9 Ga. App. 236 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1911
Roy Hightower was tried for murder and convicted of voluntary manslaughter.
But even if the trial had been postponed until the next day, Mr. Walker, the attorney, stated that he would not then be expected to conduct the trial, or be in a physical condition to undertake the conduct of the ease. He was present in court, and in support of the motion to postpone he stated, in substance, that although the accused and his family relied upon him to give direction to the case, the actual trial of the case was entrusted to Messrs. Wilcox and Whitaker, both as to the argument of the case and the examination of the witnesses; that his part would be to advise these attor-'
The ease did not involve any intricate questions of law or fact. The witnesses to the difficulty which resulted in the homicide were all present, and were all examined, either for the State or for the accused; and an examination of the entire record fails to disclose any hint or suggestion that the accused was deprived of any right, either in the testimony of an absent witness, or in the testimony of the witnesses sworn, or in the management of the case from start to finish, because of the indisposition of Mr. Walker. Mr. Walker had full opportunity from the time of his employment, which was immediately after the homicide, to prepare the evidence and to confer with the associate counsel, and there is no suggestion that this preparation was not made or this conference not had. After a careful examination of all the facts, we have come to the conclusion that, while the judge might very properly have postponed the ease until the next day, his failure to do so was not an abuse of his discretion, and did not result in injury to any right of the accused.
We think the court did not err in admitting the statement in evidence. It appears that the accused was near enough to the deceased, who was talking in an ordinary conversational tone, to have heard the statement when made, and it was for the jury to decide whether in fact he had heard it. Besides, it was so near to the actual occurrence of the difficulty as to preclude the suspicion of forethought and to make the statement a part of the res gestae. “Sayings of one party to a rencounter, just before its occurrence, within hearing of the other, may be admitted as a part of the res gestae.” Williams v. State, 59 Ga. 401.
As correctly stated by Judge McCay, in Hall v. State, 48 Ga. 608, “No precise point of time can be fixed a priori where the res geste ends. Each case turns on its own circumstances. . . Is the proof offered of a matter fairly a part of the same transaction? Is it an event happening naturally and spontaneously as a part of the occurrence under investigation? If so, the law permits it to be proven as párt of it, since the whole scene, as it has transpired, ought to appear to the tribunal called upon to determine its character. Matters occurring before or after — that is, before the transaction begun or after it ended — are not part of it. To make them such they must be so nearly connected with the occurrence as to be without the suspicion of afterthought or forethought. They must be within the shadow, as it were, of the transaction itself. Is that so in this case? The quarrel was over, some minutes had elapsed, the parties had separated. The prisoner had been arrested.” Penal Code (1910), § 1024.
Here the transaction had ended. The accused liad shot the deceased. The deceased was dead, and the accused was under arrest, and was being taken by the arresting officer to prison. It does not appear how many minutes had elapsed between the killing and the narration; but it is clear that it was a narration of a transaction which had fully ended, and this statement of the accused, made to the arresting officer, could not in any sense be deemed a natural or spontaneous utterance, and is certainly not free from suspicion of afterthought. In our opinion, it was simply a self-serving declaration, made by the accused to the arresting officer, and the court very properly excluded' it from evidence. It could not have any force as a spontaneous utterance of a participant in the difficulty. It could only have such force and effect as could be given to it by its reasonableness, or by the manner of narration, or his character; and this force and effect the jury had an opportunity to give it when it was incorporated by the accused in his statement on the trial.
The charge as a whole was fair, full, and correct, presenting clearly to the jury every issue made by the evidence.