100 Ga. 659 | Ga. | 1897
Henry White was indicted in Muscogee superior courk for the offense of murder, the indictment alleging the homi- • cide of William Jackson by him on the 14th day of October, 1896. On the 18th day of November thereafter the; case came on for trial, and the defendant moved the court' to grant a change of venue, upon the ground that in consequence of the strong local prejudice existing in the county of Muscogee against him, he could not obtain a fair trial m that county. Upon the hearing of this motion a number of witnesses were sworn, and in addition to their testimony much documentary evidence, consisting of extracts' from the daily papers in the city of Columbus immediately following the homicide, were introduced in evidence. The; testimony shows, that at the time of the homicide there was intense feeling in the city of Columbus against the accused; but even the witnesses who swore in his behalf testified that the public mind had undergone a change, that this excitement had to a great extent abated, and that in their opinion the accused could be fairly and properly triedi in the county of Muscogee. The trial judge overruled the-motion for a change of venue, proceeded with the trial, and empanelled the jury without exhausting the list of" names of persons in the jury-box who were subject to jury duty.
Upon the trial it was shown that because of some difficulty in which J. A. White, the father of the accused, became engaged in the morning, both he and the accused were summoned by certain members of the police force to appear in the recorder’s court. Upon this provocation, and none other, so far as the record discloses, both J. A. White and the accused became very much enraged and incensed against the police force of the city of Columbus. They
The accused was convicted, and moved for a new trial,. (1) upon the general grounds, that the verdict was contrary to law, contrary to evidence, and without evidence - to support it. (2) Upon the further ground that the court,. over objection of the accused, permitted Means Brannon,, a witness for the State, to testify as'follows: “I saw Mr.. Will Jackson the day he was shot; I saw him at the Vernon. Hotel in Columbus, Ga. He said he did not expect to get: well; he called me over to the bed and said, ‘Mr. Brannon,, that young boy shot me down like a dog, shot me down like - a dog,’ repeating it. He [Jackson] did not say whether he - shot or not.” The objection was, that this was the opinion,. statement, conclusion and declaration of Jackson; and that, in order for a dying declaration to go to the jury, it should be a statement of a fact which is a part of the res gestae. (3) Further, because the wife of William Jackson, as a. witness, was permitted to testify (over the objection that the same was hearsay and illegal, and did not show the • condition of the pistol at the time of the homicide), that’, she identified the pistol as that of the deceased; that she • last saw it on the morning before he was shot in the even- - ing, he having then put it into his pocket by her bedside ■ where she lay in bed sick; that all the chambers were loaded but one; he always carried it on an empty cartridge; that he had oiled the pistol that day and put that in, and spoke of it when he put it in. (4) Further, because, after the • State had closed its case, and defendant had submitted testimony, together with his statement,, and closed, the-
1. Prior to the passage of the act approved December 17th, 1895, it was necessary that the trial judge should examine all persons in the county where the crime was committed, who were liable to serve on juries, before the venue of a criminal case could he changed to a county other than that' wherein the offense was alleged to have been committed. That act institutes a new order of things; and now it is competent for the judge of the superior court, in any criminal case, to change the venue of the trial of such case whenever, in his judgment, an impartial trial cannot he
2. The court did not err in admitting the dying declarations, of which complaint is made. According to the provisions of our Penal Code, §1000, “Dying declarations, made by any 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 the homicide.” The question in this case is
4. To the proposition announced in the 4th head-note’ supra, to the effect that it is within the discretion of the trial judge, after the accused has concluded the introduction of his evidence, to permit the solicitor-general to introduce further testimony, either in rebuttal of the evidence offered by the accused, or in corroboration or confirmation of witnesses introduced on behalf of the State, it is only necessary to refer ¡tío the case of Bird v. The State, 14 Ga. 43, where nit wlas held: “The State, otn a trial for murder, proved the killing and the attending circumstances, and closed. The prisoner then proved facts and circumstances going to rebut the presumption of malice: Held,, that it wtas ithen competent fbr the State to prhve, in surrebuttal, express malice.” And also the case of Walker v. Walker, reported on page 242 of the same volume, in which this court uses the following expression: “It should require a very strong case of threatened evil, to justify a court in preventing a party from giving additional confirmatory, cumulative and corroborative evidence, either of facts previously proved, or which tends to strengthen, add force or probability to such evidence.” A number of other cases in our own reports hold directly to the same effect, and this is in harmony with the rule which prevails elsewhere. See Thompson on Trials, §348. According to that authority, the matter of reopening a case to admit additional evidence, whether the case be civil or criminal, is always within the discretion of the trial judge, and affords no ground for the reversal of a judgment denying
5, 6. In view of the facts and circumstances attendant upon the commission of this homicide, we are fully per.suaded that the alleged newly discovered evidence would not and ought not to produce a different result. If human testimony is to be believed, the deceased, passing along a public street in the discharge of his public duties, was ■violently set upon by two desperate men and, without the slightest provocation from him, was deliberately and in ■ cold blood shot to death. The evidence demonstrates that he was shot from the rear by one of his assailants when he had sought refuge behind a neighboring building from the violence of another of his assailants. There is not the ■slightest circumstance of excuse, justification, extenuation, or even palliation of the guilt of the accused. Ho jury which had the slightest respect for its oath of office could, upon its conscience, return a verdict of acquittal; and however much we may deplore the unfortunate circum:stances which have brought this young man to his untimely end, it must be remembered that while the law should he administered in mercy, it should strike with a mailed hand the man who deliberately and in cold blood takes the life of a fellow-cfeature. The trial judge did not err in refusing a new trial; and the judgment stands
Affirmed.