22 Ga. App. 105 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1918
The indictment in this case was based upon the act of the legislature of Georgia approved November 17, 1915 (Ga. L. Ex. Sess. 1915, p. 77), and charged the accused with selling a quantity of alcoholic, spirituous, and malt liquors. It was signed: “W. E. Slater, Solicitdr-General. W. E. Slater, Prosecutor.” A special plea in abatement was as follows: “That it appears from said indictment, that W. E. Slater the solicitor-general of said court is the solicitor-general who drew and signed said indictment as found against defendant by the grand jury of Bryan county on the 8th day of May, 1917, and who consulted and advised the grand jury in finding the same, and that said W. E. Slater, solicitor-general, is also the prosecutor whose name is signed as such prosecutor to said indictment, as W. E. Slater, individually, and said solicitor-general, having a pecuniary interest in the outcome of said prosecution and being the prosecutor in said case, was and is disqualified as solicitor-general in said case, by reason of his interest in said case; wherefore said indictment should abate and be quashed.” This plea was overruled, the order thereon being as follows: “The foregoing plea coming on to be heard, after considering the same and in the light of section 18, pages 86 and 87 of the prohibition laws of 191.5, said plea be and is hereby overruled.” Exceptions were taken to this ruling. There was also a motion for a new trial, on the general grounds.
Section 805 of the Penal Code (1910) is as follows: “When a solicitor is absent or indisposed, or disqualified from interest or' relationship to engage in a prosecution, the presiding judge must appoint a competent attorney of the circuit to act in his place, or he, may command the services of the solicitor of any other circuit accessible, or he may make a requisition on the Governor for the attorney-general, as the emergency in his discretion may require.” See 'Civil Code, § 4929. It is contended that in view of this provision, the judge erred in overruling the. plea in abatement. Whether the solicitor-general was disqualified depends on the construction of the words, “disqualified from interest,” in the section quoted, construed in connection with
Counsel for plaintiff in error cite and rely on Baker v. State, 97 Ga. 452 (25 S. E. 321), and Nichols v. State, 17 Ga. App. 593, 604 (87 S. E. 817), and the cases cited in the latter case. In the Baker case, supra, the indictment was for criminal libel, and the publication which was the basis of the allegation in the indictment charged the solicitor-general with attempting to buy votes, and the record shows that he appeared before the grand jury in the dual character of prosecutor and State’s counsel. In discussing the case Mr. Justice Lumpkin said: “We shall undertake no discussion of the proposition that it is improper for the solicitor-general to appear before the grand jury in a case which he himself prosecutes personally. It is, of course, his right as a citizen to be the prosecutor in any criminal. case; but as he is the official counselor of the grand jury, he could not with propriety appear before that body and give advice in a case in which he was personally concerned. In such a case, a solicitor pro tern, should be
The case of Hicks v. Brantley, 102 Ga. 271 (29 S. E. 459), referred to and quoted from in the Nichols case, supra, was not a criminal case, but a suit for malicious prosecution, and the gist of the decision is that section 4958 of the Civil Code (1910), which provides that “Clients shall not be relieved from their liability to damages and penalties imposed by law, on the ground that they acted under the advice of their counsel, but are entitled to redress from them for unskilled advice,” is not applicable to advice given by the s¿licitor-general relative to a criminal case in which he gives advice as the prosecuting officer. However, some of the language used in that case and quoted in the. Nichols case is quite apropos- to the instant case. It was there said: “A solicitor-
In the instant case the solicitor-general, when lie signed the accusation as prosecutor, was not acting in his personal or individual character, or for his personal or individual interest, but in his character as an 'officer of the law specially charged by statute to perform this particular duty. He was not employed by any private person to prosecute, and his acts in connection with the instant case were “not with a view to the interest of any client, but alone to subserve public justice.” In each of the cases'from other States, quoted from in the Nichols case, supra, the prosecuting attorney had a personal interest in the case, or had been employed or engaged therein in his individual capacity as attorney.
It can not be successfully urged that the solicitor-general was “disqualified from interest” because he would participate in the division of the fine if one should be imposed upon conviction and be paid. To so hold would be to disqualify the prosecuting attorney in practically every case prosecuted; for under our State law his compensation comes from the fines and forfeitures realized from cases prosecuted by him. We are therefore convinced that the solicitor-general who appeared as prosecutor in the instant case was not disqualified, and that the court did not err in striking the plea in abatement.
The evidence is sufficient to support the verdict.
Judgment affirmed.