Thе defendant appeals from his conviction of theft by-taking.
1. The trial judge did not err in failing without request to charge the jury on admissions made with a view to a compromise and settlement of claims, as the appellant contends was required by the provisions of Code § 38-408, which Code section applies to civil cases and not to criminal cases.
Moore v. State,
2. The charge — "A defendant in a criminal case is not required to give evidence for or against himself. The defendant in a criminal case is not required to satisfy the jury of the existence of any facts which, if true, is a defense.” — did not constitute a comment on the failure of the defendаnt to testify, which would be prohibited by Code § 38-415 (as amended, Ga. L. 1973, pp. 292, 294).
Woodard v. State,
3. The trial court charged the jury, "An admission is a circumstance which requires the aid of testimony or other evidence to authorize or warrant a reasonable conclusion of guilt of the crime charged.” The appellant contends that this charge was reversible error because it allowed the jury to consider evidence that corroborated the "admissions” which was not independent, as is contended is required under Payne
v. State,
"Code § 38-401 provides: 'Admissions usually refer to civil cases; confessions to criminal.’ ”
Moore v. State,
4. The trial court charged the jury that "where one fraudulently intends to get possession of the money оf another and by false representation induces the owner to deliver the money to him for the purpose of being applied to the owner’s use and then appropriates it pursuant to the original fraudulent intent, he may be convicted of thе offense of theft by taking.” This charge was not inappropriate in this prosecution for theft by taking, as the appellant contends. The language embodied in the clause, "regardless of the manner in which said property is taken or approрriated,” in Code Ann. § 26-1802 (a), renders the section sufficiently broad to encompass thefts or larcenies perpetrated by deception as prohibited under -§ 26-1803, and theft by conversion, as prohibited under § 26-1808, the punishment for all of which is identical, as provided in § 26-1812.
Stull v. State,
5. The appellant, for the first time on appeal to this court, attempts to chаllenge the composition of the jury by which he was tried. He asserts that seven of the jurors had been summoned for a prior term of court; had tendered excuses for non-service in the week subpoenaed to the Jury Clerk of Fulton County; had been excused from service that week; and had been reassigned to the term during which the appellant was tried. His contention is that the seven jurors were not legally excused, having been excused by the jury clerk rather than by the judge, as is provided by Code Ann. § 59-112 (b) (as amended by Ga. L. 1967, p. 725; 1975, p. 779).
This enumerated error is without merit for several reasons. Firstly, a challenge to the polls for cause must be made bеfore the jury is sworn, unless the cause of challenge be unknown until afterwards. Code § 59-804;
Howell v. State,
Finally, even if the alleged disqualification of the jurors had been timely rаised, the contended ground is not valid. "The judges of the superior courts have authority — 6... to exercise all other powers ... which may be granted them by law.” Code § 24-2616. By Ga. L. 1964, p. 2119, the General Assembly authorized the superior court judges of Fulton County, inter alia, "to appoint a jury clerk and such other personnel as may be deemed necessary or advisable to dispatch the work of the court,” and provided that "[t]he duties of said personnel shall be as prescribed by said judges.” Section 4 of this Act provides that "[t]his Act shall be in addition and supplemental to other provisions provided by law, with a view toward efficient and orderly handling of jury selection and the administration of justice.” Such language authorizes the judge to delegate the ministerial duty of receiving excuses and acting on them, under § 59-112 (b), supra, to the jury clerk, who, as a judicial official, may as properly perform this ministerial functiоn (of determining the date jurors will serve, not whether or not they will serve) as clerks may issue subpoenas.
See Horton v. State,
In Fulton County v. Amorous,
supra, (1), the Supreme Court authorized the reassignment of excused jurors for service in a succeeding week within the same term. This holding of the
Amorous
case was subsequently applied by that court in a criminal case.
Meyers v. State,
The verdict and judgment were not erroneous for any reason urged.
Judgment affirmed.
