27 S.E.2d 667 | Ga. | 1943
1. While customarily a remittitur from this court is not transmitted to the trial court until ten days shall have elapsed from the time of rendition of judgment by this court, it is within the discretion of the court to order it forwarded sooner. The remittitur having, in the discretion of this court, been forwarded to the trial court in less than the usual period of ten days, it was the duty of the judge to make the judgment of this court the judgment of the trial court, and his action in doing so afforded no legal ground for objection to such entry, or to support a motion to vacate the judgment, or to grant a postponement of the hearing of the case which was set for trial within two days from the time of entry of such judgment.
2. Where the prosecutrix was unable to state the exact spot or hollow in which, as she testified, the defendant committed the alleged crime for which he was being tried, but testified that the crime was committed between the house of the defendant's father and a certain river, venue *768 was sufficiently proved by the State when another witness, a deputy sheriff, testified, that, although he could not say what particular spot or hollow the prosecutrix was referring to in the testimony which he heard, he had been in that locality, and that, if the crime was committed at a spot between the described house and the river, that spot was in the county wherein the case was being tried.
3. The evidence requiring a verdict of guilty of the major offense of rape, if guilty at all, the court did not err in refusing to give a requested charge on the law of assault with intent to rape.
4. Where the evidence is conflicting as to whether a particular thing did or did not occur, it is the general rule that if the judge charges the jury that the existence of a fact testified to by one positive witness is rather to be believed than that such fact did not exist because many witnesses who had the same opportunity of observation swear that they did not see or know of its having transpired, it is reversible error not to charge in connection therewith the proviso that the witnesses be of equal credibility; but such a charge as to the weight to be given to positive and negative testimony, without the qualification named, will not require a reversal when the positive testimony in regard to the fact under consideration is introduced by the losing party and the negative testimony is introduced by the successful party, since such a charge would be more favorable to the losing party than he would have a right to ask.
5. The objection that a quoted excerpt of the charge was erroneous and injurious because it was a summary of the evidence for the State, favorable to the State, without a summary of the evidence on cross-examination, favorable to the defendant, and was argumentative, and an expression of an opinion by the court, and incomplete and confusing, is without merit.
6. The charge of the court, that "if the defendant by means or display of a weapon brought such fear to the female that she was afraid not to consent, and if by the use of a weapon she was intimidated to the extent that she dared not [refuse] to give her consent, and the defendant under these circumstances had carnal knowledge of her, and you believe that to be the truth of the case beyond a reasonable doubt, then I charge you that intercourse with [the prosecutrix] under such circumstances would be rape whether [the prosecutrix] offered any physical resistance or not," stated a correct principle of law as applied to the evidence, and was not error for the assigned reasons that it was the expression of an opinion, and made a summary of the evidence favorable to the State and prejudicial to the defendant.
7. Where the court charged on the question of corroboration that the jury may look to "all the facts and circumstances of the case; and if the evidence showed that a rape was committed upon her, the jury should investigate whether she made at the time or soon thereafter an outcry, and whether or not her clothes were torn or her body or person was bruised and bleeding or scratched," which was authorized by the evidence, the further charge, "and on the question of corroboration you may consider any other act or any other thing which the defendant — which the person alleged to have been raped may have done," was not subject to the objection that it was too broad, and, in connection with *769 the statement of the court immediately theretofore, was the expression of an opinion that the prosecutrix made an outcry and that her clothing was torn and her body bruised, bleeding, and scratched at the time of such outcry following the alleged rape upon her by the defendant.
8. The ground consisting of several pages wherein are related numerous occurrences on the trial of the case, objections by defendant's counsel, colloquies between counsel, rulings by the court, and other matters, is too improperly framed and confusing to present any question for decision.
9. The ground complaining that the court refused to permit the defendant's counsel to ask the prosecutrix a certain question as to her conduct while being held as a material witness at the jail is incomplete and without merit, for reasons shown in the opinion, infra.
