55 Ga. App. 842 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1937
George Mitchell, a negro, ivas charged with having committed the crime of assault with intent to murder Grady Woodward, a white man. The defendant was convicted, and the Court of Appeals granted him a new trial on September 33, 1936. 54 Ga. App. 354. Subsequently, when the decision for a new trial was published, there were threats of violence against the defendant, and he was taken from his home at night and severely and painfully beaten. His case was subsequently assigned for trial
The movant.introduced affidavits of the following persons, all except T. M. Steele being residents of Clayton County; E. L. Adamson, the sheriff; Alan Kemper, the ordinary; W. H. Reynolds, the solicitor of the city court of Jonesboro; Watterson Royston, the county surveyor; W. D. Whaley, ex-mayor of Jonesboro, the county-site of Clayton County; O. L. Roberts, policeman of Jonesboro; E. L. Camp, and T. M. Steele. The affidavit of each affiant, omitting the formal parts, recited.: "That at the time of the commission of the crime charged it was alleged that said defendant, colored, cut a white man, and that in connection with his arrest on said occasion violence was apprehended, and scarcely avoided by arresting officers in the gathering together of persons en route to and about the jail when the lights in the City of Jonesboro went out. Subsequent to the trial of said defendant in August, 1935, his motion for new trial and granting of the same by the Court of Appeals of Georgia on or about September 22d, 1936, when afterwards published and generally known, threats of violence to said defendant in the event he did not leave and remain away from the county was the subject of current rumors and discussion, and, as affiant has gathered from such rumors and believes, these threats were communicated to said defendant, who nevertheless remained in said county. That thereafter sometime in the latter part of September or the first of October of 1936, as affiant is informed and believes, said defendant was taken by persons unknown in the nighttime to a point probably six or eight miles south of Jonesboro into the County of Henry, where violent and serious injuries were inflicted upon his person, and that afterwards when said defendant became physically able to do so he removed from said county, concealing his whereabouts as has not been known to your affiant, and he does not believe to the public generally until recently, as affiant is now informed, and believes he is out in the rural section from Hogans-ville, Troup County, Georgia, where he remains because of fear of threats of violence on his return to said county, and, as your affiant believes, there is probability or danger of such other and further violence to him at this time. Affiant further says that be
Hon. John B. Hutcheson, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of Georgia, who resides in Clayton County and for whom the defendant worked, made affidavit as follows: “That he remembers the occasion when he [the accused] was arrested about May, 1934, charged with an assault on Mr. Woodward; that he saw him the next day after it is said to have happened, and procured a doctor for him; that he is also acquainted with the circumstances of his trial about August, 1935, and he also remembers the severe beating that was given him after the Court of Appeals had granted a new trial; that he procured a doctor for him on that occasion, and has kept in touch with the case from the beginning until now; that he was in very bad condition after the beating in the fall of 1936, and has the scars on his head and body at the present time; that he saw him on Sunday after the beating on Saturday night; that he had been beaten so severely that he could not walk and could not talk coherently; that for at least a month after the beating, he was still unable to walk or stand alone; that deponent is acquainted with the situation surrounding this case, has heard the rumors and threats, and, in his opinion, it would not be safe for this defendant to go to Clayton County to be tried; and deponent believes that if he did, there would be grave danger of mob violence.” The defendant swore that after the Court of Appeals granted him a new trial “a mob came to his home, looking for him, and found him at the home of Joe Nathan about 300
The State introduced, as witnesses, Grady Woodward, T. ■ C. Sower, Dr. W. D. Holton, C. D. Dickson, G. D. Medlock, J. A. Garner, W. A. McLendon, A. E. Eowen, W. W. Mundy, J. P. Porter, L. J. Brown, justice of the peace in the Jonesboro district, and P. K. Dickson, clerk of the superior court of Clayton County. Each of them testified in substance, on direct examina
It appears that many good citizens of Clayton County were of different opinions as to whether the defendant would be in danger of physical violence. Conceding, however, that every word sworn to by the witnesses on both sides with reference to their opinions as to whether there was a probability or danger of violence is conscientiously believed bjr them to be true, yet we have the undisputed, cold aiid undenied fact duly established that this defendant was brutally beaten; and the facts established strongly tended to show this was done because the higher court had not acted in accordance with the wishes of a certain element of the citizenry. What assurance is there, if the trial court does not do their bidding, or rather act in accordance with their desires, that they will not again reap vengeance upon the accused in the nature of physical violence when he returns to that county for trial ? As tending to show that the same state of feeling against the defendant had not changed, the sheriff, the officer of the law to whom both the State and the accused must primarily, in that county,
Judgment reversed.