6 Ga. App. 770 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1909
Outside of the ordinary general grounds, the plaintiff in error assigns, as a reason why a new trial should have been granted, a ruling upon the part of the trial judge upon the testimony. This ruling was not invoked by the plaintiff in error, but by the solicitor in behalf of the State. It appears from the record that at the conclusion of the evidence O. H. Elkins, Esq., solicitor of the city court, moved to rule out the hearsay testimony that was brought -out in the cross-examination. Upon this the court ruled as follows: “I do not know just what the evidence is now. You should have made your objection at the time. But I will state to the jury, gentlemen of the jury, any evidence that appears to you, from the evidence from the stand, was hearsay evidence, you will not consider it.” The court properly ruled that the objection was too late, or at least too general, to invoke any ruling; and he perhaps should have stopped there. The only question which can possibly arise is whether the statement to the jury, that they should exclude any evidence that appeared to them to be hearsay evidence, is such an error as to authorize the reversal of the judgment refusing a new trial. We think not. It is true, of course, that it is for the judge to determine what is hearsay and what is not; and the dictum that the jury are the judges of the law and the evidence is subject to the qualification that they are to take the law from the court, and consider as evidence only such testimony as the court may submit to their consideration. But in the present case the plaintiff in error can derive no benefit from the point. If the language of the judge be taken as a direction to the jury to exclude
There is some conflict in the evidence as to the time that the rocking-chair which was alleged to have been stolen was first missed from the house of the prosecutrix, but the defendant’s own statement with regard to the manner in which she became possessed of the chair is so equivocal that, when taken in connection with the testimony in behalf of the State, it virtually amounts to a plea of guilty. There was no error in the refusal of the trial judge to grant a new trial. Judgment affirmed.