10. The refusal of the court to permit defendant's counsel to seek to elicit from the prosecutrix, on cross-examination, testimony that while her husband was in jail on one occasion she had been at the home of a named negro woman, dancing with other men, was not prejudicial error on the ground that it deprived the defendant of the right to show by another person that the prosecutrix did engage in such conduct.
11. The testimony of a deputy sheriff, referred to in headnote 2 above, fixing the venue as the county in which the case was being tried, was not subject to the objection that it was hearsay; the witness being familiar with the territory described by the prosecutrix, and his information as to the alleged crime having been committed in such locality having been acquired by him from testimony of the prosecutrix in the course of the trial, and not otherwise. While the witness's knowledge of the described locality was based on reputation, and not from an actual survey made by him, that fact did not render his testimony inadmissible on the question of venue.
12. Another ground involves the same question dealt with in the preceding headnote, and is without merit.
13. The question asked by the court of a witness testifying as to venue, "But the place she locates in her testimony is in Lumpkin County," was not, when considered in the context of other questions asked by the court to test the knowledge of the witness, harmful error for the assigned reason that it conveyed to the jury the idea that proof of location had been made, and that the court was satisfied as to the venue.
14. The action of the court in restraining the defendant's counsel from continuing to question the prosecutrix on a subject which, as properly termed by the court, was a delicate matter, as affecting the sensibilities of a female witness, and which the record shows to have been sufficiently presented to the jury, was not harmful error on the ground that it amounted to an expression of an opinion, created a sympathy for the witness, and was a rebuke to counsel; but it was a proper exercise of the right of the court to restrain useless and unnecessary prolongation of examination, and to control the conduct of counsel towards an opposing witness.
15. The statement by the court to the defendant's counsel, that if he did not contend that the prosecutrix had changed her testimony, after counsel had stated that he did not so contend, it would be unfair to her to *770 question her in that respect, was not error for the assigned reason that it constituted harmful and prejudicial error against the defendant, and created in the minds of the jury the impression that the witness was being unfairly treated and disparaged defendant's counsel. 16. The verdict was authorized by the evidence.
The prosecutrix testified that she had been married for a year and seven months, was twenty-one years of age, and knew the defendant. On August 16, 1942, she and her husband met the defendant at Tommy Porter's store, where a meeting was being held, sundown. Bud Washington, a colored man in the company of the defendant, called her and her husband to where the defendant was in his truck, and the defendant told them that he had a job for her husband, and that he would pay him two dollars a day and keep one dollar on the money her husband owed him. He stated that he had a shack he wanted to rent them, and asked them to go and see it. They went to the shack, and decided to live in it. After leaving this place, and riding in the truck with the defendant, the truck was stopped on the road, and the defendant asked Bud Washington to get out and fix the truck. Her husband got out at this time, and the defendant requested him to get a tire tube and to knock the cap off the gas tank; and when her husband was bringing the tube the defendant struck him with a pistol and kicked him in the stomach, and after that her husband ran. She immediately started screaming and crying, and the defendant drew his pistol on her, and with his pistol continuously pointed at her he made her cross the river near by on a foot-log, and made the statement that he was going to do to her as he pleased that night. She was afraid of him, and begged him to let her alone and let her go home. They walked across the foot-log and went up a hill and down in a hollow, and the negro came along, and there was another negro with them, Harvey Webb, but he ran when the trouble started. The defendant made her go through a briar-patch and finally stopped at a place in the woods, from which he sent Bud Washington to get a bottle with some whisky in it. He grabbed her by the foot, threw her down, and pulled up her dress and slip, and when she would *771 move he would slap her in the mouth, and he had a pistol, and she was afraid of him and begged him not to have intercourse with her; but he did have intercourse with her twice, despite her begging and offering such resistance as she could. The rape occurred near the home of the defendant's father, Will Rider. She was not sure whether or not it was in Lumpkin County. The defendant tried to have a third intercourse with her, but stopped when Bud Washington came back with the whisky, and he drank the whisky, and later dropped off to sleep; and she crawled up a gully and ran off and went to the house of Mrs. Emory Brackett. She told her what had happened to her, and asked her to take her to town where she could report the crime to the sheriff. Mrs. Brackett said they had a flat tire on their car, and that their truck had gone to the sawmill. The prosecutrix left the house, hitched-hiked a ride with two men, and went to Dahlonega and swore out a warrant against the defendant before a justice of the peace, and told him what had happened. The warrant was turned over to Argo, a deputy sheriff of Lumpkin County. On the next day the prosecutrix went to a doctor, who examined her legs where they were scratched by briars, and he dressed them. On cross-examination she testified that she had known the defendant for some time, and at one time she borrowed $4 from him to get her husband out of jail. While she was being detained in jail as a material witness, she made a trick by placing a coca-cola glass in a jug, and the defendant put some pennies in the glass, and she wrote a letter to the judge of the superior court for the defendant. She also copied a song for him. She denied having sexual intercourse with the defendant or any one else while she was in jail, and denied having intercourse with any one except her husband, and with the defendant at the time he raped her.
