163 Ga. 304 | Ga. | 1926
Lead Opinion
On August 4, 1925, the body of a human being was found scattered along the tracks and right of way of the South
In the first special ground of the motion complaint is made of the failure of the judge to instruct the jury to the effect that any evidence on the subject of alibi should be considered by the jury in connection with aE other testimony, and that although the accused might not establish his alibi to the reasonable satisfaction of the jury as required by law, still if upon consideration of the evidence in support of alibi, in connection with all the other testimony in the case, a reasonable doubt was generated, the defendant would be entitled to be acquitted. Upon the subject of alibi the court' charged as follows: “In this ease the defendant enters his plea of not guilty; he contends that he was not present, that he knew nothing of the killing, that he was at another place at the time when the killing took place. He pleads what is known in law as alibi. I will give you the law of alibi, that you will understand what is necessary to be done in a case of alibi. Alibi, as a defense, involves the impossibility of the prisoner’s presence at the scene of the offense at the time of its commission, and the range of the evidence in respect to time and place must be such as reasonably to preclude the possibility of the defendant’s presence. Now that is what is necessary to appear before the defense of alibi is set up, and the burden is upon the defendant to show, to satisfy you, not beyond a reasonable doubt, as is required on the part of the State to prove all of the necessary allegations in the bill of indictment beyond a reasonable doubt; but when the defendant sets up the defense of alibi, then the burden is upon him to satisfy you to a moral and reasonable certainty that it was impossible for him to have been present at the scene of the offense at the time it was committed, and that is the burden that is upon the defendant when he relies upon the defense of alibi.” The foregoing is the only reference to the subject of alibi contained in the record. It will be observed that the court very distinctly informed the jury that
In Harrison v. State, 83 Ga. 129 (9 S. E. 542), Mr. Chief Justice Bleckley, after quoting approvingly from 2 Thompson on Trials, § 2436, as follows: “But upon the most unshaken grounds this burden is sustained, and an adequate quantum of proof produced by the defendant, when he succeeds in raising a reasonable doubt in the minds of the jurors as to whether or not he was at the place of the crime when it was committed,” said: “As well as we can formulate the rule prevailing in Georgia, we have done so in the third headnote to this opinion.” The headnote referred to is as follows: “Touching alibi, the rule in Georgia as established
The second special ground of the motion for a new trial complains that the court permitted the sheriff to testify that another witness for the State (Top McConnell) told him about how the killing occurred: “He told me just how it happened.” This testimony was objected to on the ground that it was an effort to bolster up the truth of that witness’s evidence by sayings of the
The court charged the jury: “The defendant further contends that the party came to his death, not at the hands of anybody, but that he was killed by the railroad; his insistence being that he, the deceased, in a state of intoxication walked upon or got upon the railroad-tracks, and was run over and killed by the railroad. He insists upon that. Of course the burden is upon the State to prove the corpus delicti; that is, they must prove the crime, prove that the man was killed by somebody.” It is insisted that the court erred in giving this instruction: (a) Because there was no evidence in the record even tending to show that the deceased was intoxicated, or that he was killed by a passing train, (b) Because the charge called attention of the jury to a defense wholly unsupported, and tended to impress on the minds of the jurors that movant was depending upon a false plea, (c) Because said charge was error, inasmuch as there is nothing in the evidence showing that movant depended upon the plea that the deceased was killed by the railroad, thus forcing upon movant a defense he did not make, which biased the minds of the jurors against him. Without holding that error can not be assigned upon an instruction when there is no evidence upon which the charge of the court can be predicated (for it is error to charge the jury upon any theory of law which is entirely unsupported by evidence), we must assume from the language of the instruction of which complaint is made that counsel for the plaintiff in error in his argument insisted that the deceased was killed while in a state of intoxication by being run over by a train. In these circumstances the principle stated in the third headnote requires no further elaboration.
The fourth ground of the motion for a new trial consists of two parts, the first complaining that the witnesses for the State who testified against the movant at the trial had been under duress; and the second, that all of the evidence against movant, considered together with the evidence in his favor, “shows that movant’s conviction is not based upon that character of proof required to
Judgment reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. We dissent from the judgment reversing the judgment of the court below. In the absence of a written request, the charge of the court on the subject of alibi was sufficient. We do not think the cases cited in the majority opinion hold that it was necessary for the judge to charge, in the absence of a written request, as the plaintiff in error here insists.