175 Ga. 283 | Ga. | 1932
Dan.Millen, A. J. Jester, and S. G. (referred to in the record as Tom) Day were jointly indicted for the murder of B. W. Bennie. Millen was tried separately and was found guilty, with a recommendation by the jury to mercy, and the court sentenced him to life imprisonment. His motion for a new trial was overruled, and he excepted.
It appears from the evidence that the deceased Bennie, the defendant Millen, and the witness Jester lived in a two-room house, Millen and Jester occupying one room together and Bennie staying in the other room alone. According to the testimony of Jester, on Saturday preceding the Sunday on which the homicide occurred Millen said to him: “ Let’s knock Bennie out and take his money.” Witness told him no, he could not do that, and did not want to have anything to do with it. On the following day, Sunday, after these three had eaten dinner Millen went off, returning about four-thirty or five o’clock in the afternoon. Day came back with him. “When they came back Tom Day walked in there in my room. I do not know where Millen was then; he was outside somewhere, and Tom walked in there. Tom Day then went in Benny’s -room over in the
The material part of the testimony of the witness Beese Hill, as to the statements made to him by Dan Millen, was as follows: "I was confined in jail here at Darien last fall. While I was in jail here at Darien these boys in this case, Dan Millen, Tom Day, and A. J. Jester, were put in jail. . . I heard these three men talking among themselyes about this thing and Benny being killed.
After a careful and painstaking examination of the testimony, it is very evident that the verdict of guilty was supported by sufficient evidence, if the testimony in behalf of the State was credible in the opinion of the jury. The witness A. J. Jester, in his story, discloses a sordid picture of the defendant murdering the deceased with a club-ax, by blows inflicted before the deceased had an opportunity to defend himself, merely to get the few dollars of wages supposed to be in the pocket of the deceased, and when the deceased was not aware that the defendant was approaching him. There are some of the statements of Jester which do not conform with the blood-stains and blood which were found near a cot, while he says that Dan Millen, the defendant, struck the blows which killed Bennie in front of the fireplace several feet away from where the blood was found. And it appears from other evidence that there was no blood-stain or bloody track such as might have been ex
There are several special grounds in the motion for a new trial. In the first ground it is alleged that the charge of the court, to wit, “To this indictment the defendant, Dan Millen, has entered his plea of not guilty; the State says he is guilty; and that makes the issue which you are to try,” was error. Considered in connection with the instructions of the court as a whole, the excerpt just quoted is not a misstatement which was confusing or misleading to the jury, or prejudicial to the rights of the defendant. By an indictment the State always, in effect, says that the defendant in an accusation is guilty of the offense charged. When the defendant enters a plea of not guilty, that makes the issue which the jury are empaneled to try. While ordinarily the charge of the court contains the statement that the State in the indictment says that the accused is guilty, followed by the statement that to this indictment the defendant has entered his plea of not guilty, we do not think that the transposition was such error as would authorize the grant of a new trial.
The second special ground of the motion for a new trial complains that the court erred in not following the language of § 1036 of the Penal Code, but instead charged the jury as to the defendant’s statement as follows: “In criminal cases the defendant is entitled to make a statement in his own behalf. The statement is
The court did not err, as alleged in the third special ground
There is no merit in the fourth special ground of the motion for new trial; for proof of the corpus delicti, of itself, may sufficiently corroborate a confession. For this reason, the instruction of the court to the jury that “In felony cases the testimony of an accomplice is.not alone of itself sufficient to sustain a conviction, unless such testimony is corroborated by other competent evidence which you do believe, or by facts and circumstances developed by the trial/5 was fully as favorable to the accused as the evidence warranted. The movant admits that ““this is the substantive law and the rule by which the jury should be governed/5 but insists ““that the evidence of such corroboration [accomplice] was only corroborated by the testimony of the witness Eeese Hill, who testified as to a confession made by the defendant to him.55 It is insisted that “in the absence of such legal instruction on the part of the trial court to the jury, relative to their duty as well as the rule by which they should be governed in the consideration of such confession, that this was not such “competent evidence5 as is required by law to corroborate the testimony of such an accomplice.55 As we understand this assignment of error, the plaintiff in error complains that the court did not instruct the jury ““relative to their duty as well as the rule by which they should be governed in the consideration of such confession, that this was not such “competent evidence/55 etc. This assignment of error is too vague and indefinite to invoke a ruling, and therefore entirely without merit. The assignment does not inform us what ““legal instructions55 should have been given to the jury, or by what rule the jury should be governed with relation to a confession, nor does it refer to any evidence so as to enable us to judge whether it is such as is required by law to corroborate the testimony of an accomplice.
The fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, and ninth grounds of the motion for a new trial, which complain of excerpts from the charge
Counsel for the plaintiff in error, with very commendable skill and diligence, apparently exhausted every effort to take advantage of every doubt in favor of their client. That there may exist in our minds, as judges, a doubt as to whether the accused or the witness, Jester, struck the blows which ended the life of the deceased, Bennie, may be admitted for the sake of argument. But juries, and not judges, are the exclusive triors of facts. The prerogative of a jury to ascertain and declare the truth from the evidence is exclusive. It can not be said in the case at bar that the evidence does not authorize the verdict, nor can it be said that the court erred in his instructions to the jury.
Judgment affirmed.