40 Ga. App. 145 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1929
The defendant was convicted of cheating and swindling, and assigns error upon the overruling of his motion for a new trial. The evidence abundantly supported the verdict of guilty. It shows that the defendant gave a bill of sale to property which he did not own and procured $300 as a result thereof. It shows that the defendant made false representations with intent to deceive and defraud, and that they did deceive and defraud, and that as a result of such representations one E. E. Lockridge was induced to part with $300.
The evidence objected to in the first special grouúd of the motion for a new trial, upon the ground that it was a communication
The court properly refused to give the requested charge set out in the second special ground, and properly charged as set out in the third special ground. The court’s charge relative to the defendant’s statement is practically in the language of the statute, and is without error. This dispose's of the fourth special ground.
Exception was taken on the ground that the court erred in imposing the following sentence on the defendant: “Whereupon it is considered and adjudged by the court that the said J. B. Ray be kept at labor in chain-gang or public works of said county, or on any other work which county authorities may lawfully have such misdemeanor convicts worked, and when not so at labor that he be confined in the common jail of said county, or such other place as may be selected by said county authorities or of such county wherein he shall be lawfully worked, such labor and imprisonment to continue twelve months from inception; from which labor and imprisonment he may at any time be discharged on payment of a fine of $50, including all costs, and in addition to said fine making restitution to E. R. Lockridge $300.” It was contended that the court erred in passing said sentence “because it is violative of article 1, section 1, paragraph 21 of the constitution of the State of Georgia, which says, There shall be no imprisonment for debt.’”
However equitable it may seem that the victim of the transaction should be paid the money which he was induced to part with by fraudulent representations, there is no provision in the law of our State for hanging over the head of a convicted criminal the threatened enforcement of an imposed sentence for the purpose of coercing him to pay a debt. Our criminal laws can not be invoked to enforce the payment of debts. The trial judge in a criminal case has no legal right to impose a sentence in terrorem. But the State contends the real sentence was twelve months at labor and imprisonment, and that “the sentence merely gives the defendant the privilege of paying the $300 and being relieved from making the twelve months sentence, and that it is not definitely imposed or
Though part of the language above quoted may be obiter as to this case, it is sound in principle, is supported by other legal authority, and is applicable to the facts now under consideration. In Brown v. City of Atlanta, 123 Ga, 497 (51 S. E. 507), the Supreme Court held: “A sentence imposing two penalties in the alternative, one of which is unauthorized, is not void, but may be enforced as to the penalty which is authorized.” In Daniel v. Persons, 137 Ga., 826, 829 (74 S. E. 260), the Supreme Court, in speaking of an unlawful qualification to a sentence, said: “ Such words in such a sentence are of no legal force, and consequently should be ignored and the sentence executed just as if they did not appear therein.”
Had the sentence in the present case provided that the defendant be discharged upon the payment of a fine of $350, $50 to go to the officers of court, and $300 to Lockridge, the portion of the sentence providing for such distribution would have been null and void, but the defendant would have to pay the fine of $350 before he could be relieved from the chain-gang sentence; and the distribution of the fine would have been made as provided by law. However, the language employed by the court makes it plain that the payment of the $300 was not a pari of the fine. The sentence provides that the defendant “may at any time be discharged on payment of a fine of $50 including all costs, and in addition to said fine making restitution to E. E. Lockridge $300.” The words, “and in addition to said fine making restitution to E. E. Lock-ridge $300,” in such sentence “are of no legal force, and consequently should be ignored and the sentence executed just as if they did not appear therein.” With this direction, the judgment of the court overruling the motion for a new trial is affirmed.