151 Ga. 743 | Ga. | 1921
This case came on to be heard in Chatham superior court, on the petition of Joe Buffin praying that the clerk of the superior court of Jenkins county be directed to transmit to the superior court of Chatham county an indictment found by the grand jury of Jenkins county on March 15, 1921, charging the petitioner with the offense of murder, in order that appropriate action might be had on the indictment by the superior court of Chatham county, and that pending consideration of the petition the petitioner be remanded to the custody of the sheriff of Chatham county. It was alleged in the petition, that the petitioner had been indicted by the grand jury of Jenkins county on March 15, 1921, for the murder of one Edmund Scott in said county on-April 13, 1919; that the indictment so found charged the petitioner with the same criminal act as that charged against him in two previous indictments found by the grand jury, of Jenkins county at the September term, 1919, on which indictments he had been fully acquitted upon his trial in the superior court - of Chatham county (a change of venue from Jenkins county to Chatham county having been granted), and that, by reason of the acquittal on the two previous indictments which involved the same transaction as charged by the indictment found on March 15, 1921, Jenkins superior court had no jurisdiction to try him upon the last indictment, but that the superior court of Chatham county did have jurisdiction. Upon consideration of the petition the judge of the superior court of Chatham county rendered the following judgment: “ I am of opinion that I have no power or jurisdiction to pass on the issues involved; the power or jurisdiction being vested in the superior court of Jenkins county and the judge thereof. Order is denied.” To this judgment the petitioner excepted.
Properly construed this is a case involving a change of venue, of which class of cases,- since the constitutional amendment of 1916 (Acts 1916, p. 19), the Court of Appeals, and not this court, has jurisdiction. Scoggins v. State, 24 Ga. App. 677, 678 (102 S. E. 39). No constitutional or other question is raised by the record