REYNOLDS v. THE STATE.
38167
Court of Appeals of Georgia
DECIDED MAY 25, 1960.
101 Ga. App. 715
DECIDED MAY 24, 1960. (Previous Case)
The trial court did not err in revoking the probation of the defendant.
Judgment affirmed. Townsend, Carlisle and Frankum, JJ., concur.
DECIDED MAY 24, 1960.
Archibald A. Farrar, for plaintiff in error.
Earl B. Self, Solicitor-General, contra.
38167. REYNOLDS v. THE STATE.
TOWNSEND, Judge. J. P. Reynolds was indicted in the Superior Court of Hall County on 25 counts of simple larceny. Each count alleged that the accused stole a specified number of gallons of water from the City of Gainesville by taking the same through a two-inch water pipe attached to a six-inch water pipe connected with the city water system. The counts vary as to date and number of gallons only, each count being for a period of approximately a month, and the periods being consecutive. The defendant‘s demurrers to the indictment were overruled. After conviction he filed a motion for a new trial which, as amended by the addition of 17 special grounds, was also overruled by the trial court, and these judgments are assigned as error.
1. (a) It is not ground for demurrer that the offense of unlawfully taking water from a city water system was charged as simple larceny, a misdemeanor, instead of being charged under
(b) It is permissible to indict specially for an offense and allege the date as an essential averment of the transaction. Martin v. State, 73 Ga. App. 573 (37 S. E. 2d 411). So a number of offenses of larceny may be alleged in separate counts of the indictment differing only as to date, and the indictment will not be subject to demurrer, but the State must prove that the offense was committed on the specific date alleged or no conviction can be obtained. Special demurrers 5, 7 and 8 contending that only one offense is alleged, are also without merit.
2. That an indictment contains more than one charge in its several counts does not authorize an increase in the number of preemptory challenges allotted the defendant. 50 C. J. S. 1071, Juries, § 281. The request to overrule the statement to this effect in Vismore v. State, 41 Ga. App. 544 (1) (153 S. E. 776) and similar cases is denied.
3. Special grounds 3 through 7 deal with alleged errors in admission of evidence resulting in the overruling of two motions for mistrial. Without setting out the evidence contended to be hearsay, the court sustained the objection in one case and admitted it in others restricted to the sole purpose of showing motive and explaining conduct under
4. Special grounds 9, 11 and 13 complain of certain excerpts from the charge on the ground that they were not adjusted to the facts, contained expressions of opinion, and permitted the jury to find the defendant guilty regardless of the evidence. The expression “if the jury believes” instead of “if the jury should find from the evidence” is not, when considered in context with the charge as a whole, conceivably error in that it would have been understood by the jury as a license to convict regardless of the testimony. The use of the words “any line” instead of “the two inch line specified in the indictment” is likewise harmless considered in connection with the evidence in the case, which was that a line as described in the indictment was the only unauthorized line so attached. And, the evidence being undisputed that the pipe, a mechanical device, was installed as alleged, the use of the language “if you believe beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant is the person who caused those mechanical devices to be installed” is not error requiring reversal. Abbott v. State, 91 Ga. App. 380 (85 S. E. 2d 615).
5. The remaining special grounds, all of which bear on the question of the defendant‘s trial and conviction as for 25 separate offenses, will be dealt with in connection with the general grounds. The evidence is to the effect that the defendant, who was president of Best Ice & Locker Company, Inc., placed an order around the first of March, 1956, for a six-inch M.J. sleeve tap, which consists of two pipes split in half that can be bolted together around a 6-inch water main, with a mechanical gasket type joint, such as would be used to draw water from the main or put water into the main, and into which a two-inch pipe would fit; that this material was billed and shipped to Best Ice & Locker Co., Inc.; that such a device was found connecting the plant to the city water main through which water was run into the ice plant in such manner that it would not go through and register on the water meter; that a sprinkler system was installed in the ice plant in the early part of 1956 and there was no place by which water from this system went into the ice plant other than for the dry sprinkler system at the time of the installation; that just before this
Although the sentence does not appear in the record, the special grounds of the motion for new trial approved as true by the trial court contain recitals of fact sufficient to show that the defendant was separately sentenced upon each of the 25 counts of the indictment. Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court in this case denying the motion for new trial is affirmed on condition that the defendant be called before the court and resentenced as for a single misdemeanor. Should the court fail to resentence the defendant within 15 days after
Judgment affirmed on condition. Felton, C. J., Carlisle, Nichols, Bell and Frankum, JJ., concur. Gardner, P. J., dissents.
DECIDED MAY 25, 1960.
Brannon & Brannon, E. C. Brannon, Sr., James Maddox, for plaintiff in error.
Jeff C. Wayne, Solicitor-General, Sidney O. Smith, Jr., contra.
GARDNER, Presiding Judge, dissenting. This case was assigned to me and I wrote it substantially as shown by what is now the majority opinion, except that I set out the evidence as shown by the record. It has been my contention throughout the study and discussion of this case that the defendant was guilty of a separate crime on each occasion when he stole water from the City of Gainesville. The record shows that the grand jury of Hall County returned a true bill against the defendant and that a petty jury found him guilty. The evidence set out in the majority opinion is meager, not at all full, but it is very clear to me that the evidence, as shown in the record, is amply sufficient to show that the jury was correct in finding the defendant guilty. I have always had a great respect for the jury system and it is seldom that I find their conclusions subject to reversal by an appellate court. The case now before us is one which makes me proud of the jurors who arrived at what I consider an absolutely correct verdict—in fact it is my studied conviction that any other verdict would have been a miscarriage of justice, under the record before this court, keeping in mind that I recognize the right of my colleagues to think otherwise.
