31 S.E.2d 349 | Ga. | 1944
1. The verdicts of the jury finding the defendants guilty of murder were authorized under the evidence for the State showing that they willfully and maliciously inflicted upon the deceased a wound from which death resulted.
(a) The fact that the deceased contracted pneumonia after leaving the hospital where he was treated for the wound inflicted by the defendants does not affect the question of the guilt of the defendants, where the uncontradicted testimony of the attending physician shows that the pneumonia was superinduced by the weakened condition of the deceased, resulting from his wound, and that death would have resulted from the wound regardless of the pneumonia.
2. The charge instructing the jury as to the rule of law applicable where death results from a wound as the primary or secondary cause of death, which is conceded to be a correct statement of the law, was not erroneous in that it excluded from the consideration of the jury independent or *213 natural causes from which death resulted. Indeed, its plain meaning is that convictions would not be authorized if death resulted from natural causes independently of such wounds as the defendants might have inflicted. Nor was it error, in the absence of a timely request, to fail to specifically so charge.
3. Where a ground of a motion for new trial is not approved by the trial judge, it can not be considered by the Supreme Court.
(a) Neither extrinsic evidence which tends to prove the ground, nor such evidence which tends to disprove it, will be considered.
The sheriff and the deputy sheriff both testified that when the defendants were arrested they both disclaimed all knowledge of the trouble at the juke joint or injury to Kirkus, one of them denying that he was even there on the occasion, and that neither has since changed his story.
1. "Where one inflicts an unlawful injury, such injury is to be accounted as the efficient, proximate cause of the death, whenever it shall be made to appear, either that (1) the injury itself constituted the sole proximate cause of the death; or that (2) the injury directly and materially contributed to the happening of a subsequent accruing immediate cause of the death; or that (3) the injury materially accelerated the death, although proximately occasioned by a pre-existing cause."Wilson v. State,
2. The first special ground relates to the charge on the cause of death. It sets forth a portion of the charge wherein the court said: "With reference to the cause of death where death results from an occurrence such as set out and charged in this bill of indictment, I charge you that if one should willfully, unlawfully, and with malice aforethought strike another with a weapon, thereby inflicting a wound which, though not necessarily a mortal wound, is the primary cause of a disease which brings about the death of the wounded person, then the one striking such a blow would be guilty of murder." The excerpt then applied the rule to the instant case, and charged further that one thus responsible would not be relived on account of negligence or lack of skill in the treatment of such wound — that it was for the jury to say if the wounds were inflicted upon the deceased, and, if so, if either of the defendants inflicted such wounds, and what was the effect of such wounds, and whether or not they were the primary cause or secondary cause of the death of the deceased, or whether they were related to the death. The movants concede that the charge is a correct statement of law and more than covers the State's theory, but it is insisted that "as framed and given" it excluded from the jury's consideration the theory of the defense, to wit, "from considering any other independent or natural causes which did not set in motion any other or secondary cause from which the deceased died." It is contended that the jury could have found from the evidence that death resulted from natural and independent causes unrelated to any wound or wounds, and that, in the absence of any request, the court should have submitted in its charge this theory of the defendants. In Pressley v. State,
3. The other special ground is not approved by the trial judge. The order of the judge expressly disapproved material portions thereof. There are in this record what purport to be affidavits, one made by counsel for one of the movants, and another by seven of the trial jurors, testifying to the correctness of this ground. There is also in the record an affidavit by the solicitor-general testifying to its incorrectness. None of these, if properly authenticated, would or could be considered by this court. It is the settled rule that the Supreme Court will not pass upon a ground of a motion for new trial which is not unqualifiedly approved by the trial judge.Clifton v. State,
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.