91 Ga. 153 | Ga. | 1893
Hill was convicted of the murder of Perkins, with a recommendation to life imprisonment. Exception was taken to the overruling of a motion for a new trial.
The motion complains that the court refused to continue the case on.defendant’s showing, that Gilbert Cole had been subpoenaed and was not absent by defendant’s procurement or consent, that the showing was made in good faith and not for delay, that defendant expected to have the witness at the next term and to prove by him that one Harper testified at the coroner’s inquest .altogether differently from what he had sworn before the grand jury and from what his testimony on the trial was, and that defendant had other witnesses by whom he could prove the same facts. The court ordered attachments to issue for the defaulting witnesses. On the
One ground for new trial was that Roop, one of the jurors who tried the case, was not competent, and that this was unknown to defendant and his counsel until after the verdict was rendered. In support of this ground were offered the affidavits of two Howards, one Buthrim and one Phillips. For counter-showing the State produced, among others, affidavits by nine of the jurors who tried the case. Thereupon the defendant offered affidavits by three of the jury as a reply to this counter-showing. The court allowed the affidavits of these three to be read, but held , that they could not be considered for the purpose of impeaching the verdict. Exception was taken to this ruling, the movant contending that when the State brought evidence to the jury to resist the motion, other evidence from the same source should be heard to disprove that offered by the State.
The affidavits of the Howards, Buthrim and Phillips were, in brief, that the juror Roop said, after the killing and before the trial, that the defendant was not fit to live, and to get justice would get his neck broken, that he ought to be hung, and that if he (Roop) was on the jury he would hang defendant. There were a number of affidavits that the Howards, Buthrim and Phillips were truthful and worthy of belief. The affidavits on