Mrs. Emory Brackett, for the State, testified that she lived in the Auroria District of Lumpkin County, and that on the preceding August 16 and 17 she lived a few miles from Dahlonega on the highway near where Will Rider lived. On the morning of August 17, 1942, she saw the prosecutrix in her yard at the house, and she came up the highway. She was not very well acquainted, and she did not notice that her legs were scratched and whether or not she was barefooted, but the prosecutrix made the complaint to her and requested her to take her to town or send her to town in her automobile. *772 She did not do this, because the tire on her car was flat, and her husband had the truck at the sawmill. The prosecutrix left her home, going in the direction of Dahlonega.
Kenneth Argo, for the State, testified that he was deputy sheriff of Lumpkin County, and saw the prosecutrix at Woody's barbershop on August 17, 1942. She came to him and made an outcry against the defendant. A warrant was placed in his hands for execution, charging the defendant with rape. When she came to him, her feet and legs were scratched. He did not make any examination of her, and did not notice whether her mouth and lips appeared to be swollen. He was familiar with the place where the crime was supposed to have been committed. He took the warrant, went down in the neighborhood of Will Rider's place, found him and his wife and daughter and informed them that he had a warrant for the defendant; and Will Rider told him he would find the defendant and bring him on to Dahlonega. Within a short while Will Rider brought the defendant to Dahlonega, where Argo served the warrant.
Dr. S. A. West, for the State, testified that the prosecutrix came to his house on August 17, 1942, where he examined her and found her feet and legs were scratched up, which scratches he presumed were made by briars, and that the husband of the prosecutrix also came to him, and he found wounds on his head and deep lacerations of the skull, which he believed to have been made by some hard instrument. The witness was unable to state definitely what kind of instrument made these head wounds.
Mrs. Emily Butler, for the State, testified that on the occasion of the alleged rape she saw the prosecutrix and her husband. They came by her house and asked her to go with them to church. She could not go. Shortly after they left her house, the defendant and the negro, Bud Washington, came to her home and asked for the prosecutrix and her husband. She told them they had gone up the road. The defendant and Washington whistled and tried to get them, but did not follow them in the truck. They made the remark that it was all right, they would get them that night. On the day after the alleged crime was committed the prosecutrix showed her a dress, which she identified. The prosecutrix was in her room crying when she got there, and made a complaint or outcry against the defendant. The witness looked at the feet and *773 legs of the prosecutrix, and they were all torn to pieces, but did not see anything wrong with her mouth and face. She also remembered the evening when the prosecutrix borrowed money from the defendant, and on that afternoon she came home and stayed with her "all day long."
The husband of the prosecutrix testified substantially as did the prosecutrix with reference to the trip in the truck with the defendant and the occurrences after it was stopped, and shortly before the prosecutrix, as she testified, was forced into the woods by the defendant, who struck him with a pistol and kicked him in his stomach; and he ran from the place and did not see his wife until the next morning.
The State introduced the warrant sworn out by the prosecutrix and a transcript of the testimony of the defendant given before the judge of the superior court on his application for bail, in which he denied ever having intercourse with the prosecutrix.
