Cobb v. State

260 S.E.2d 60, 244 Ga. 344, 1979 Ga. LEXIS 1230
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 26, 1979
Docket35107
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 260 S.E.2d 60 (Cobb 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
Cobb v. State, 260 S.E.2d 60, 244 Ga. 344, 1979 Ga. LEXIS 1230 (Ga. 1979).

Opinion

Marshall, Justice.

This is the direct appeal of Anthony Jerome Cobb from his conviction in Turner County Superior Court of the armed robbery and murder of Harvey M. Downing and his sentences of life and death, respectively.

*345 I. Summary of the Evidence

The state presented evidence from which the jury was entitled to find the following:

On November 22,1976, at approximately 11:45 p.m., a carload of black males drove up to the Ashburn Motor Inn in a dark, late-model car. One of the men came in and filled out a registration card. The night clerk, Harvey Downing, asked him to write down his car’s license tag number, which he did after returning to the car to check the number. At that point, the man pulled a gun on Downing, demanded cash, shot him in the left eye, and took approximately $317 from the motel’s cash drawer. Based on the information on the registration slip and from Downing’s statement, deputy sheriff Nutt radioed a lookout for a dark, late-model car, Georgia license tag No. TEN 836, containing two black males. He then took Downing to the hospital, where he subsequently died.

Orilla, Georgia, police officers, alerted by Nutt’s radio call, stopped an older model, green Plymouth, bearing Georgia license tag No. HEN 683, driven by Harold Dean Sneed, the appellant’s co-defendant. The officers, recognizing Sneed as a local resident, let him go. Neither of them recognized his black, male passenger.

A GBI special agent observed at the scene of the crime a motel registration card; a room key; a pair of men’s glasses with the left lens missing, lying on the registration desk; bloodstains and lens particles on the floor and desk; and the open cash drawer, empty of bills. An autopsy of the decedent revealed that he had been in good health for his age (72 years), and that death was caused by a bullet in his brain which had entered between his left eye and his nose. After being advised of his rights, the appellant executed, on December 2, a handwriting sample, which the state crime lab identified as the same as the handwriting on the motel registration card.

The appellant, meanwhile, left Georgia. On December 10, deputy sheriffs in Volusia County, Florida, acting on a radio lookout, in connection with a Florida robbery, for two black males wearing brown leather jackets driving a greenish 1970 or 1971 Buick, stopped a car matching this description. The car contained a .22 caliber revolver, two brown leather jackets, a knit cap with $400 *346 cash in it, and, among others, the appellant and co-defendant Sneed, who were arrested.

The appellant was read his rights five times, after which he made a full confession of the robbery and homicide. State crime lab tests showed that the bullet which killed Downing was fired from the pistol seized from the appellant. No evidence was introduced in the appellant’s behalf at the trial.

II. Enumerations of Error

1. The trial court did not err in overruling the appellant’s motion to dismiss for an alleged violation of the Interstate Agreement on Detainers, Code Ann. Ch. 77-5B (Ga. L. 1972, p. 938 et seq.), in that his trial did not begin until a year after the State of Georgia first took custody of him. The court was authorized to find that the 120-day time limit of Code Ann. § 77-505b (c) was tolled by the delay occasioned by the appellant’s numerous pretrial motions, including challenges of three separate indictments, in the face of the state’s good-faith efforts to expedite the trial. See Reaves v. State, 242 Ga. 542, 552 (7a) (250 SE2d 376) (1978) and cit. Enumerated error 1 is without merit.

2. Enumerated errors 2 and 3 are the overruling of the appellant’s challenges to the arrays of the grand and traverse juries. We affirm as to both.

(a) The appellant contends that persons 65 years of age or older are no longer exempt from jury duty, hence were improperly not included in the jury lists unless they had specifically requested to be included.

Code Ann. § 59-112 (a) (6) (Ga. L. 1967, p. 725) provided as follows: "The following persons are exempt from all jury duty, civil or criminal; the name of any such person shall not be included or continued in the jury box unless such person shall make a request therefor in writing to the board of jury commissioners or its clerk:... 6. Persons who are sixty-five (65) years of age or older.” Ga. L. 1978, pp. 221, 222, repealed paragraph 6 of subsection (a) and added subsection (e): "Any person who is 65 years of age or older who does desire to serve upon juries shall notify the jury commissioners of the county in which such person resides in writing to that effect, and thereupon the jury commissioners shall place the name of *347 such person in the jury box for said county.” Whatever the reason for such amendment may have been, it is apparent that the result is the same as previously, viz., that the exemption is still in effect and that it is not permissible to place persons who are 65 years of age or older injury boxes unless they shall make request therefor in writing to the jury commissioners of the county of their residence. See Op. Atty. Gen. U77-37 (1977). The record shows that the Turner County jury commissioners followed this procedure.

Moreover, the appellant cannot complain of any alleged underrepresentation of older citizens on Turner County juries, as age is not a recognized class for the purposes of grand and traverse jury representation. Fouts v. State, 240 Ga. 39, 41 (IB) (239 SE2d 366) (1977) and cits.

(b) The juries were drawn pursuant to the provisions of Code § 59-205 (grand jury) and Code § 59-702 (traverse jury), which do not have the requirements for the drawing to be "at the close of each term, in open court,” contained in the alternative method of drawing jurors provided in Code § 59-203.

(c) The drawing of the grand jurors on December 13, at which time no superior court judge was present in Turner County, rather than on December 19, when the calendar had indicated they would be drawn, did not invalidate the drawing. The alternative method provided by Code § 59-205 may be used "[wjhenever from any cause tbe judge shall fail to draw a grand juiy ...” (Emphasis supplied.) Once this method was instigated, the drawing had to be done "at least 20 days previous to the next ensuing term of the court,” which in this instance was January 8.

(d) The absence of the "ordinary” (now probate judge) at the drawing of the grand jury and his failure to sign the minutes after the clerk had made the proper entry thereon, were mere irregularities, which will not vitiate the drawing, or render the jury drawn illegal. Smith v. State, 90 Ga. 133(1) (158 SE 682) (1892). "Where the law is substantially complied with, and upright and intelligent men form tbe grand jury,.. .the courts should not set aside proceedings by sucb an inquest on mere *348 technicalities.” Roby v. State, 74 Ga. 812 (2a) (1885). These conditions were met in the present case.

3.

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Bluebook (online)
260 S.E.2d 60, 244 Ga. 344, 1979 Ga. LEXIS 1230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cobb-v-state-ga-1979.