60 Ga. App. 229 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1939
Howard., a deputy sheriff of Eulton County, Georgia, was tried on an indictment containing nine counts, each count charging a separate act of bribery, in that as such officer he received bribes to prevent the proper performance of the duties of his office, each act being specifically alleged. The State abandoned the third count, and the jury returned a verdict of not guilty as to counts 1, 2, and 6, and a verdict of guilty as to counts 4, 5, 7, 8, and 9. All of the acts charged were alleged to have occurred within two years before the return of the indictment, except as to the acts charged in the second count, it being alleged therein that the acts there charged were unknown until March 1, 1938.
Complaint is made in ground 4 of the motion for new trial that the judge erred in his charge therein set forth, it being contended that he failed to limit the acts necessary to prove guilt to a period within two years before the return of the indictment. It may be well to state that the court, after having given in charge the general law in respect to the defendant, took up each separate count of the indictment, and as to all of them, except the second count, charged that the acts proved must have been within two years preceding the return of this indictment into court, before the defendant could be found guilty. On the second count the court charged: “I charge you that would be barred by the statute of limitations, and you could not consider it unless you believed in connection therewith, from the evidence, that the solicitor-general, the prosecuting authority, did not have knowledge of it at the time of its commission or at a time within the two-year period. That is to
In ground 5 error is alleged in that the court, in charging on the weight and credit to be given the testimony of the witnesses, undertook to give the substance of Code, § 38-107, but did not give it verbatim or in its entirety. It will be noted that in this case the State relied, for a conviction on most of the counts, upon the testimony of witnesses who were themselves admitted bribe-givers and violators of the prohibition law, and to whom immunity had been promised. The court expressly charged the jury to take these facts into consideration in weighing the testimony of the witnesses, and then stated that the law made the jury the exclusive judges of the credibility of the witnesses, and that in passing upon their credibility “you may consider the interest or lack of interest of a witness. You may consider his relationship to any of the parties involved in the ease or absence of any such relationship. You may consider any bias or prejudice, if such should exist in the case, the witness’s intelligence or want of intelligence, his means and opportunity for knowing the facts to which he testified, the reasonableness or unreasonableness of the facts to which he testified; and you may consider the personal credibility of the witness in so far as that legitimately appears from the trial before you.” The plaintiff in error insists that this charge fails to cover every item and circumstance as detailed in Code, § 38-107, and that under the decision in Shankle v. Crowder, 174 Ga. 399 (163 S. E. 180), reversible error was committed.
In Eller v. State, 48 Ga. App. 163, 165 (172 S. E. 592), this court said, in a similar complaint where the court attempted to charge this section but failed to charge it in its entirety: “While the ‘preponderance-of-evidence’ rule is always applicable in a civil case, it is inappropriate in a criminal case, where the State is required to prove the guilt of the accused beyond a reasonable doubt. . . It is ordinarily inapt to charge § 5732 [38-107] in a crim
Ground 7 of the motion is in respect to the evidence in support of the eighth count, it being contended that the testimony of the State’s witness in support of this count was too indefinite to fix the time of the commission of the act alleged within two years before the return of the indictment. The testimony of this witness, when read in its entirety, was sufficient to support a finding that some of the acts testified to had occurred within a period of two years before the return of the indictment. Even though it be granted that the testimony of this witness on direct examination was inconsistent with his testimony on cross-examination, he continued to swear positively that the last bribe given was “in the fall of 1936.” He was not such a party to the case as to' hold that his testimony was not without probative value. See Sherman v. Stephens, 30 Ga. App. 509 (4) (118 S. E. 567); Reaves v. Columbus Electric Co., 32 Ga. App. 140 (122 S. E. 824).
Grounds 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 16, 17, 20, 21, and 22 of the motion for new trial, being exceptions to rulings on evidence, requests
Ground 13 of the motion is in respect to a request to charge on the subject of immunity, and the effect of the repeal of the prohibition law. The language used in the request was not a correct statement of the law; nor are we able to see, in the light of the charge as a whole, that it was harmful error to refuse such request.
