Bryant v. State

121 S.E. 574, 157 Ga. 195, 1924 Ga. LEXIS 14
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1924
DocketNo. 3841
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 121 S.E. 574 (Bryant 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
Bryant v. State, 121 S.E. 574, 157 Ga. 195, 1924 Ga. LEXIS 14 (Ga. 1924).

Opinions

Beck, P. J.

Ira Bryant was tried under an indictment charging him with the offense of murder; and the jury trying the case returned a verdict of guilty, without a recommendation. The defendant made a motion for new trial, which was overruled, and to the judgment overruling the motion he excepted.

It appears from the evidence that on the evening of the homicide Jim Lewis, the decedent, accompanied the accused to the latter’s home. It was late in the afternoon. About 9:30 o’clock that night Dr. C. H. Maxwell was summoned to visit the decedent, who was still at the defendant’s home. He found Lewis upon his knees and arms on the floor and his head was on the floor. The man was; [196]*196badly wounded, was not conscious at the time of the doctor’s arrival. There were several wounds on the back of his head. “They were spread out from either ear; one was near the ear on one side and one near the other ear, and several across the back portion of the head, cuts, something like six or seven, and there was one just below his nose across his face, about three inches long. Later on I found a wound on his elbow, which looked as if he had fallen on a nail, and there appeared to be some bruises about on his body. The wounds did not look so bad, there were gashes from two to three inches long, six or seven of them being on the back portion of his head and one on the front. The floor was covered with blood, pools of blood and clotted blood, the blood having run across an adjoining room for a distance of about twelve feet or more. The clothing of the decedent was saturated with blood.” The doctor further testified that in his opinion the blood came from the wounds on the head. Two days later Lewis died as the result of the wounds.

T. 'L. Langley, a witness for the State, testified in part as follows : He went down to the home of the accused. The wife of the defendant had come to his house, and two of the defendant’s children came a few minutes ahead of her. At the request of the wife of the- accused Langley went for a physician. When he returned to his home he found the defendant standing in the hall. The latter had a piece of lightwood in his hand. (The piece of wood was produced in evidence.) The defendant requested Langley to go down to the house with him and see if he knew the man whom he had hit. He said it was an old man, he did not know who it was; that he came into the house, pushed the door open, walked in there on them, and he took this piece of wood and fired- in on him and gave him considerable beating. “He told me he beat him right sharp while he had been down there, and that he didn’t know whether- he had killed him, and he said if he hadn’t killed him and I said so, he would go in and finish it. I said, H don’t say so; I expect you have [done] too much already.’ We went in and looked at the old man, who was between the door and the fireplace. . . I saw nothing around the body of Mr. Lewis but blood. There was a puddle about two feet square, and it had run down in the other room. While we were dressing the old man’s wounds, the defendant said if he had known it was old man Lewis he would not [197]*197have done it. The defendant did not act like a drunk man, he did not stagger, and I would not deem him drunk. He said they were all sitting around the fire when the old man came in the room. . . The defendant said when the old man came in the house that defendant’s wife said he had a knife,’ but that he did not see the knife, and that he took a piece of wood then and knocked him down.”

Mrs. T. L. Langley, sworn as a witness for the State, testified: The accused came to their house and inquired for Mr. Langley; said he wanted to see him. She told him to- go back to his home, and her husband would be there. The defendant replied that he didn’t want to go back until Mr. Langley came, and would go back with him. The accused had “a billet of wood” in his hand, which had blood on it. He turned to his wife and said he had not beat him none when she left to what he had after she left; that he beat him to his satisfaction. She further testified that he did not appear to be drunk. A piece of wood, identified by the witnesses as that which was carried by the defendant to T. L. Langley’s, is about 18 inches long and about three inches thick, triangular shaped.

The defendant introduced evidence tending to show that the decedent had an open knife. Louise Bryant, the daughter of the defendant, ten years old, was sworn as a witness for the defendant. She testified that Lewis came home with her father; that he stayed at their home till about dark; and further, to quote a part of the witness’s testimony in her own language: “Mr. Lewis stayed there a good while. He stayed until about dark, when he left, I saw father hit a man there that night. I did not know who the man was. We were fixing to go to bed, the fire was nearly out, and the lamp was turned down. Mother and father were sitting by the fire. The man did not knock on the door. The first I saw of him he was standing in the door with a knife in his hand. Mother hollered, and father said, ‘I’ll have to do something,’ picked up a piece of wood and hit him. Mother said, ‘Look there,’ and Papa said, ‘I’ve got to do something, or he’ll hurt us,’ and picked up a piece of wood and hit him and knocked him up side of the door, and Mama told me to go to Mr. Langley’s and get him to come down there and help us. I went to Mr. Langley’s, and then Mama came and got Mr. Langley to go for the doctor. Papa came up [198]*198there, and Hr. Langley came back from the doctor’s house, and Papa brought the piece of wood with him, and Papa and Mr. Langley went back to our house to see who it was. I do not remember what Mr. Lewis did when he first got to our house that afternoon. I went in the house. Mr. Lewis went around behind the house, and later came in the house with Father. Mr. Lewis left after he stayed there a right good while. He and Mother and Father were sitting around the fire. He did not eat any supper; neither did Father eat any supper. Mother and brother and I ate supper. Father and Mr. Lewis were sitting at the fire while we were eating supper, and drank some while they were sitting at the fire. After supper I stayed in the room about an hour or more. Mr. Lewis got drunk and got sick before he left there, and had to vomit on the floor; that is not the reason Father hit him. He went out of the door and then came back. He vomited on the floor and got up and went out; after he came back was when Father hit him. I went to get somebody to help Mother make Father quit beating old man Lewis, but I didn’t .know it was old man Lewis until Papa and Mr. Langley came back. I did not see Father hit him but one lick. Father hit him because he vomited on the floor. He fell out of the chair on the other side from Mother. Father hit him while he was sitting in the chair. I did not see the handle of his knife, but I saw the blade of it. He had it drawed on Father. Mr. Lewis got mad with Papa at home because he told him to get up and go out of doors. He got up and left and was gone a good little while. When he came back he never did sit, down. Mother screamed when he came back in the door before Father hit him. Mother had just gotten up from pneumonia, and left the room because she couldn’t stand it.” The witness further testified, in response to questions propounded to her: “Q. When you saw Mr. Lewis sitting in the chair and your father got the piece of wood, your mother begged him not to hit him? A. Yes, sir. Q. And then you ran to get Mr. Langley to keep your father from beating Mr. Lewis? A. Yes, sir. Q. And soon your mother came up to Mr. Langley’s? A. Yes, sir. Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 S.E. 574, 157 Ga. 195, 1924 Ga. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryant-v-state-ga-1924.