what he was doing, he was feeding a hog. He made a statement to me about the hog. He said C. N. Boone asked him to shut up his hogs. I saw him there about to get the hog. He made a statement as to whose hog it was. I told him that wasn’t Mr. Boone’s hog, it was my boy’s hog and he said he, well he wouldn’t bother it. That was about two or three weeks ago. He did not do anything to bother him except to feed him, that is all. He was shelling some corn to the hog. He told me he thought it was Mr. Boone’s hog and I told him it was my son’s hog and he said he wouldn’t bother it. As to whether he had done anything other than shell a little corn out to her, there was a little more than that now, there was a pig, she had three pigs and there was one just off a little piece and he seemed to be interested in the other pig and he said there was four of the pigs. He said he thought they were Mr. Boone’s hogs, Lum Boone’s hogs, Mr. Boone has a lot of hogs down there. Mr. Harden lives down there and as to whether or not he was feeding his neighbor, Mr. Boone’s hog, that’s whafc he thought he was doing. And I told him he was mistaken and I told him it was my son’s hog; he didn’t take the hog that I know of. As to what he told me about getting the hog from Mr. Boone, I told about all he said about the hog, he stated that he thought it was Mr. Boone’s hog and he was going to shut him, up and let him know about it. He said he thought that was his neighbor Boone’s hog and he was going to shut him up and let him know about it.” The objection of the defendant to the admission of this evidence was: “We object to the testimony because he is not charged with stealing hogs, and in a conversation with Mr. Padgett some three or four weeks prior to the
2. In special ground 3 the defendant contends that the court charged the jury incorrectly in giving the following portion of the charge: “Gentlemen of the jury, along with other contentions in this case, the State contends that the defendant committed other similar offenses, that is offenses similar to the one covered by this indictment, along about the same time of the alleged commission of the offense named in the indictment. Now, you gentlemen will recall that when that evidence was admitted I instructed you that I would later give you a proper limitation on that evidence and I will now do so, and that evidence was admitted, gentlemen of the jury, subject to that limitation. The defendant is on trial for the particular offense charged against him in the bill of indictment and not on account of any other alleged offense or offenses. Where, however, knowledge, motive, intent, good or bad faith, and other matters dependent upon a person’s state of mind or conduct, scheme or plan is involved as a material element in a particular criminal offense for which a defendant is on trial, evidence of the defendant’s conduct, with reference to a similar transaction about the same time is admissible for the consideration of the jury, insofar only as they may intend [tend?] to illustrate the state of the defendant’s mind on the subject involved or to show conduct, scheme or plan. Any evidence with reference to other alleged transactions of the defendant must be limited by the jury to the consideration of the state of the defendant’s mind with reference to the subject involved in this case, and for no other purpose. Now, gentlemen of the jury, I charge you in that connection that that evidence was not admitted as evidence to place the character of the defendant in issue on this trial. It was admitted solely for the purpose just stated to you, gentlemen of the jury, if you find that there was no evidence admitted in this case tending to show any other offenses, or that
3. Special ground 1 is but an amplification of, and will be considered here in connection with, the general grounds of the motion for a new trial. Under the general grounds the defendant contends that there is no corroborating evidence or circumstances of the testimony of the codefendant Algerine Waters which either directly or indirectly connects the defendant with the crime charged in the indictment. The crime is alleged in the indictment to have occurred October 8, 1949. Algerine Waters testified: “I saw Mr. Harden on Saturday morning about the 8th of October, this year. I saw him the first time that day over at my father-in-law’s home. My father-in-law lives about a mile from where Remer Waters lives. Mr. Ansel Harden lived on what we call the Black Ankle section on the river down in that section. He went to my house early the next morning; approximately seven or eight o’clock. He told me my daddy said he wanted me to help him drive some cows out. He told
From the other evidence in the case, it appears that the cows, which were alleged in the indictment to have been stolen, were found in the possession of Remer Waters. Algerine Waters, son of Remer Waters and codefendant of Remer Waters and Harden, testified as to the time, place and circumstances under which the cows were taken from the open range and penned at his father’s house. He testified that Harden had brought, him a message from his father to come to a designated point in the county to help drive the cows; that Harden had instructed him to drive the cows to his father’s house by a longer and more circuitous route than he would have followed except for Harden’s instructions. The defendant in his statement to the jury stated that he had been with the elder Waters when he drove the cows up out of the open range; that he had recognized only one of the cows as that of Waters; that he had taken the message to the younger Waters to come and assist his father in driving the cows home, but that he had in no way participated in the driving of the cows nor did he give any instructions as to the route to be followed in driving the cows. K. D. Smith, an investigator for the State, testified that Harden had told him that on the day the cows were penned (Saturday) he had got drunk and did not realize until the next morning that he had some cattle and that did not belong to him and that he should have gone and made Remer Waters turn them out, but he did not. The evidence shows that the cattle the defendant referred to in his statement to the investigator Smith were those that the defendant Remer Waters had seen on the open range on
Judgment affirmed.