Gaulden v. State
This text of 11 Ga. 47 (Gaulden 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
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
Neither can the Solicitor General, on the expiration of his term of office, properly be considered as having been discharged, by the State. The contract between him and the State is, that he will perform certain duties enjoined by law, for a specified term of time, for a stipulated compensation. Upon the expiration of the period of time for which he ¿was elected, he is out of office, by the express terms of the contract. The State does not discharge him, but his term of service expires, by the express stipulation of the contract made between himself and the State; and hence, the want of any analogy between such a contract and a contract with a private citizen for professional services, who discharges his counsel from his case before the termination of the suit in which he is employed. The administration of the law should be free from all temptation and suspicion, so far as human agency is capable of accomplishing that object; and in- our judgment, public policy most emphatically demands, that a Solicitor General who has been employed by the State, to prosecute defendants for a violation of her laws, for the compensation affixed by law, should not be allowed to defend such defendants from the charge contained in the indictment, after the expiration of his term of office, for a compensation to be paid by them for that purpose. Such a practice will have a tendency to greatly embarrass the administration of the Criminal Law; for, as the term of the office of Solicitor General is about to expire, prosecutors and others, who maybe intrusted to prosecute offenders, will necessarily be restrained from communicating [51]*51freely with the State’s counsel, when he may be employed at the next term of the Court, to defend the indicted culprit. It is no sufficient answer to say, that the law will not allow him to disclose any fact which may have been communicated to him, as the counsel for the State, to her prejudice. If he knows the vulnerable points in the case, derived by his official connexion with it, there are many ways by which those points might be made available to the defendant on his trial, by-his counsel, besides disclosing them as a witness. If he has knowledge of facts, derived from his official connexion with the prosecution, which will operate to the prejudice of the State, and he is permitted to act as counsel for the defendant, that knowledge will be made available in the defence; therefore, we place our judgment on the ground, that public policy forbids that a Solicitor General who has prosecuted a defendant for a violation of the law, by preferring an indictment against him, should appear as his counsel to defend him from the charge, after the expiration of his term of office. We take pleasure in stating, that in the present instance the plaintiff in error has only pursued the general practice which has heretofore prevailed in most of the Circuits of this State, and that no positive abuse of his professional confidence has been made to appear, and none is imputed to him in this case, by the judgment whicl], we have felt it to be our dutytc^ award; but we affirm the judgment of the Court below, as before stated, on the ground of public policy, irrespective of the particular facts of this case.
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11 Ga. 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaulden-v-state-ga-1851.