On February 11, 1894, an inquisition was taken in Chatham county, Georgia, before the coroner of that county, upon view of the body of J. C. Neve. The coroner’s jury returned a verdict that Neve “came to his death from a gunshot wound inflicted by a weapon in the hands of Abe • Small, and we consider it murder.”
On March 24, 1897, Smalls filed in the superior court a peti
The judge, in his order sustaining the demurrer of the solicitor-general, says: “ The incidents and characteristics of a coroner’s inquest, under the old practice at common law in England, where the verdict could be used for prosecuting the offenders without and instead of an indictment by a grand jury (see Clarke’s Criminal Procedure, pp. 73, 130), and where it also fixed the value of the property forfeited, have disappeared in this State, the inquest and its finding amounting only to the finding of a court of inquiry.” This reason we consider sufficient to sustain the judgment of which complaint is here made. At common law the verdict of a coroner’s jury was, when it contained the subject-matter of an accusation, equivalent to an indictment of the accused for the homicide of the deceased. The writ, of melius inquirendum issued in certain cases, as where the misbehavior of the coroner rendered necessary another inquiry super visum corporis. Our laws relating to the subject differ fundamentally from the common law. In this State, under our present system, the verdict of a coroner’s jury is merely advisory to the officers charged with the execution of the public law, and may also make it the duty of the coroner to issue a warrant for the arrest of the person suspected of the homicide, but further than this it is without effect. Portions of the evidence given at the inquest may sometimes be admissible at the trial of the accused for the homicide, but the verdict has itself no probative effect as evidence, and is binding upon no one as-a judgment. It can prejudice
The judgment of the court below, sustaining the demurrer to the petition, was without error, and is therefore
Affirmed.