Pledger, Cobb, and Griggs were indicted for kidnapping a woman, Ella Fountain, and her two daughters, Cassandra and Denitria Fountain, OCGA § 16-5-40, robbing the woman at gunpoint, OCGA § 16-8-41, and raping the woman and one of the daughters, OCGA § 16-6-1. All were tried together by a jury. Pledger was convicted of armed robbery and kidnapping of all three victims. Cobb was convicted of the kidnappings, the armed robbery, and the rape of Cassandra Fountain. Griggs was convicted of three counts of kidnapping, armed robbery and the rape of Ella Fountain.
1. Case Nos. A89A1100 and A89A1101 are duplicate appeals by Cobb. As a result of. this and because A89A1101 is not supported by enumeration of error or brief, it is treated as abandoned and dismissed.
2. Pledger and Cobb enumerate as error the denial of a new trial on evidence insufficiency. Cobb and Griggs claim error in the court’s reversing its order granting a new trial to them.
(a) As to the latter question, a procedural one, the three motions for new trial were heard and, in the same November term of court, granted as to Cobb and Griggs, denied as to Pledger. The trial court was of the opinion, based on
Cruz v. New York,
What was stated in
Salisbury v. Grimes,
“ ‘During the term of the court at which a judgment is rendered, it is within the breast of the presiding judge, and may be vacated
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upon proper cause shown; but after the term has expired, the judgment ‘is upon the roll’ and is not subject to review or revision by the trial court.’ ”
Gobles v. Hayes,
The effect of a new trial grant is to leave the cause pending in the lower court. In civil cases and under OCGA § 9-11-6 (c), our courts have distinguished between interlocutory rulings and final judgments. “While final judgments may not be modified after the term in which they were rendered (subject to certain exceptions), ‘an interlocutory ruling does not pass from the control of the court at the end of the term if the cause remains pending.’ ”
Hodges Plumbing &c. Co. v. ITT Grinnell Co.,
The power of the court during, but not beyond, the term is an inherent one,
East Side Lumber &c. Co. v. Barfield,
The present order was entered in one term and vacated in another. In a criminal case the inherent power still ceases with the term’s end.
Bowen v. State,
At the beginning of the January term, any action with respect to *590 whether there should be a new trial or not was complete. The power to reinstate the original judgment had expired at the end of the November term.
Cobb and Griggs are entitled to a new trial.
(b) Their remaining enumerations of error fail to disclose a further basis for reversal.
(c) The substantive question, of the sufficiency of evidence, need be decided only with respect to Pledger. It is within the jury’s province to resolve contradictions in evidence and decide issues of credibility of witnesses.
Rhodes v. State,
Identity was the key issue, rather than whether or not the events occurred. Pledger was identified as one of the two men who first approached the victims’ car, abducted them, partially by display of Pledger’s gun, took them to a deserted area for robbery and rape with Pledger driving, took the daughters to the family home for burglarizing, and drove off with them again. Pledger, who was Griggs’ nephew, was arrested wearing shoes taken from the mother when she was raped the second time. Another victim of a similar incident which took place the same day also identified Pledger as one of the three men who attacked her. Pledger gave a statement when arrested, implicating all three.
3. Pledger’s other enumeration is that the court erred in denying his motion to sever his trial from that of the others, which denial infringed on his Federal Constitutional Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel. He argues that he was entitled to severance because the number of defendants created confusion of the evidence and law applicable to each, citing
Crawford v. State,
Pledger was one of the two who first approached the victims’ car. *591 He had a gun. He drove the victims’ car throughout the ordeal, first with the mother in the trunk and then on the second leg of the journey with the eldest daughter confined there. He participated in the robbery and later in the burglary. By his statement before trial, he denied raping the mother and the daughter. The jury found him not guilty of rape.
Applying the first test set out in
Crawford,
which is the only one Pledger draws into the issue, the evidence and the law relevant to him were not confused by the number of defendants as a matter of law. The court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to provide Pledger with a separate trial. OCGA.§ 17-8-4;
Rivers v. State,
Appeal dismissed in Case No. A89A1101; judgments reversed in Case Nos. A89A1100 and A89A1104; judgment affirmed in Case No. A89A0938.