The defendant offered witnesses who swore as to the reputation of the prosecutrix, and stated that they would not believe her on oath, and that she had a bad reputation in the community in which she lived.
In his statement to the jury the defendant denied that he raped the prosecutrix, and denied the facts testified to by the prosecutrix and her husband as to the happenings on the night of August 16, 1942. He stated that he had loaned money to the prosecutrix and her husband on numerous occasions, and had intercourse with her in different sections of north Georgia, with her consent. He denied ever having raped her.
The jury returned a verdict of guilty with recommendation of mercy, and that the defendant's punishment be fixed at from ten to twelve years. The defendant filed a motion for new trial, and the exception is to the overruling of the motion.
1. Special ground 1 of the motion for new trial complains that the court erred in forcing the defendant to trial in the following circumstances: On April 13, 1943, this court, as reported in Rider v. State,
While, as asserted in the motion it is the practice of this court to hold up a remittitur for ten days following its judgment, "The court may by special order in any case direct that the remittitur be transmitted to the clerk of the trial court immediately after the rendition of the decision and judgment, or at any other time, without awaiting expiration of the usual period of ten days." Rule 40(a). "Whether the remittitur shall be forwarded earlier than the time fixed in the above rule is a question addressed to the discretion of the court." SeaboardAir-Line Ry. v. Jones,
Nor did the court err in refusing a continuance. It appears that on the former trial of the case the defendant was represented by the same three attorneys who represented him in the present proceeding, and who were presumably well acquainted with the details of the case the State would endeavor to make against the defendant, and it is not shown in the ground that it was expected that any evidence contradicting the contentions of the State as to the commission of the alleged crime might be obtained, or that any additional witness was procurable, or former witnesses actually inaccessible. Numerous citations might be made to the effect that an application for a continuance is always addressed to the sound discretion of the judge, and that his discretion will not be disturbed unless it appears that the refusal of a continuance was an abuse of discretion. No merit is shown in this ground.
2. It is complained that the venue of Lumpkin County where the case was tried was not established. The prosecutrix testified that the alleged act of rape was committed "up there where Mr. Rider [referring to the father of the defendant] lives back in them hills. I aint lernt what county it is in. It was between Will Rider's house and the river." A deputy sheriff testified for the State, that he heard her describe the location, that while he did not know that he had been to the exact spot he had been in that location, that the place she located is in Lumpkin County, that all of the territory between Will Rider's house and the river is in Lumpkin County, though he could not say in what particular hollow it was that the prosecutrix and the defendant were at the time of the alleged commission of the crime as related by her. The contention that this testimony did not show venue of Lumpkin County cannot be upheld. The prosecutrix had testified that the alleged crime was committed in a hollow in the vicinity of the home of the father of the defendant, which was in her sight at the time, but that she could not exactly describe the particular hollow; though she testified that the spot where the alleged crime was committed was between that house and the river. The deputy sheriff, while not able to say from her testimony just what particular hollow she was referring to as being in that locality, affirmatively swore that he had been in the described locality; and that if the alleged crime *776
was committed at a spot between the house and the river, that spot was in Lumpkin County, all of the territory embracing the spot being in Lumpkin County. There was no evidence which warranted even a bare conjecture that the crime was committed elsewhere; and the venue was sufficiently established. SeeWomble v. State,
3. It is complained that the court erred in refusing to give a requested charge on the offense of assault with intent to rape, which, it is contended, was applicable to the evidence, because the testimony of the prosecutrix showed that "in one instance the defendant was scuffling with her when Bud Washington came up, and he did not accomplish the act." If this unsuccessful attempt had been the only criminal act shown by the evidence, there would be much force in this argument; but it is without merit, for the reason that the testimony of the prosecutrix was that shortly theretofore the defendant had had sexual intercourse with her, forcibly and against her will, and if the jury believed her he was guilty of the major completed offense of rape. As ruled by this court on the former appearance of the case: "`No person shall be convicted of an assault with intent to commit a crime, . . when it shall appear that the crime intended, or the offense attempted, was actually perpetrated by such person at the time of such assault, or in pursuance of such attempt.' Code, § 27-2508. Although a conviction of assault with intent to rape, under § 26-1404, may be had on an indictment for rape where the act was attempted but not completed (Johnson v. State,
