79 Ga. 773 | Ga. | 1887
The plaintiff in error was tried in McDuffie superior court for the offence of murder, and the jury returned a verdict of guilty with a recommendation to mercy. A motion for a new trial was made upon the grounds (1) that the verdict was contrary to the evidence; (2) that the verdict was decidedly against the weight of evidence; (3) that the verdict was contrary to law; (1) that the court, after a juror, W. J. Paschal, had been put upon the defendant by the State, and accepted as a juror by the defendant, allowed the State to withdraw its acceptance of said juror, and have his name stricken from the list of accepted jurors, and refused to allow the defendant to retain said W. J. Paschal as a juror to try said case, said juror not having been shown incompetent.
When the motion came on to be heard, the plaintiff in error amended his motion and added the 5th ground, as follows: “Because of the disqualification of the foreman of the jury which tried him, for that Huriah Reese, one of the jurors rendering said verdict and acting as foreman of the panel, had previously to the trial formed and expressed the opinion that movant was guilty of murder, and should be hung; which state of facts was unknown to movant and his counsel until after the said trial.”
¥e do not agree with the plaintiff in error upon this question. We think that the act of 1875 (acts 1875, p. 106,) is conclusive on this point, a recommendation to mercy in capital cases of homicide being therein defined or declared to mean a recommendation to imprisonment for life. This section of that act is omitted from the code of 1882. Judge Bleckley, in his report of omissions in the code of 1882, refers to this section as one of the acts so omitted; and for some reason it seems that it was again omitted from the addenda made up from his report and attached to the code. It was claimed by the plaintiff in error that this act was not of force, and was repealed by the act of 1878, amendatory to section 4323 of the code. The act of 1878 simply changed that section of the code so as to permit a recommendation by the jury in capital cases, without regal'd to whether the evidence is merely circumstantial or not. And the act of 1875 is just as consistent with section 4323 after its amendment as it was before. This ground of exception therefore cannot be maintained. The act was a proper subject of legislation, and beyond doubt is still of force. The act being of force, it is an answer to the decisions relied upon by the plaintiff in error in 35 Ga. (above cited), and 48 Ga. 119 and 49 Ga. 451.
Indeed, in our opinion, we think the act was passed to meet the views of this court as pronounced in these cases. We, therefore, hold that the verdict of the jury in recommending the prisoner to mercy, instead of recommending that he be imprisoned in the penitentiary for life, under the act of 1875, means the same as if they had recommended imprisonment for life. The act declares that that shall be the meaning of this particular verdict. It would be the better practice, however, for the judge below to
Upon this statement of the facts, we do not think this was error. The reporter was not charged with the duty of accepting or rejecting jurors. His duty was simply to relieve the solicitor-general of propounding these questions to the jury. This is frequently done in several circuits of this State, either by the reporter or the clerk of the court, in order to relieve the solicitor-general, who, if he is any way feeble, sometimes breaks down before the trial commences; but in no case do they exercise the right to represent the solicitor-general in accepting or rejecting jurors. This being a mere inadvertence on the part of the reporter in putting the juror upon the prisoner before the solicitor-general had signified his acceptance, we hold that it was not error in the court to allow the solicitor-general his challenge.
Judgment affirmed.