Andrews v. State

290 S.E.2d 71, 249 Ga. 223, 1982 Ga. LEXIS 776
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 6, 1982
Docket38213
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 290 S.E.2d 71 (Andrews v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrews v. State, 290 S.E.2d 71, 249 Ga. 223, 1982 Ga. LEXIS 776 (Ga. 1982).

Opinion

Weltner, Justice.

Joe Louis Andrews shot and killed his wife with a handgun. He was convicted of murder, and sentenced to life imprisonment. He appeals, urging fourteen enumerations of error, none of which is significant with the exception of that attacking the trial judge’s admitting over objection the testimony of two emergency room nurses who attended the victim before her death.

The essential facts of the case are these: Andrews was in his automobile, and had in his right hand a pistol. He instructed one of his children to tell his wife to come from the house to the driveway, where he was parked. The wife came close to the driver’s side of the car. The gun discharged, striking her in the chest and thumb. Andrews drove her to the hospital, where she received treatment and shortly thereafter died.

Andrews testified that he had the gun in his hand in order to remove it from the car, as one of the couple’s children might be expected to use the car on that evening; that as he opened the door to *224 get out of the car, the gun accidentally discharged, even though his finger was not on the trigger; that the discharge of the gun was an accident, and he had no intention of inflicting any harm upon his wife. A blood-alcohol test recorded .27 grams percent alcohol content of Andrews’ blood. Powder burns on the victim’s skin indicated that the gun was fired from a muzzle distance of less than two inches.

We set out here the testimony of the emergency room attendants. A Ms. Harvey testified that she was with the victim in the emergency room attempting to give her intravenous fluid under the direction of the attending physicians. During that time, “she was speaking at random different statements, she was saying: ‘Don’t shoot me, Joe. Are you crazy? Put the gun away.’ When we were trying to start her IV, she was so agitated that she looked at me and called me Joe one time. And she was pulling her arm back and we were sticking the needle in. She was just making so many different statements it is hard to remember them all____She talked for about 35 or 40 minutes. She was saying, just repeating over and over, ‘Don’t shoot. Put the gun away. Are you crazy, Joe. Here, Joe, don’t do that.’ ”

A Ms. Smith, also an emergency room attendant, testified, “When she first came in, we were trying to stop the bleeding, we were trying to get IV’s started. We were trying to hold her down so that we wouldn’t have to restrain her.... She was saying, ‘Please, Joe, don’t shoot. Here, Joe. Joe, are you crazy?’ Saying some stuff like that. She kept saying it over and over. . . . She kept on fighting with her hands....”

On cross-examination, the witness testified that she and her companions continued to ask the victim questions about her condition, but received no answer. “Question: ‘Did she ever give any indication that you saw that she understood anything that was being said to her?’ Answer: ‘No.’ ”

Code Ann. § 38-307 provides: “Declarations 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, shall be admissible in evidence in a prosecution for the homicide.”

The declarations of the victim do not come within the ambit of this Code section for several reasons: there is no showing that she was conscious of her impending death; there is no declaration on her part as to the cause of her injury, and no identification of the person inflicting a mortal wound. To the contrary, the testimony of the two attendants reflects words and conduct which can only be categorized as delirium.

The State urges that the admission of the testimony is warranted under the provisions of Code Ann. § 38-305, as follows: *225 “Declarations accompanying an act, or so nearly connected therewith in time as to be free from all suspicion of device or afterthought, shall be admissible in evidence as part of res gestae.”

And so today we face, once more, that near-insoluble enigma of our law, which we call res gestae, just as our predecessors on this Court have done throughout our history.

In Mitchum v. State, 11 Ga. 615, 622-3 (1852), Justice Nisbet wrote: “What then is meant by res gestae? I cannot more satisfactorily answer this question than by transcribing what I said on a former occasion. ‘The idea of the res gestae presupposes a main fact. With this preliminary remark, I answer that the res gestae mean the circumstances, facts and declarations which grow out of the main fact, are contemporaneous with it, and serve to illustrate its character. I do not claim that this definition is perfect, for I know that the res gestae are different in different cases. No definition could be found so comprehensive as to embrace all cases; hence it is left to the sound discretion of the Courts what they shall admit to the Jury along with the main fact, as parts of the res gestae. But perhaps this definition embraces as nearly all that is meant in legal parlance by that phrase as any other that can be drawn from the books. One peculiarity of the main fact or transaction ought to be noted, and that is that it is not necessarily limited as to time — it may be a length of time in the action. The time of course depends upon the character of the transaction; it is however, well settled, that the acts of the party, or the facts or circumstances, or declarations which are sought to be admitted in evidence are not admissible, unless they grow out of the principal transaction, illustrate its character and are contemporary with it.’... In determining questions about the res gestae, it is an error to undertake to test them by a definition or rule. For what is the res gestae of a given transaction must depend upon its own peculiarities of character and circumstances. Courts must be allowed some latitude in this matter.”

Chief Justice Lumpkin wrote the opinion in Hart v. Powell, 18 Ga. 635 (1855), which approved the receipt in evidence of statements of a party, relative to the reason that he had shot and killed another man, in a time when parties were incompetent to testify. Lumpkin did not use at any point in his opinion the words res gestae, although he quoted with approval a passage by Greenleaf (1 Greenleaf Evidence § 108) employing the term. Instead, he put this question: “We ask, do not his declarations elucidate the facts with which they are connected? Were not the Jury authorized to believe that they were made without premeditation or artifice, and without a view to the consequences? We think so, unquestionably.” Hart, supra, at 640.

In Cox v. State, 64 Ga. 375, 410 (1879), Justice Bleckley wrote: *226 “(2) Acts are pertinent as a part of the res gestae

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Bluebook (online)
290 S.E.2d 71, 249 Ga. 223, 1982 Ga. LEXIS 776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrews-v-state-ga-1982.