We do not think that the exception taken in ground 15 is well taken. The fact that the solicitor-general, on objection being made to a question propounded by him, states what he expects to prove by the witness is no ground for declaring a mistrial, although the court sustains the objection made, where it does not also appear that such statement, made in the presence of the jury, was prejudicial, which does not here appear. To hold otherwise would be to subject a case to have a mistrial declared whenever evidence was unsuccessfully sought to be introduced. Moreover, we think the statement by the solicitor-general as to what he expected to prove in the present case was entirely proper, and was not subject to the objection offered. The solicitor-general had asked the witness for the defendant what was the value of the house the defendant lived in. On objection on the ground of irrelevancy and immateriality, the solicitor-general said, “I am showing how he made $155 a month and was buying automobiles and living in a fine house on the $155 a month, and paying alimony to one wife and keeping up another.” The extravagance of the defendant, the money he spent compared with the money he earned or the income he had, were circumstances which might illustrate motive in accepting a bribe. See Camp v. State, 31 Ga. App. 737 (7) (122 S. E. 249), and cit.; Williams v. State, 177 Ga. 391 (2) (170 S. E. 281).
The alleged newly discovered evidence was merely cumulative and impeaching in its character, and was not such as would be likely to cause a different result at another trial.
The request to charge as set out in ground 19 of the motion was fully covered in the charge as given, and it was not error to refuse the same. The charge of the court limiting the evidence as to other crimes to the specific purpose for which it was admissible was an unusually clear statement of the law in respect to this principle, and in no other part of the charge was this principle limited or detracted from.
The defendant filed what he called a plea in abatement to the indictment, containing thirty or forty pages of reading matter and exhibits. In substance, the plea, or motion to quash, alleged that
It was further alleged that the assistant solicitor-general in charge of the investigation said', in an interview which was published, that “immunity would be deserved and recommended to any officer or other violator who helps clean up the situation, which has become deplorable, and those who fail to testify are going to be prosecuted vigorously.” It was also alleged that the indictment against this defendant was not returned on evidence alone which was given before the grand jury returning the bill, but on reports of testimony delivered to the preceding grand jury. A traverse was filed to this particular allegation, and on a trial thereof the traverse was sustained. The plaintiff in error contends that the statement of the Mareh-April grand jury, which was in general terms as to the character of the investigation it was making, and that it was turning over the accumulated evidence to the succeeding grand jury, was a betrayal of its oath of secrecy. It is further contended that the solicitor-general and the grand jury had no right to promise immunity to witnesses, and that these acts constituted a denial of the due-process clause to this defendant and prevented a fair and impartial trial of his case. The court sustained a demurrer to all the paragraphs of the plea, except those to which a traverse was filed; and as to them the traverse was sustained.
As was said in Commissioners v. Mead, 12 Gray (Mass.) 167 (71 Am. D. 741), "The reasons on which the sanction of secrecy which the common law gives to proceedings before grand juries is founded are said in the books to be threefold. One is that the utmost freedom of disclosure of alleged crimes and offenses by prosecutors may be secured. A second is that perjury and subornation of perjury may be prevented by withholding the knowledge of facts testified to before the grand jury, which if known would be for the interest (of defendants) or their confederates to attempt to disprove by procuring false testimony. The third is to conceal the fact that an indictment is found against a party, in order to avoid danger that he may escape and elude arrest upon it before presentment is made.” See 28 C. J. 813, § 113. In State v. Rothrock, 45 Nev. 214 (200 Pac. 525), it is said: "The provisions of our statute relative to keeping secret the proceedings before the grand jury were not enacted for the benefit of those who were investigated and indicted by the grand jury, but for the protection of the public. See also People v. Young, 31 Cal. 564; People v. Kresel, 142 Misc. 88 (254 N. Y. Supp. 193). "The inquisitorial power of the grand jury is the most valuable function which it possesses to-day and, far more than any supposed protection which it gives to the accused, justifies its survival as an institution. As an en'gine of discovery against organized and far-reaching crime, it has no counterpart. Policy emphatically forbids that there should be any curtailment of it except in clearest cases.” In re Grand Jury Proceedings, 4 F. Supp. 283 (3).
Moreover, the action of the March-April grand jury in violating its oath of secrecy, if such it was, and if such act constituted a violation of any right of the present defendant, could not be urged as a plea in abatement against an indictment found against this defendant by another grand jury at a succeeding term of the court. If this act had disqualified such succeeding grand jury, it was an act known to this defendant and his counsel; for he attached copies of all the Atlanta papers in which such alleged secrets were published, and he should have made objection to the array when he found that he was one of the parties referred to, and before the grand jury had taken action against him. •
The special demurrer to count 9 was properly overruled.
Judgment affirmed.