Ridenhour v. State

75 Ga. 382 | Ga. | 1885

Blandeord, Justice.

The plaintiff in error was indicted for malpractice in office as a justice of the peace, in that he wilfully and knowingly demanded and received more costs than he was *384entitled to under the law; he was found guilty, and he moved the court, for a new trial, on numerous grounds, which the court overruled and refused, and he excepted, and assigns as error the refusal of the new trial upon each and all of the grounds set forth in the motion.

1. The first ground is that the court erred in sustaining a demurrer to his special plea that he had not been served with a copy of the bill of indictment, but he had only been served with a copy of said indictment without its containing the names of the grand jurors.

We think that this is a sufficient compliance with the statute. The copy served upon him fully advised him of the charges against him, and if he desired to know who the grand jurors were, he had only to apply to the clerk, who would have furnished him with a list of the grand jurors. The offense with which he was to be charged before the grand jury was served upon him, and this is sufficient, and the court did right to sustain the demurrer to this plea.

2. It is much insisted by the able counsel for plaintiff in error that the court in its charge laid more stress upon the accused having received more costs than he was entitled to than upon his having demanded the costs, but on examination of the entire charge, which we find in the record, shows that this exception is not well taken, for that the charge shows that the court invariably put the case to the jury, that if the accused demanded and received, or received after demanding, more costsThan he was entitled to, etc., so we think that this exception is not well founded.

3. The main ground insisted upon'is that the court refused certain requests of plaintiff in error, to the effect that the evidence must show that the accused acted corruptly in his office by taking more costs than he was entitled to, before he could be-found guilty. The charge of the court shows that the judge instructed the jury that the accused must have demanded and received, as justice *385of the peace, more costs than he was' entitled to, wilfully and knowingly, before he could be convicted, and this charge is in the language of the Code, section 4504. The words wilfully and knowingly imply corruption. So, where an officer does an illegal act in his office or by virtue thereof, wilfully and knowingly, he does the same corruptly, and under our Code he is guilty of malpractice in office.

When the court has fully instructed and charged the jury upon the law of the case before them, it is not error to refuse to further charge requests by counsel, however legal they may be.

4. The plaintiff in error requested the court to charge the jury that, in criminal cases, they were the judges of the law as well as the facts. This court held, under the Penal Code of 1833, that a clause in said Code, declaring that the jury were judges of the law as well as of the facts, meant that the jury could determine the law to be different from that given in charge by the judge, and such were the uniform rulings of this court, until after the war;, upon this clause in the Penal Code of 1833. 5 Ga., 441; 10 Id., 512; 18 Id., 194; 22 Id., 478; 30 Id., 353, 383.

These decisions were made by a court, one of the judges, of which was a compiler of the Penal Code of 1883, but, these decisions, although not expressly overruled, were-departed from after the late war, in 42 Ga., 9, and other-cases. After the constitution of 1877 was adopted, which; contained the same declaration as that in the Code, “ that' the jurors in criminal cases were judges of the law as welll as the facts,” this question came before this court in several cases, and in Hill vs. The State, 64 Ga., 454, the court1; declared that the constitution of 1877 merely affirmed1 the' Code and re-affirmed the decision in 42 Ga; 9; without reversing or reviewing the previous decisions of this court referred to. This was a unanimous decision of this bench at the time, and while two of us, my brother Hall and myself, think that the rulings of this court down to the 30th *386Ga, referred to, are the law, yet, as in Hill's case, the constitution of 1877 has received a construction different from what we think the law is, by a unanimous court, and as that decision cannot be reviewed and reversed, except by a unanimous court, and the Chief Justice adheres to that decision, we are powerless under the law, although we think that in criminal cases the jury are judges of tho law and facts, and are not bound by or compelled to lake the law as given them in charge by the court. The legislature should make this law so plain that there can be no doubt about it. There are no errors complained of that require a reversal of this case.

The verdict of the jury is sustained by the law and the evidence, and the judgment is affirmed.

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