6 Ga. App. 251 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1909
Moses was convicted of a violation of §306 of tbe Penal Code, which is in the following language: “If any person shall knowingly and wilfully obstruct, resist, or oppose anjr officer of this State, or other person duly authorized, in serving, or attempting to serve or execute any lawful process, or order, . . he shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.” The evidence, briefly stated, is as follows: The deputy sheriff of the County of Early arrested Moses under a warrant, duly issued by a justice of the peace, charging him with the offense of wife-beating. Moses made no resistance,, but' took the arresting officer in his buggy and drove with him to the jail. At the time of the arrest a white citizen in tbe store where he was arrested offered to go upon his bond, but the officer refused to take bond. This citizen thereupon went to the court-house and told the sheriff that he wanted to go on the defendant’s bond. The sheriff made no objection to the bondsman offered, but refused to take bond at all. When the defendant and the deputy sheriff reached the jail, the officer ordered him to get out of the buggy and go into the jail, whereupon the defendant began cursing and said that he would not go to jail. The officer took hold of him and he tried to jerk loose, and said he was not going to jail, that he had done nothing for which to go to jail. Two or three times he tried to jerk loose from the officer, and the officer called upon a negro bystander to assist him in putting the defendant in jail. The defendant made no threat of violence, and did not attempt in any way to assault the officer. When the officer first commanded him to go into the jail and he refused, the officer left him and' went into the jail, got his pistol, and returned with it, the defendant remaining quietly outside until the officer returned. The evidence further showed that the city court of Blakely was then in session at the courthouse, near the jail, and several justices of the peace, including the one who issued the warrant, were easily accessible to the arresting officer. The arrest was in the daytime, and no reason whatever was shown why the defendant should have been imprisoned before a commitment trial, nor why he was not taken before some judicial officer for this purpose.
The record shows the exceptional and remarkable fact — in a criminal case^ — -that the ^plaintiff in error paid the cost of his appeal and did not resort to a pauper’s affidavit.
Judgment reversed.