153 Ga. 147 | Ga. | 1922
John Thompson was tried under an indictment charging him with the murder of D. W. Huff, by shooting the decedent with a shotgun, and the jury trying the case returned a verdict of guilty. The defendant thereupon made a motion for a new trial, which contained the usual general grounds, and the additional ground that the court erred in admitting certain testimony set forth in the motion. Upon the hearing the court overruled the motion, and the defendant excepted.
This evidence of Woods was corroborated by the testimony of his wife. But a witness introduced by the State, Dr. H. W. Birdsong, testified: “ He [Huff] died about two o’clock. He lived about an hour after I saw him. The wound was just to the left of the lower end of the sternum about an inch to the left of the lower end of the breast bone — sternum. He lived about an hour after that. The cause of his death was a gunshot wound. I made a thorough examination of the wound. I found that the left lobe of the liver was shot into. First, -there was an opening through the skin about as big as a dollar, caused from a shotgun. The lobe of the liver was shot into, and also the lead went through the stomach and the large bowels, and also portions of' the smaller bowels was shot and the left kidney. The upper pole of the left kidney, and also the spleen. In the wound I found some shot and a few fragments of his clothing; and after he was carried to the undertaker’s parlor we went down there and opened him up, and found the wadding just at the upper pole of the kidney, wadding from a shotgun. He made a statement in my presence with reference to who did it; his condition at that time was fair. He was rational at that time. As to his condition or knowledge as to whether or not he would live, he thought he was dying. He told me before he made the statement he was dying. I asked him who shot him; and he said, the first time I understood him to sa.y, ‘Big John Thomas,’ and I asked him, ‘"Who did you say?’ and he said, ‘Big John Thompson.’ ” In answer to the question whether or not the decedent made any other statement about where he was or anything, witness answered, “ That was the only statement he made.” In answer to the question, “ Was anybody else present at that time ? ” witness answered, “Yes, Dr. Coffee and the night superintendent, Miss Hutchins. She is the night superintendent.” Dr. H, D,
Alex. Hill, a witness for the State, testified: “I have known 'Big John Thompson a'year or two. I never spoke to him as I know of, to recall of. As to any trouble with Mr. Huff and John Thompson prior to this — just about two weeks before he was killed, me and old man Doc [the decedent] was coming to town one Saturday evening, and old man Doc had loaned Big John five dollars, and he had been owing it three or four or five months, and old man Doc told me to stop up there, and sajrs, ‘I will ask old Big John if he has any money for me,’ and we stopped and asked him, and he told him, no, he didn’t have any money for him, and the old man says, ‘You just aint a negro of jmur word, or you would have paid me when you promised,’ and he says, ‘ God damn you, I will see you later,’ and turned around and walked off. That is all he ever said to him. What John Thompson stated to old man Doc was, Thompson told old man Doc, ‘ God damn you, I will see you later.’ This may have been two weeks before the killing, majhe a little less or maybe a little more.”
Notwithstanding the testimony of Mr. Woods and his wife as to the statement made by the decedent, the jury were authorized to find that the dying man, while absolutely in articulo mortis and fully conscious of his condition, made the statement that the defendant was the man who killed him. And there was also the evidence, slight though it may be, tending to show that the accused entertained feelings of enmity towards the dead man. It is urged in the arguments of counsel for the plaintiff in error that the dying declarations made by the decedent are not to be considered as anything more than an impression made upon the mind of the declarant. In other words, that it was a mere conclusion of his, and ought not to have any weight as a conclusion stated by him, in the absence of evidence of facts upon which he based that conclusion. Manifestly, the statement was one of fact, and a fact proper to go to the jury and to have such weight with them as it was entitled to under all the circumstances. That it was a single bare fact, unaccompanied by a statement of surrounding
■Judgment affirmed,.