Berry v. State

10 Ga. 511
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 15, 1851
DocketNo. 75
StatusPublished
Cited by275 cases

This text of 10 Ga. 511 (Berry 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
Berry v. State, 10 Ga. 511 (Ga. 1851).

Opinion

[517]*517 By the Court.

Lumpkin, J.

delivering the opinion.

This is an indictment which copies before us upon a writ of error from a judgment rendered in the'Superior Court of Floyd’ County. On the plea of not guilty, the defendant, James Berry, was convicted by a verdict of the' Jury. ‘ The charge was for stealing from the dwelling house of William Montgomery, two thousand dollars in gold and silver coin, five thousand dollars in bank bills, and three thousand dollars in promissory notes, all of the value of ten thousand dollars, the same being the property of one William Montgomery.

Counsel for the defendant moved, in arrest of judgment, and assigned as reasons,

First. Because the prisoner is indicted as principal, without stating in what degree. > .

The offence charged in the indictment constitutes the defendant a principal in the first degree. He is accused of being the actor or absolute perpetrator of the crime; if it had been intended to criminate him as principal in the second degree, the indictment would have charged, not that he stole the money and chattels, but that he was present, aiding and abetting the fact to be done; the indictment therefore is not only sufficiently technichal and correct, but it is in the very language and terms of the Code.

[1.] Secondly. Because the indictment charges that the prisoner entered the dwelling in the' night time, without stating with what intent he entered the same.

Nor is it necessary that it should, where, as in this case, the stealing was consummated. Larceny from the house is defined to be, either the breaking or entering any house with an intent to steal, or after breaking or entering said house, stealing therefrom any money or thing of value. (New Digest, 794.) One may be guilty of this crime then, wfieré the original entry was not felonious or with an intent to steal. Could the Jury who tried the case fail to comprehend readily the nature of the offence intended to be charged? If so, the indictment is sufficient. Studstill vs. The State, 7 Geo. R. 2.

[518]*518Thirdly. Because the indictment does not state that the prisoner, after having entered said dwelling house, did steal anything therefrom.

It charges the prisoner after having feloniously entered the dwelling house of the prosecutor by night, with having “ feloniously and privately taken and carried away” the money and notes specified in the indictment, “with intent to steal the same. The allegation could not have been more full and explicit.

■Fourthly. Because the indictment charges no facts which make the prisoner principal in the second degree.

[2.] Nor. is it attempted to convict him in that capacity. If it appears that an offence not capital, committed by a slave, has been done by the counsel, persuasion, or procurement or other means of a free white person, he or she shall be prosecuted for the offence, and if found guilty shall incur the same punishment as if he or she had actually committed the crime or misdemean- or with which the slave is charged. New Digest, 780.

If the facts which transpired in this case had occurred between the defendant and a free white citizen, Berry would have been guilty as principal in the second degree" only, and the indictment shouldhave been found accordingly; but the designhere is to charge Berry himself as guilty of the offence, because perpetrated by a negro through his procurement. The law institutes him in the place of the slave, and treats him as the actor or principal in the first degree. The same division of the Penal Code contains an analogous provision as to offences committed by infants under the age of ten years, by the influence of adults. New Digest 779, §7.

[3.] Fifthly. Because the indictment contains no sufficient description of the property stolen.

It is not necessary that it should be more particular in the description. In ninety-nine cases out of a hundred which occur, it is impossible to ascertain the precise coins or bills stolen. If a particular description was required to be given in the indictment, the proof must correspond and be equally definite. To hold this,, we might as well say at once that all thieves shall go [519]*519clear, who steal coin or bank notes. See Bulloch vs. The State, 10 Geo. R. 46.

It is our opinion then, that the Court was right in overruling the motion to arrest the judgment.

The defendant then by his counsel, moved for a new-trial, on the following grounds, to wit:

[4.] 1st. Because the Court permitted evidence to go to the Jury, to this effect, that the negro Phill, in a confession drawn from him by whipping, in the presence and by the consent of Berry, that he should tell all he knew, accused the prisoner with having procured the larceny to be committed by him and a fellow by the name of Tom, the propertj of Berry. This testimony was admitted for the purpose of explaining the reply and conduct of Berry, when thus impeached. ■

It is conceded, that by the Common Law of this State, (there being no statutory enactment upon this subject in Georgia,) a negro has never been permitted to give evidence in any case, where the rights of a white person were concerned. And when we consider the degraded state in which they are placed by the laws, and'the mental, as well as moral ignorance in which most of them are reared, not to advert to other reasons for excluding their testimony, it would be most unreasonable, as well as impolitic, to admit them as witnesses.

[5.] Nor shall we pretend to controvert the familiar rule, that confessions of guilt, extorted by either hope or fear, cannot be received either against the accused himself, or any one else. A confession thus obtained, however, if made by a free white citizen, and pointing to a distinct, substantive fact, from which guilt can be inferred or established, is competent proof. 2 Stark. Ev. 4 part, 49, 50, 51.

But the question here is, did the Court below err in refusing, under the factsof the case, to exclude the statements of Phill ? We are clear that it did not. It is immaterial from what source, or under what circumstances the accusation was made, whether by a negro or a white man; whether it was voluntary or induced by the flattery of hope, or the pain of punishment; whether it came from a talking ass, or a talking snake, a stock, [520]*520a stone or a stump, man, beast or reptile, animate or inanimate object, it is admissible as a key to, or explanatory of, what was said and done by the prisoner.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ga. 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berry-v-state-ga-1851.