Darden v. State

171 Ga. 848
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 13, 1931
DocketNo. 7785
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 171 Ga. 848 (Darden 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
Darden v. State, 171 Ga. 848 (Ga. 1931).

Opinion

Hill, J.

Moses Darden, Marcellus Darden, and Steve Darden were indicted for the offense of murder. The indictment charged that they murdered Chesley Davis by shooting him with a shotgun. Marcellus Darden was put upon trial; and the jury, after hearing the evidence and the charge of the court, returned a verdict of guilty, with a recommendation to the mercy of the court; and he was accordingly sentenced to the penitentiary for life. He made a motion for new trial, which was overruled, and he excepted. The evidence is very voluminous, and we set out only enough' thereof to show that the jury were authorized to convict the dedefendant.

L. Y. Adcock, for the State, testified: “I live about four miles northwest of Kingston. On Tuesday morning, the 22d of April, or maybe it was the 23d, I was driving along the road leading from my house out to the Dixie highway; that road is the one that goes by D. Wilbanks’ house. When I came along that road the sun was something like an hour high. I discovered an automobile standing on that road. There was a man in it. He was dead. He was sitting up under the steering-wheel, with his right hand on the steering-wheel and his left hand hanging down to his side. In leaving Kingston you go out to the highway over the overhead bridge, and then you take the right-hand road. That is a side road. It goes beyond Barnsley’s. I think that car was standing nearly a mile from the Dixie highway. It was pointed [850]*850towards Kingston. I was in a wagon, going up towards Kingston. I was driving a young pair of mules, and they got scared as I started around the car, and I was trying to hold my team and trying to keep out of the way of the car too. The road was narrow at that point. There was room by the car for me to pass on the left side of that car. I stopped after I passed it. Somewhere between five or half past six o’clock a. m. probably. So far as I know, nobody else had discovered that body at that time. After I discovered it I came on down to Mr. Wilbanks. That is D. Wilbanks’ grandfather. From the car to the old gentleman’s house I would guess it was something like two hundred yards, probably farther. I reported to Mr. Wilbanks what I had seen, and we went back up there. When I went back was when I discovered his right hand on the steering-wheel and his left hand dropped down. . I was close when I went back; more than I had been before. We did not disturb anything in the car. We moved nothing. After I went back with Mr. Wilbanks I went on to Kingston. I notified them there of finding the dead body. I don’t know if they called the law after I got there, or before. It was after, I suppose. I noticed the wounds of this dead man. I saw one. It was up in his neck there [indicating]. On the left of the neck. I noticed a five-gallon jug, and looked like between the two seats a jug in a sack, and a double-barrel shotgun in the car. The shotgun was in the rear seat. I think it was lying partly on the jug there. Like this is the seat and here is the back, this gun was lying between the jug and the back of the seat. I did not take the gun out, nor did anybody while I was there. I did not see anything in the dead man’s hands. He was on the front seat, and the shotgun was on the back seat. That was in this county. I later learned that the dead man was ' Chesley Davis. That was in April of this year.”

Ed Wilbanks, for the State, testified: “My name is .Ed Wilbanks. I am seventeen. I live at the same place now that I did when Chesley Davis was killed. I live about two miles and a half south of Kingston. To go to my house you go to Kingston and go right out the highway, go over the overhead bridge and on down the highway, and the first road to the right you take that road, and that leads right on out to my house. That road by my house leads right on to the Barnsley’s schoolhouse. On the afternoon [851]*851of Monday, April 22d, I was at home — at home on that morning; I was in Kingston that afternoon. I knew Chesley Davis in his lifetime. On this Monday in question I saw Chesley Davis. In Kingston, about four o’clock, I got in the car with him and went out to Charlie Ledford’s. He wanted me to go out there with-him. To go to Charlie Ledford’s, you go right up the railroad towards Adairsville till you get there to the Hawkins place, and you turn to the left and go back through the woods, right beyond the old cement plant, and turn to the left. From Kingston to Charlie Ledford’s house is about two and a half or three miles. We went on to his house. Charlie wasn’t at home. We turned around and went back to Kingston. We stayed around there until we met Charlie. We met Charlie up there in the highway; then he got in the car with us, and we went back down to Mr. Rampley’s store, and then back out to Charlie’s house. Hp at Charlie Ledford’s house, Charlie and Mr. Davis got out and went down to the barn. I do not know what Davis’s business up there with Charlie Ledford; he didn’t tell me. On the second trip up there we were all riding in Davis’s car. Mr. Davis and Charlie got out and went down to the barn, and after a while they come back to the car with something in a sack, and put it in the back end of the car. I heard talk up there about trading a pistol. Charlie had a sawed-off shotgun that he said he would trade for a pistol. That talk was down there at Mr. Ledford’s barn, or right at the barn. Charlie wanted to trade him the shotgun for h'is pistol. That was Charlie that was talking, about trading him that sawed-off shotgun for his pistol. They did not trade. A jug was put in the car. The jug was in a sack. It was put in the back of the car. Well, after they didn’t trade guns, me and Mr. Davis turned around and went back to my house. Before we went up to Charlie Ledford’s house Davis appeared to be drinking. You could just smell liquor on his breath. I did not notice it in any way in his actions. After he left Charlie Ledford’s house or barn, you could tell he had a little more. Smelled like he had been drinking a right smart. Davis drove the car away from there. Then we went back to my house. On the way up there, I told him I had a double-barrel hammerless gun that I would trade for his pistol. It was after sundown when we left Ledford’s. And after we left from Charlie Ledford’s we went [852]*852back to Kingston and out to my house. From Ledford’s to my house, that way, it is about five to five and a half miles. There is a road from my house to Ledford’s through the field. If you traveled that road I couldn’t hardly tell you how far it is. It is a shorter way. It is so rough you can’t get over it all the way in a car. I stopped out there in the road, and I went in the house and back down the hill. When we went to my house we left the car sitting on the hill; from my house to Kingston you have to come up a hill, and then go straight and ride down another hill. We went up there, and he stopped in front of my house. We turned around there. Then I went in the house and stole out the shotgun. It was dark then. When I got back Davis was sitting in his ear, out towards the front of my house. When he turned around he moved down a little. I slipped my shotgun out of my house. When I went back to Davis I got in the car, and then we went on down to the next hill. That put us at the top of the second hill. We were standing there and talking; he was sitting in the car, and I was standing by the side of it. Then Mr. Mose, Marcellus and Steve Darden came up. They come from towards Kingston, they were traveling in a Ford coupé. Mose was driving the car then. They didn’t get out, not right then.

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Related

Morrow v. State
290 S.E.2d 137 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1982)
Burdett v. State
283 S.E.2d 622 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1981)
Elliott v. State
10 S.E.2d 843 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
171 Ga. 848, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darden-v-state-ga-1931.