13 S.E.2d 870 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1941
1. The motion in arrest of judgment was properly overruled.
2. The refusal to grant a new trial was not error for any reason assigned.
1. Murphy was tried separately and convicted of the offense charged. The verdict read as follows: "We the jury find the defendant John W. Murray guilty, and sentence to not less than 10 yr. an more than 10 yr. Forman C. M. Nelms C. M. Nelms." The defendant filed a motion in arrest of judgment on the following grounds: (1) The verdict is void and does not have such a reasonable intendment as to support a valid sentence of the defendant, John M. Murphy. (2) The verdict does not find the defendant John M. Murphy, or said Murphy, guilty. It does not fix the punishment, but attempts to sentence, which is not within the province of the jury, but is a function of the court. (3) The term of punishment is not definitely fixed, and if "yr." is considered a correct abbreviation for "years," then the sentence is for more than is provided by law for the crime charged. (4) The verdict is not signed by the foreman of the jury but apparently by two men, with the word "foreman" written above their names, and it can not be ascertained by reading the record which, if either, of the men was foreman. (5) The verdict is so ambiguous that no reasonable, definite, or accurate meaning can be ascertained from reading it. The motion was overruled, and the defendant excepted to that judgment. We see no error in the judgment. The fact that the jury inadvertently wrote in the verdict the defendant's name as "Murray," instead of "Murphy," does not invalidate the verdict. The defendant John W. Murphy, alias J. M. *692
Murphy, was the only person on trial, and the verdict, finding "the defendant John W. Murray" guilty, could only mean the defendant John W. Murphy, alias John M. Murphy. See, in this connection, Davis v. State,
2. The defendant also moved for a new trial, the motion was denied, and that judgment is assigned as error. The special ground of the motion, complaining of the admission in evidence of various tools and articles found on the person of the defendant and identified by the arresting officers as tools and articles commonly used in the commission of burglaries, is without merit. Such evidence tended to establish the defendant's guilt of the offense charged and was admissible notwithstanding the tools and articles were discovered by an unlawful search and seizure of the defendant's person. Calhoun v. State,
Judgment affirmed. MacIntyre and Gardner, JJ., concur.