76 Ga. 727 | Ga. | 1886
Willis Hudson was indicted jointly with two others, his mother and half sister. The mother, Sarah Ann Roney,
(1.) Besides the ground that the verdict is against evidence, etc., the others are:
(2.) That through his ignorance, and the oversight and inefficieney of his attorneys, he failed to avail himself of the privilege of making a statement to the effect that he shot deceased in defence of his mother and sister.
(3.) That one of his attorneys was a young man of very limited experience, and the other was so constantly under the influence of liquor during the trial as to incapacitate him for the managment of the case, the result being that his right to make a statement was overlooked, and that his counsel clashed in their arguments before the jury, one contending that the homicide was justiOable, and the other confining his address to the jury to an appeal for mercy, viz., to an appeal that the jury would not condemn him to the gallows, but would send him to the penitentiary for life.
On the first point, the judge certifies that the prisoner did not appear to be unusually ignorant.
On the second point, he certifies that he did not observe anything indicating that either of prisoner’s counsel was drunk, and that whilst he noticed counsel treated the case differently in their addresses to the jury, he did not observe any necessary conflict,—one arguing that the case was one of justifiable homicide, whilst the other, without touching on that view of the case, appealed to the jury not to condemn the prisoner to the gallows.
Judgment affirmed.