This appeal by Jerry Ray Lane is from his convictions of the crimes of murder and armed robbery, and the denial of his motion for new trial. Consecutive sentences of lifе imprisonment and 20 years were imposed.
The appellant was jointly indicted with Michael Gene Berryhill. On his separate trial Berryhill was convicted and given the death penalty. His convictions were affirmed in
Berryhill v. State,
Berryhill was the actual perpetrator of the murder and armed robbery. The evidence in the present case аuthorized a finding that the appellant and Berryhill conspired to commit a burglary; they went to the home of the murder victim, and when he refused to open the door, Berryhill shot into a glass beside the door and opened the door, and thereafter shot the victim and robbed his wife; when Berryhill shot, the appellant fled the scene, returned to the car in which they were riding, and went to his home. It is the appellant’s contention that he tried to persuade Berryhill not to go to the home of the murder victim because it appeared that the occupants were at home; Berryhill told him that he would leave if anyone came to the door; and when the аppellant saw that Berryhill did not leave as promised, the appellant left the scene.
1. Error is enumerated on the denial of the general *408 grounds of the motion for new trial, and on the failure to direct a vеrdict of acquittal. The jury was authorized to find under all of the evidence that the appellant was a party to the crime. Code Ann. § 26-801 (Ga. L. 1968, pp. 1249, 1271).
2. It is contended thаt the court should have granted a new trial due to the negligence of appointed counsel. The record does not support this contention.
3. It is asserted that the court erred in its charge to the jury in that no charge was given on the need for corroboration of a confession pursuant to Code § 38-420, and no chаrge was given that the appellant could have been found guilty of burglary, or attempted burglary, as a lesser included offense.
The trial judge in his charge referred tо the appellant’s statement, which was introduced in evidence, as an admission or incriminatory statement, and instructed the jury that it should be considered with caution. The appellant does not admit that his statement was a confession, and it was not error in the absence of a request to charge on the need for corroboration of a confession, to fail to so charge.
The evidence did not require a charge on burglary or attempted burglary. The appellant was either guilty of murder and armed robbery as a party to the crimes committed by Berryhill, or he was guilty of no offense.
4. Error is enumerated because the court allowed the attorney who represented Berryhill at his trial to act as special prosecutor at the trial of the appellant, over the objection оf the appellant’s counsel, made at the commencement of the trial, that there was a conflict of interest.
Error is also enumerated on the court allowing this attorney over objections, while questioning Berryhill as a state’s witness, to claim entrapment and cross examine his former client after he refused to give any testimony.
In the early case of
Gaulden v. State,
The rule of disqualification of counsеl who had prosecuted two defendants as solicitor general to represent them in a civil action growing out of the same incident was stated in
Conley v. Arnold,
In
Clifton v. State,
Discussions of the rule on disqualification of counsel because of conflict of interеst are found in the following civil cases:
Tilley v. King,
It is argued by the state in the present case that since the special prosecutor had not represented the аppellant in any former trial, the rule of disqualification would not apply to him.
It cannot be denied that the state and those it prosecutes for crimes arе adversaries. The public policy which will not permit counsel to change roles from representing a person accused of crime to represеnting the state in prosecuting the person will not permit him to change from representing one conspirator in crimes to prosecuting his alleged co-cоnspirator in those same crimes. Such counsel must be presumed to have received confidential communications from his client concerning the crimes charged against the alleged co-conspirator which he can use in prosecuting the co-conspirator.
In the present case Berryhill refused to tеstify against the appellant, but his former counsel was permitted to question him in a manner extremely prejudicial to the appellant about the appellant’s participation in the crimes. The jury, in all probability, attributed to counsel knowledge of facts gained from his representation of the witness in asking these questiоns. While he stated to the court that the questions asked his former client pertained to information communicated to him only a few nights previously, the confidential сommunications could not have been erased from his mind.
The participation of counsel who had represented the appellant’s alleged co-conspirator as special prosecutor in the trial of the appellant denied him fundamental due process of law. We cannot say, under the rеcord, that this error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. The convictions must therefore be vacated, and a new trial granted.
Judgment reversed.
