Cicero v. State
This text of 54 Ga. 156 (Cicero 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.
Opinion
The defendant was indicted for the offense of an assault witii intent to murder, and on -the trial therefor was found guilty by the jury. A motion was made for a new trial on the grounds that the verdict was contrary to law, contrary to the evidence, and without evidence to sustain it; because the court erred in admitting the evidence of the committing magistrate over the objection of defendant, that on the commitment trial before him he examined the defendant, who slated at first “that he was in his house cooking some bread for for his children when the gun fired, and when the justice told him to tell it over again, to see if he would tell the same story, when defendant said he was in his house breaking bread and dividing it out among his children when the gun fired;” because the court erred in not charging the jury as to any other grade of homicide but that of murder; because the court erred in its charge.to the jury, after stating that where there is a chain of circumstances that point to a fact, and one witness swears positively to the contrary, that they could determine which they would believe, added, “but that law wri[158]*158ters say that a chain of circumstances cannot lie, whilst a witness may.” It appears from the evidence in the record that the prosecutor, hearing his dogs bark in the early part of the night as if after some one, got up and went out of the house, heard some one running, set the dogs on them, and run after them fifty or one hundred yards, when some one shot at him — defendant lived three or four hundred yards from prosecutor — found tracks which corresponded in size with defendant’s tracks; about an hour and a half after the gun fired, prosecutor and others got a light and went in the direction of where the gun was fired, and some one said put out that light, and recognized it to be the defendant by his voice. A witness for the defendant stated that he was at the house of defendant that night about the time of the alleged firing of the gun, heard a pistol shot, and defendant was in his house at that time.
Judgment reversed.
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54 Ga. 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cicero-v-state-ga-1875.