1. The general grounds and the first special ground, which alleges that the testimony of an accomplice of the defendant was not corroborated, will be considered together, as this ground is only an elaboration of the general grounds. The testimony of the accomplice was corroborated, and the evidence was fully ample to support the verdict.
Pace, a co-indictee, testified that he, Stone, and Jackson conspired to rob the deceased, and that Pace and Stone went to the store to effect the robbery, while Jackson remained in the car, which they parked across the railroad tracks directly in front of and about 75 feet from the store. Pace testified that Jackson first mentioned going out on Gordon Road and robbing a store, that they went out to a named store, Jackson went in, came back and said, “it didn’t seem like it was too much money in there,” so then Jackson drove to Mr. Little’s store, where Jackson went in and came back saying, “it looked like it should be a right smart of money in there”; that then Jackson drove the car across the railroad tracks and parked, and Jackson and Stone went to the store saying they were going to rob it, but came back saying there were other people in the store, so they waited about 15 minutes in the car and then Pace and Stone went to the Little store and left Jackson sitting in the car; that when they entered *820 the store Pace drew a pistol on Little and engaged in a tussle with him during which the pistol which he held in his hand fell to the floor; that suddenly Little released his hold on him and sank to the floor; that Stone took the money from the cash register and they returned to the car, where Jackson was waiting; that they then drove to the house of a friend of Jackson’s, where Pace changed clothes and washed the blood from his hands. Little died from the gunshot wound.
The testimony of Pace was corroborated by two girls, who in going from their home to Little’s store saw the parked automobile, which fitted the description of Pace’s car, parked across the railroad tracks in front of the Little store and saw one man sitting in it, with two men coming from the direction of Little’s store, one of whom was identified as Jackson by one of the girls; and as they came back from the store, they saw the three men sitting in the car. This supported the testimony of Pace that Jackson and Stone first went to the store leaving him sitting in the car, came back when they found several people there, then the three sat in the car for a few minutes before he and Stone, leaving Jackson in the car, went over and robbed the store. Several witnesses testified as to seeing Jackson and two other men at the house where Pace said they went after the robbery. The bloody clothes were found where Pace said they were put. An employee of Little, who was in the store when he was killed, identified Stone and Pace as the ones who came into the store. There was other evidence corroborating Pace’s testimony. See
Whaley v. State,
2. Special grounds 2, 3, and 4 which except to the admission of testimony without setting out or pointing out in the record what testimony was improperly admitted are insufficient to constitute an assignment of error.
3. Ground 5 which complains of the court’s refusal to direct a verdict of not guilty is without merit. “It is not error in a criminal case to refuse to direct a verdict of not guilty.”
Cornett v. State,
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4: There is no merit in ground 6 which complains of the refusal of the court to declare a mistrial on motion of defendant’s counsel because the solicitor general in his argument to the jury said, “that from his deductions, movant was a murderer.” The evidence authorized that deduction and thus the argument was permissible.
Montos v. State,
5. Special grounds 7 and 8 allege as error the refusal to grant a mistrial on motion of the defendant’s counsel because the solicitor general read certain excerpts from decisions of this court to the court in the presence and hearing of the jury.
(a) In ground 7 the excerpt was the following quotation from
Eberhart v. State,
This court in
Nix v. State,
(b) In ground 8 the excerpt was the following quotation from
Gore v. State,
It was perfectly proper for the solicitor general to read that statement to the court in the presence of the jury as it was a correct statement of the law applicable to the facts in this case. It was not improper and prejudicial for the reasons alleged, which were that the solicitor general tried to draw an analogy between that case and this case, that the jury may have been prejudiced and influenced by hearing the facts and verdict in that case, and that the cases are similar as to fact and law and that the death penalty should have been given the defendant. We think the solicitor general was right — the cases are analogous, having practically the same facts and the same law was applicable. There is no showing that the jury heard the “verdict” in that case, or anything to indicate to the jury that the death penalty was there imposed and should likewise be given here. See
Ayers v. State,
6. Ground 9 assigns error on an extract from the charge, which is quoted only in part leaving out other parts of the sen
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tence. An examination of the full charge discloses that the attack upon the charge is without merit. The court charged fully and correctly on conspiracy to commit a crime, and specifically charged that, when individuals associate themselves together to do an unlawful act or acts, any act done in pursuance of that association by any one of the conspirators would, in legal contemplation, be the act of each of them. Then to follow that with a charge that if the defendant did kill the deceased by shooting him with a pistol,- which is what is complained of — the jury necessarily understood that the court referred to the act of one of the defendants in shooting and killing the deceased as the act of this defendant. See
Handley v. State,
7. Under the rule that a request to charge “must be correct and even perfect,”
Lewis v. State,
(a) Grounds 11 and 12 complaining of the court’s refusal to charge, are, for the same reasons given above, without merit as neither of them is correct and perfect.
Judgment affirmed.