4. The court charged the jury: "I charge you that the existence of a fact testified to by one positive witness is to be believed rather than that such fact did not exist because many witnesses who had the same opportunity of observation swear that they did not see or know of its having transpired. This rule does not apply when two parties, or two persons, having equal opportunities, or equal facilities, for seeing or hearing, or knowing a thing, and where one swears that it occurred, or it existed, and the other swears that it did not occur or did not exist." Error is assigned on the grounds that (a) it was inapplicable, (b) confusing to the jury in that there was no negative testimony, and since there was positive testimony by the prosecutrix it was the duty of the jury under the charge to believe her, and (c) the court failed to charge the necessary qualifying words "being of equal credibility." It has many times been held that it is reversible error for the court to give in charge the provisions of the Code § 38-111, as did the court here, without also charging as contended by the plaintiff in error. A general charge on credibility of witnesses does not cure the defect, because, though under such charge the jury might find that a witness swearing positively is of less credibility than one swearing negatively, still to give in charge § 38-111, without the qualifying words "of equal credibility," might confuse the jury and cause them to believe that notwithstanding the general charge on credibility they must accept the sworn positive testimony of a less credible witness in preference to that of a cautious witness, more credible, who testifies negatively. Atlanta Consolidated Street Ry. Co. v. Bigham,
5. Ground 5 complains that a quoted excerpt of the charge was erroneous and injurious, because it was a summary of evidence of a witness for the State, favorable to the State, and without a summary of the evidence on cross-examination, favorable to the defendant, was argumentative and an expression of an opinion by the court, and was unsound, incomplete, and confusing to the jury in its indefiniteness. This ground has been carefully considered, and is without merit, and no discussion is deemed profitable. *779
6. The charge complained of in ground 6 was: "In other words, gentlemen, if the defendant by means or display of a weapon brought such fear to the female that she was afraid not to consent, and if by the use of a weapon she was intimidated to the extent that she dared not [refuse to] give her consent, and the defendant under these circumstances had carnal knowledge with her, and you believe that to be the truth of the case beyond a reasonable doubt, then I charge you that intercourse with [the prosecutrix] under such circumstances would be rape, whether [the prosecutrix] offered any physical resistance or not." This stated a correct principle of law as applied to the evidence, and was not error for the assigned reasons that it was an expression of opinion and made a summary of the evidence favorable to the State and prejudicial to the defendant. See Allen v. State,
7. The charge complained of in ground 7, "and on the question of corroboration you may consider any other act or any other thing which the defendant — which the person alleged to have been raped may have done," is not subject to the objection that it was too broad and, in connection with the statement by the court immediately theretofore, was an expression of opinion that the prosecutrix had made an outcry, and that her clothing was torn and her body bruised, bleeding, and scratched at the time of such outcry following the alleged rape upon her by the defendant. The court had charged immediately before this instruction that on the question of corroboration the jury may look to "all the facts and circumstances of the case; and if the evidence showed that a rape was committed upon her, the jury should investigate whether she made at the time or soon thereafter an outcry, and whether or not her clothes were torn or her body or person was bruised or bleeding or scratched;" all of which inquiry, to which the court directed the jury, was authorized by the evidence. The charge was not error for any reason assigned.
8. The ground consisting of several pages wherein are related numerous occurrences on the trial of the case, objections by defendant's counsel, colloquies between counsel, rulings by the court, and other matters, is too improperly framed and confusing to present any question for decision. Johns v. State,
9. Ground 9 complains that the court refused to allow the defendant's counsel to ask the prosecutrix, while on cross-examination, questions which would, as stated, have elicited answers that a lock on the inside of her cell at the jail had been tampered with and was repaired or replaced by the jailor, but that she did not tamper with it; that the defendant reported this to the wife of the jailor; that other inmates were denied the run of the jail, and she was confined to her cell. This is not a complaint because full cross-examination was denied, but rather that withholding the expected testimony injured the defendant. The ground does not show how the evidence would have been material, and hence shows no injury.
