175 Ga. 115 | Ga. | 1932
At the November term, 1930, of the superior court of Lowndes County, the jury trying the case of the State v. Austin Westberry returned a verdict of guilty, with a recommendation. In the indictment other defendants were jointly charged with murder, but Austin Westberry was tried alone. A motion for a new trial was made, and to the original motion a number of grounds were added by amendment. Upon the hearing of the motion the court overruled the same, and the defendant excepted.
A more elaborate statement of the facts in this case is contained in the report of the case of Allen Westberry, who was jointly indicted with the defendant in the instant case. See 174 Ga. 174 (163 S. E. 729). Bepetition here of that statement is unnecessary.
The court charged the jury, in part, as follows: “I charge you, gentlemen, that a dying declaration made by a person in the article of death, who is conscious of his condition, as to the cause of his death, and the person who killed him, are admissible in evidence in a prosecution for a homicide.” And then again in the following language: “ If you determine that such declaration was made by the said Mrs. Betty Browning in these circumstances claimed, while in the article of death, and that she was conscious of her condition, then you are to give the evidence contained in the declaration, if such were made, just such weight as you think they are entitled to have. You take the evidence of the witnesses touching dying declarations, consider the same, and determine all questions relating thereto by the same rules of evidence as you apply to other witnesses sworn in the case as to other matters.” And in another part of his charge the court gave further instructions relative to evidence of dying declarations of Mrs. Browning. Exceptions are taken to each and all these excerpts from the charge, and one of the exceptions is that there is no competent evidence to authorize a charge upon this subject, and that it was not applicable to the case. These exceptions are well taken. If the “evidence of the witnesses referred to in the first division of this opinion was erroneously admitted and should have been excluded, then there was no evidence in the case to which a charge upon the subject of dying declarations was applicable, and it was error to give the instructions excepted to.
The rulings made in the third, fourth, fifth, and sixth head-notes require no elaboration.
During the progress of the trial, over the' objection of
Error is assigned upon the ruling of the court admitting, over the objection of movant’s counsel that it was “irrelevant, immaterial, illegal, harmful and prejudicial,” the following testimony given by a witness for the State, to wit: “I saw Allen Westberry on the second Saturday night after the murder of the Brownings on August 21st. It was ten or twelve days after the murder that I saw him in Jennings, Florida. He wanted me to go to supper with him. I refused to go, and I saw him again in an hour or two. He seemed to be drinking, and still insisted that I go to supper with' him, and I refused again. And then he cursed and said the reason I would not go was I was afraid he did not have the
The rulings made in headnotes 9, 10, 11, and 12 require no elaboration.
Inasmuch as the case is remanded for a new trial, no opinion is expressed as to the sufficiency of the evidence.
Judgment reversed.