44 S.C. 325 | S.C. | 1895
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The three defendants above named were indicted and tried jointly under a charge of arson, in burning the gin house of one James P. Johnson, and upon their trial they were all convicted and recommended to the mercy of the court. After the verdict was'rendered, the defendant, Rhodes, moved for a new trial upon the minutes of the court, which motion was refused, and the defendant, Rhodes, was sentenced to imprisonment in the State penitentiary at hard labor, for the term of twelve years. From this judgment the defendant, Jasper N. Rhodes, alone appeals, on the several grounds set out in the record; the other two defendants not appealing.
How this testimony can be construed (not to use a stronger term) into an effort on the part of the solicitor to convey the idea to the jury that appellant was selling liquor on Sunday, which, judging from the argument of counsel for appellant, constitutes the gravamen of the objection, it is impossible to conceive, and the suggestion of any such purpose is based solely upon the purest conjecture. The witness was not asked if he got any liquor from appellant, and as there were several other persons present, there was not the slightest reason to assume that the intention was to show that the witness got any liquor from appellant, or even that he had any; though another of defendant’s witnesses was permitted to say, without objection, that he and the appellant did go out of the house and got a drink. It is very obvious that the sole purpose of the testimony, which constitutes a basis of this ground of appeal, was to ascertain whether the witness Grant was unable to identify
The judgment of this court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed. •