10. The ruling in headnote 10 does not require further exposition.
11. Ground 11 complains that the court erred in permitting a deputy sheriff to testify: "I did hear her testimony [that of the prosecutrix] yesterday, about where she says this took place, the intercourse out here. That is in Lumpkin County." The objection was that the testimony was hearsay and prejudicial, as no venue had otherwise been proved. The testimony was not hearsay. The witness was not giving an opinion which was based on something stated to him by the prosecutrix out of court, but was testifying as to knowledge of territory described by the prosecutrix in her testimony as that in which the alleged crime was committed. The record shows that while he testified that he could not, from the testimony of the prosecutrix, identify the exact spot where she testified that the crime was committed, he was familiar with the locality between the house of the defendant's father and a river, as testified to by the prosecutrix, and that such locality, within which she swore the alleged crime was committed, was in Lumpkin County in which the case was being tried. While the witness's knowledge of the described locality was based on hearsay, and not from an actual survey made by him, that fact did not render his testimony inadmissible. Wimbish v. State,
12. Ground 12 involves the same question as just dealt with, and is likewise without merit. *781
13. While a deputy sheriff was on the witness-stand and had stated that he heard the prosecutrix testify as to the place where the alleged crime was committed, being between the house of the defendant's father and a certain river, and with which he was familiar, and that it was in Lumpkin County, the court asked, "And you know where the river is in reference to that place?," to which the witness answered, "I don't know as I have been to the exact spot, but I have been in that location."Thereupon the court asked "But the place she locates in her testimony is in Lumpkin County?" The witness answered, "Yes, sir." In ground 13 complaint is made that the last question asked by the court was harmful error, in that it conveyed to the jury the idea that proof of location had been made, and that the court was satisfied as to the venue. We think that the only significance to be attached to the question is that it was thereby sought to be established whether or not the witness was able to say that the location described by the prosecutrix was in Lumpkin County, although he had testified that he had not been to the "exact spot." In other words, the substance of the examination was as if the court had said, "I understand you to say that you have not been to the exact spot [described by the prosecutrix as a hollow between the house of the defendant's father and the river], but that the locality embracing the spot is in Lumpkin County?" No merit is shown in this ground.
14. During the cross-examination by one of the defendant's counsel the prosecutrix made reference to an unsuccessful attempt by the defendant to have a third forcible intercourse with her, which attempt was frustrated by the approach of a third person, and the defendant was thus reduced to a state of sexual unreadiness or, as described by the prosecutrix, he was without "courage." Counsel then asked several questions in respect to the prosecutrix's choice and meaning of the word "courage," and she indicated to counsel by her answers that she felt that she had conveyed the idea she meant to express, "whatever you call it." Counsel then stated that he thought he knew what the witness meant, and, using a very bald word, asked if it was what the witness meant by "courage," and when he sought to pursue the subject further the court intervened and said, "Well now, gentlemen, let's go along. This is a delicate matter. This girl refers to `courage,' and you refer to [the bald word], and she says `whatever you call it.' I think that *782
is enough." Error is assigned on the ground that the statement by the court was an expression of opinion, created a sympathy for the witness, and was a rebuke to counsel for the defense. Not only may the court restrain useless and unnecessary examination (Sims v. State,
15. During cross-examination of the prosecutrix the court stated to the defendant's counsel, "I will permit you to ask her if she has changed her testimony in any substantial way; but in fairness to the witness you should point out to her the specific matters where you contend she has changed her testimony." Counsel replied, "I haven't contended that yet this morning," and the court then stated, "If you don't contend that, then it is unfair to ask the witness." In ground 15 complaint is made that the statements of the court were harmful and prejudicial to the defendant, and created in the minds of the jury the impression that the prosecutrix was being treated unfairly, and disparaged defense counsel. This ground is without merit, and is controlled by the principles of law announced in the preceding division.
16. The verdict was authorized by the evidence.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.