38 S.E.2d 180 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1946
1. The admitted possession by the manager of a golf club of a locker in the locker room of the club raises a rebuttable presumption that the contents were in his possession, but does not forbid an ulterior inquiry as to the possession of any of the contents by other persons.
2. The requested charge was a hypothetical statement by way of instruction which was insufficient because it embraced but a part of the issues and assumed facts that were contested in the case and that should have been submitted to the jury for their determination.
3. Evidence which showed some logical connection with the offense charged, in that it was a circumstance tending to show that the defendant, and not his wife or some third person, possessed the whisky as charged, was relevant.
4. "On the trial of a person charged with an offense, it is error to admit a part of his confession, and exclude the other part." Long v. State,
5. Special ground 3 relates to a matter of proof which will probably not arise on the next trial, and we deem it unnecessary to consider it. The case being reversed on the special grounds, the general grounds will not be considered.
The locker in question was in a golf club of which the defendant was manager. The possession of such a locker by the defendant *811
would raise the presumption that the contents of the locker were in the possession of the defendant, but this would be a rebuttable presumption. Isom v. State,
2. Special ground 5. The defendant excepts to the judge's refusal to charge, "I charge you that, if you find that one bottle of whisky which the State says was found was the property of the wife of the defendant, the defendant would not be guilty." The parties have the right, "which we would not abridge, to have a principle of law springing from the testimony in the case, and pertinent to the issue tried, given by the court; but they have no right to single out and specify a fact or two in testimony, and to ask the judge to charge the jury that, if they are satisfied such and such facts exist, or have been proven to their satisfaction, that, then, they should find so and so." Wright
v. Ga. R. Bkg. Co.,
3. Special ground 1. The following question was propounded to the witness, Frank Russell, an officer, by the solicitor-general: "While you were there [in the locker room] making a search and at the time when you found this whisky, did anyone come there and try to buy whisky and ask Mr. Miller [the defendant] for some whisky?" The question was objected to on the ground that it was irrelevant and immaterial and threw no light on the issue involved in this case, and was prejudicial to the defendant. The objection was overruled and the witness was allowed to answer the question, his answer being: "When we got there, Mr. Ralph Primm and Mr. Ralph Flournoy were sitting at a table drinking in this room, and they had a pint sitting on the table between them, and while we were there looking in the lockers, either two or three, I don't know which, came in there and asked Elmo Miller for whisky, and he told them — `Don't you see the sheriff is in charge?'" In Keener v. State,
4. Special ground 2. "Ordinarily, self-serving declarations are hearsay and inadmissible, but this rule does not apply where they are made in the presence of the opposite party, or where they are part of the res gestae, or where they are a part of a conversation of which some other part has already been admitted in evidence. Monroe v. State,
5. Special ground 3, which is covered by headnote 5, needs no elaboration.
6. The judge erred in overruling the motion for a new trial.
Judgment reversed. Broyles, C. J., and Gardner, J., concur.