Battle v. State

36 S.E.2d 873, 73 Ga. App. 476, 1946 Ga. App. LEXIS 340
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1946
Docket31057.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 36 S.E.2d 873 (Battle v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Battle v. State, 36 S.E.2d 873, 73 Ga. App. 476, 1946 Ga. App. LEXIS 340 (Ga. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

MacIntyre, J.

Battle was indicted for an assault with intent to murder, and found guilty of unlawfully shooting at another. His motion for new trial was overruled and he excepted.

The prosecutor testified that he and the defendant lived next door to each other on an alley or back street, in Macon, Georgia; that there is a picket fence around the house of the defendant about four and one-half feet high; that the front porch of the defendant’s house was standing on about a level with the fence, which was only a few feet away; that they had some words; that the defendant threw a brick at the prosecutor, who in return threw a brick at the defendant; that this happened while they were -standing in the alley in front of their houses; that the defendant rushed upon his porch and the woman with whom he was living delivered him a pistol; that the defendant, while standing on his porch, shot at the prosecutor in the alley and this shot missed him, but, as the prosecutor ran up the hill in the alley, the defendant shot at him a second time and hit him in the back inflicting a wound; and that thereafter, as soon as they could obtain a conveyance, the prosecutor was carried to the hospital and treated. The doctor who treated him testified in part as follows: “As to what would be my opinion as a physician that the course of the bullet would indicate — the angle from which it was fired would seem likely that the bullet was fired from the back and right and perhaps, but not certainly, from an elevated angle. I believe that the' wound of entrance is slightly higher than the point where the bullet struck the rib, the broken rib on the other side. I think that would indicate the bullet was slanting downward; that is my idea. The wound to the patient was not particularly dangerous. I think it is fairly obvious that to shoot a man in the back is a dangerous thing to do.” This seems to cor *478 Toborate the prosecutor, who testified that he was shot from an •elevation such as the porch of the defendant’s house, as the bullet ranged downward, and was not shot from the ground, as contended by the defendant.

There were two other witnesses for the State who corroborated the prosecutor with testimony that the defendant, after the first throwing of bricks, as above stated, ran upon his porch, where he was given a pistol at his front door by the woman he lived with, and thereupon shot at the prosecutor, who was standing in the alley, and missed him with the first shot; that the defendant then .shot at the prosecutor a second time from the rear as he was Seeing up the hill in the alley, hitting him in the back. The defendant and two of his witnesses claimed that the prosecutor was advancing in the alley upon the defendant with a knife, while the defendant was standing in the gate of his front yard, and that the •defendant told him to stop; that the prosecutor would not stop, so he fired upon him and missed, and as the prosecutor continued to advance, he fired a second shot which struck the prosecutor.

Some question arose during the progress of the trial as to the physical facts that existed at the place and surroundings where the shooting occurred, and, as it appears from the record, the city officer and the solicitor-general, on the second and last day of the trial, and before court met on that day, went out to the scene of the shooting to examine the physical facts as they existed; that thereafter the detective, in testifying to the physical facts there, .stated, among other things, that in his opinion the porch was between 4 and 4% feet high.

Special ground 1 in the motion for new trial was on newly discovered evidence and, in support thereof, the defendant introduced the affidavit of James Banks, accompanied by the supporting affidavits of two witnesses as to his character, associates, etc., as provided in the Code, § 70-305. Banks, in his affidavit, testified that he had visited the scene of the shooting since the trial; that he had measured the height of the fence in question; and that a place was pointed out to him as the place where the defendant was standing on the porch when he shot the prosecutor. He swore in the affidavit that, if the prosecutor had been in the alley, this could not have been done, as contended by the State, on account of the height of the fence which was between the porch and *479 the alley; “that the lowest paling in said fence from the ground to its top is 4 feet, 8 inches high, and that all of said palings are higher than this and that the highest paling is 5 feet, iy2 inches from the bottom to the top, and that generally said palings are 5 feet, 1 y2 inches high; that these palings are made of wood and are fastened perpendicular on the fence close together, so that there is only a small fraction of an inch between said palings;” and that it would have been next to impossible “for a person to have stood on the porch of 159 Coles Alley [defendant's residence] and have fired a shot from said porch into the alley and strike a man standing in the alley anywhere nearby said paling fence without shooting through the paling, and the bullet to have struck the person shot at, for it would have naturally gone over the head of any person standing in the alley.”

The Code, § 70-205, provides: That the movant and each of his counsel shall swear that they did not know of the existence of such newly discovered evidence before the trial, “and that the same could not have been discovered by the exercise of ordinary diligence.” Here the movant and his counsel, in their affidavit, swore '“that the affiants made the following efforts before the trial of said case to discover all of the evidence in said ease, to wit: (1) interviewed witnesses listed on back of indictment; (2) talked to people in the community where the shooting took place; and (3) examined the premises where it occurred and tried to find out all the facts.” Thus the defendant was aware of the physical facts at the scene of the shooting, and took no steps to secure be-, fore or at the trial the evidence sought to be introduced after the trial by his motion for new trial, though he had examined the premises in question, and, he knew that the State on the first day of the trial had introduced evidence that the shots in question had been fired from the porch of the defendant's house, and that the front picket fence was between.the porch and the alley, where the State's evidence on the first day of the trial claimed that the prosecutor had been shot. The defendant’s counsel had the same opportunity to re-examine the physical facts before court on the second day of the trial as the solicitor-general and the city officer had; and the discovery after the trial of what Dave Banks would testify as to these physical facts was not newly discovered evidence such as would.be a ground for the grant of a new trial. Doyal *480 v. State, 70 Ga. 134 (10); Savannah, Florida & Western Ry. v. Harper, 70 Ga. 119. In short, the judge might have decided that, if the defendant had used ordinary care, he could have discovered and introduced at the trial such evidence as to the physical facts in question. Arnold v. State, 46 Ga. 455; Lakes v. Lakes, 171 Ga. 692 (156 S. E. 620).

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Bluebook (online)
36 S.E.2d 873, 73 Ga. App. 476, 1946 Ga. App. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/battle-v-state-gactapp-1946.