Frank v. State

80 S.E. 1016, 141 Ga. 243, 1914 Ga. LEXIS 183
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 17, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by124 cases

This text of 80 S.E. 1016 (Frank 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
Frank v. State, 80 S.E. 1016, 141 Ga. 243, 1914 Ga. LEXIS 183 (Ga. 1914).

Opinions

Atkinson, J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.)

1. Testimony was admitted, over objection that it was irrelevant; to the effect that on Sunday morning after the discovery of the dead body, Newt Lee, while under arrest as the perpetrator of the crime, was composed. There was other evidence to the effect that on the same morning the defendant, Frank, while visiting the corpse and conferring with the officers, was very nervous. The solicitor-general commented on the difference between the demeanor of Lee and Frank, as a circumstance pointing to the guilt of the latter. The body was found im the pencil factory. Frank saw Mary Phagan in the factory alive, and was the last one shown to have seen her. Newt Lee was the watchman at the building, and was the first to report the discovery of the body. The State relied largely on circumstantial evidence to show the perpetrator of the crime. The testimony came from officers who were detailing the incidents of their investigation on the morning after the discovery of the body. They were describing the conditions as found by them, and the conduct and demeanor of the superintendent and night watchman. They proceeded to tell the further developments in the case. Under such circumstances, though it may not have been strictly relevant to describe the demeanor of the night watchman as one of the criteria entering into the investigation, we do not think the admission of the testimony ground for new trial.

[251]*2512. One of the most important witnesses for the State was James Conley, a negro employee at the factory at the time oS and prior to the occurrence of the homicide. He testified that about 8:30 o’clock in the morning of the day of the homicide, which was Saturday and a public holiday, the accused said to him: “I want you to watch for me like you have been doing the rest of the Saturdays.” He continued: “I always stayed on the first floór like I did on the 26th of April, and watched for Mr. Frank while he and a young lady would be upon the second floor chatting. On April 26th me and Mr. Frank met at the door. He says, ‘What I want you to do is to watch for me to-day as you did other Saturdays,’ and I said, ‘All right.’” The witness testified that he and the accused both were absent from the factory for a while, and then returned, the witness closely following the accused. He then proceeded with his testimony: “When we got to.the factory we both went on the inside, and Mr. Frank stopped me at the door, and when he stopped me at the door he put his hand on the door and turned the door and says, ‘You see you turn the knob just like this, and there can’t nobody come in from the outside,’ and I says, ‘All right,’ and I walked back to a little box back there by the trash barrel. He told me to push the box up against the trash barrel and sit on it, and he says, ‘Now there will be a young lady up here after a while, and me and her 'are going to chat a little,’ and he says, ‘Now when the lady comes I will stomp like I did before,’ and he says, ‘That will be the lady, and you go and shut the door,’ and I says, ‘All right, sir,’ and he say, ‘Now when I whistle I will be through, so* you can go 'and unlock the door and come upstairs to my office like you were going to borrow some money from me, and that will give the young lady time to get out.’ I says, ‘All right, I will do just as you say,’ and I did as he said.” He further testified, that he saw'the girl who was killed go upstairs; that he heard her footsteps going towards the office of the accused, and after she went into the office he heard two people walking out of it and going back toward the metal department; that after they did so he heard the girl scream, and then heard no more; that he then saw another girl enter the building, go upstairs, then come down and leave, the building; and that he then heard some one running from the metal department on tiptoe and [252]*252afterward returning to that department in the same manner. . He then testified: “About that time I kind of dozed off and went to sleep. Next thing I knew Mr. Frank was up over my head stomping, and then I went and locked the door and sat on the box a little while, the next thing I heard was Mr. Frank whistling. I don’t know how many minutes it was after that I heard him whistle. When I heard him whistle I went and unlocked the door just like he said, and went on up the steps. Mr. Frank was standing up there at the top of the steps, shivering and trembling and rubbing his hands like this. He had a little rope in his hand, a long, wide piece of cord. His eyes were large, and they looked right funny. He looked funny out of his eyes. His face was red. Yes, he had a cord in his hands just like this here cord. After I got up to the top of the steps he asked me, ‘Did you see that little girl who passed here just awhile ago?’ and I told him I saw one come along there and she come back again, and then I saw another one come along there and she has not come back down, and he says, ‘Well, that one you say didn’t come back down she come into my office awhile ago and wanted to know something about her work in my office, and I went back there to see if the little girl’s work had come, and I wanted to be with the little girl and she refused me, and I struck her, and I guess I struck her too hard, and she fell and hit her head against something, and I don’t know how bad she got hurt. Of course you know I aint built like other men.’ ” He testified to having assisted the accused to move the body from the second floor of the building to the basement, where it was subsequently found; and 'also gave evidence tending to show that on various Saturday afternoons, during several months preceding the homicide, the accused had received women in his office, had indulged in lascivious practices with them on a number of occasions, and had also had another man (named Dalton) and a woman present on several occasions. In connection with these visits of Dalton and the other woman and their indulgence in improper practices, he said: “Mr. Frank called me in his office. There was a lady in there with him. . . She was present when he talked to me. He said, ‘You go down and see nobody don’t come up, and you will have a chance to make some money.’ The other lady had gone out to get that young man, Mr. Dalton.” He further testified •that Dalton and the woman returned, and he let them into the [253]*253basement; that he watched at the door; that when they went to leave, Dalton gave him a quarter; and that Dalton gave him money on other occasions when he came to the factory with the woman for lascivious purposes.

After the witness had testified that Frank said, “Of course you know I aint built like other men,” he was asked, “What did he mean?” and testified, “The reason he said that was, I have seen him in a position T haven’t seen any other man that has got children. I have seen him in the office two or three times before Thanksgiving, and a lady was in his office, and she was sitting down in a chair and she had her clothes up to here (indicating up to her waist), and he was down on his knees, and she had her hands on Mr. Frank. I have seen him another time there in the packing-room with a young lady lying on the table. She was on the edge’of the table when I saw her.” In one ground of the motion for new trial, this begins, “Well, what I taken it to be,” etc.; but it is set out in the brief of evidence as above stated, and another ground of the motion substantially follows the brief of evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
80 S.E. 1016, 141 Ga. 243, 1914 Ga. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frank-v-state-ga-1914.