Chatman v. State

70 S.E. 188, 8 Ga. App. 842, 1911 Ga. App. LEXIS 169
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1911
Docket2966
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 70 S.E. 188 (Chatman 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
Chatman v. State, 70 S.E. 188, 8 Ga. App. 842, 1911 Ga. App. LEXIS 169 (Ga. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Russell, J.

1. The defendant was convicted of the offense of adultery and fornication, and she excepts to the judgment overruling her motion for new trial. Upon the trial one witness testified that he had on two different occasions seen the defendant and one J. T. Levens in the very act of adultery. He was specific as to the charge in each case, and minute in each detail of these two transactions. Both acts were within the two years prior to the indictment, and would have authorized conviction. No attempt was made to impeach this witness otherwise than by disproving his statement by evidence of an alibi. Another witness corroborated the prosecuting witness as to the illegal intercourse charged to have been com[844]*844mittecl on May 27, to the extent that he swore that he also saw J. T. Levens giving the signal by beating on a stump, and that he went up the hill and saw Levens go over the hill and the defendant also go over the hill in the same direction. He did not testify, however, that hé followed them any further, or that he saw anything improper after they passed out of his sight upon that occasion, or at any other time. The defendant and Levens both denied that they had ever had sexual intercourse together. Witnesses were introduced who testified that both the defendant and Levens were at their respective homes on November 5, which was the date fixed by the prosecuting witness on which he saw the parties have intercourse at another time, and (by a strange coincidence) both were sick. Thus the transaction of November 5 was contradicted both by the positive testimony of the two alleged participants in the offense charged, and by evidence of alibi. Lambert, the prosecuting witness, testified directly to the commission of the adulterous act, both on May 27 and November 5. As to the transaction of May 27 there was no proof of alibi by the defendant, but there was explicit denial by Levens on oath, and by the defendant in .her statement, because both of them stated that there had never been at any time in their lives any sexual intercourse or improper relations between them. The jury found the defendant guilty, whether upon the testimony'as to November 5 or that as to May 27, of course, can not be determined; but the evidence was sufficient to authorize conviction on either.

Learned counsel for the plaintiff in error strongly insists that the jury should not have believed the testimony for the prosecution, because the defendant had a much larger number of witnesses, and their testimony disproved the facts testified to by the witness for the State in relation to the transaction of May 27, and especially disproved that there was any criminal intercourse on November 5. This court is so thoroughly committed to the principle that the jury are exclusive judges of the facts as to leave no room for discussion or inquiry as to why the jury based their finding upon the testimony of one witness rather than upon that of another or even of many others. We will say, however, in passing, that the testimony of Buck Spradlin not only corroborated the testimony of Lambert as to May 27, but was such a circumstance as would equally corroborate his testimony as to November 5. The credibility of the witness is [845]*845a matter exclusively for the jury, and where one witness testifies positively to all the facts essential to constitute the offense with which the defendant is charged, this court can not-interfere with the verdict, no matter how many witnesses may have testified to the contrary, or how many circumstances may be adduced tending to disprove the testimony of the single witness. In Lambert v. State, 8 Ga. App. 206 (68 S. E. 882), in which the main witness for the State in this case was the defendant, and the present defendant the only witness for the State, and in which a very large number of citizens testified that they would not believe the prosecuting witness on oath, we affirmed the conviction, upon the facts, and with the statement that it was not within our power to determine as to the credibility of witnesses, and that even though there were no attempt to sustain the witness whom it had been sought to impeach, it' was after all a question for the jury. It may be, as argued by counsel for the plaintiff in error, that the prosecution in the present case is the result of Lambert’s prosecution and conviction. We can not say. However, .it appears in the record in this case that the jury were apprised of the facts in relation to the prosecution against Lambert, and they passed upon his credibility as it might be affected by the prior prosecution. Whatever the truth of the case may be, this court, as courts should always do, is “feeding them out of the same spoon.”

2. It appears from the record that after the testimony had closed, it was suggested that the allegation of the indictment which charged that Levens. was a married man and the defendant an unmarried woman had not been referred to in the evidence. Hpon the solicitor-general’s bringing this to the attention of the court and asking that the case be reopened, to enable him to prove this allegation," the court admitted testimony to this effect, over the defendant’s objection. The objection was not meritorious, and the action of the court in the premises was eminently correct. If the jury were not satisfied, by the evidence as to sexual intercourse, that the defendant was guilty, testimony that she was an unmarried woman could not prejudice her case. On the other hand, if the jury was satisfied, from the evidence, that the parties named had committed acts of unlawful sexual intercourse (we say “unlawful” because Mrs. Levens -had appeared in person before the jury and testified that she was the wife of Levens, and hence the defendant could not have been [846]*846his wife),.it would have been a travesty upon justice if the court had refused to reopen the case in order to permit the State to prove that the defendant was an unmarried woman. The case was one authorizing the jury to find either way as to the fact of unlawful sexual intercourse, and yet they could not have found the defendant guilty, even if they had found the main fact to be true, in the absence of proof that she was unmarried; because the indictment alleged she was unmarried, and because if the proof had shown that she was married to Levens, it might be a case of bigamy, but not of adultery and fornication. Under the evidence in this case, if the omission had suggested itself to the judge, and the attention of the prosecution had not been called to it, it would still have been his duty to reopen the case upon his own motion. The reopening of a case foe the purpose of introducing additional material evidence after the testimony has closed is a matter within the discretion of the trial court; and this discretion will not be controlled unless it has manifestly been abused. Tt is not an abuse of discretion, in a case in which there is direct proof that the defendant is guilty of unlawful sexual intercourse (if the witness testifying thereto is credible), to reopen the case for the purpose of supplying proof of the necessary allegation of the indictment, as to whether the parties are married or unmarried as alleged. A case should be reopened whenever necessary in order to obtain the truth.

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Bluebook (online)
70 S.E. 188, 8 Ga. App. 842, 1911 Ga. App. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chatman-v-state-gactapp-1911.