Graham v. State

84 S.E. 981, 16 Ga. App. 221, 1915 Ga. App. LEXIS 553
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedApril 20, 1915
Docket6319
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 84 S.E. 981 (Graham v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graham v. State, 84 S.E. 981, 16 Ga. App. 221, 1915 Ga. App. LEXIS 553 (Ga. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinions

Wade, J.

Edmund Graham was convicted of the larceny of a cow described in the indictment as “one blue and white speckled female cow about two and a half years old, with horns, unmarked, of the personal property of T. M. Paulk,” etc. His motion for a new trial was based on the general grounds and on one special [222]*222ground, in which it is insisted that the evidence failed to establish that the offense was committed in the county of Irwin, and therefore the venue of the alleged crime was not shown. The prosecutor testified that on or about September 11, 1914, he lost the cow described in the indictment; that he last saw the cow in the morning of that day, in Irwin county, near Coochee creek, where the cow ranged; that about two weeks thereafter he discovered signs a quarter of a mile from where he had last seen the cow, indicating that a cow or some other animal had been butchered there; that two or three weeks after the cow was missed he saw a cow’s hide that had been dug up in the garden of Isaiah Spicer, about half a mile from where he had last seen the cow; that it was “long enough” to be the hide of the lost cow, and was a “white speckled hide,” and there “were indications that it was the color” of his cow, though the hide was partially decomposed, 'and the hair had begun to slip from it, and he could not swear that it was in fact the hide from his lost cow. He testified further that the place where he last saw the cow on September 11, 1914, the place where a cow appeared to have been butchered, and the place where the hide was discovered in Spicer’s garden, were all within the limits of Irwin county. He testified that the defendant was shot" by some one on Friday night about the 11th of September, though he did not hear of it until Sunday or Monday thereafter. Isaiah Spicer, testifjdng for the State, said that he knew the defendant and remembered the Friday night when the defendant was shot, as he himself did the shooting; that he saw the defendant pass by his house alone in the evening, riding a mule, with a gun on his shouldqr, and going in the direction of Anderson Alexander’s house; that during that night he heard a vehicle pass his place, going back in the direction of Coochee creek, and about fifteen minutes after it passed he went into his house and got his shotgun and went in the direction in which the vehicle appeared to be going, 'as he thought “they” had one of his hogs; that when he “got there” he heard a buggy coming towards him, and he stopped under an oak tree, and the persons with the buggy came directly towards and to the left side of the tree; that one Cook was leading the mule hitched to the buggy, and the defendant was walking along by the buggy with a gun, and there was beef in the buggy, cut up “like you bring it to market;” that when Cook and Edmund Graham, the [223]*223defendant, got within a few steps of where the witness was standing, the witness called ont, “Hey, Edmund,” and the defendant replied, “Who in the God damned hell is that?” and “pulled his gun and shot” at the witness twice, and then the witness shot back at him ~ that Graham and Cook ran, and the witness ran off also, and the mule pulled the buggy against a tree and broke loose and ran away. The witness further said that the shooting took place about half-past eight or nine o’clock at night, and that he did not see the defendant again that night, but saw him the next evening, when the defendant said that the beef in the buggy was his (the defendant’s) beef, and that he supposed it was some one else who hailed him> and this was why he shot at the witness; that the defendant told the witness when he saw him the day after the shooting to go to his brOther-in-law’s house and tell his brother-in-law “to go down there and get the beef,” as “he was hurt and could not manage, and his wife could not manage it,” and he wanted his brother-in-law to take the beef up to the house of the witness and to Anderson’s house and let them have some of it, and bring the remainder to him; that the defendant then told the witness that the hide “was smelling” and directed that the witness and the defendant’s hrother-in-law should bury it; that when Spicer and Cook (the brother-in-law) reached the place where the beef was, they found the defendant’s hat and shoe, and they took the hide, and Cook buried it in Spicer’s garden as the defendant had instructed; that the beef was spoiled and not in condition to sell, and the hide was smelling, as both had stayed in the woods all night; that the defendant claimed to the witness that the cow he had butchered was his and that he could prove this fact by his brother-in-law; that he, Spicer, told the sheriff where the hide was buried, and was there when the hide was dug up (about two weeks later), and it was then in bad shape, and most of the hair had slipped off; that you could tell that the cow had “black and white” on her, but not what sort of cow the hair came from.

T. M. Pollock, sworn for the State, testified, that on the day of the commitment trial he asked the defendant “who killed that cow down there where they found that hide buried,” and he said “I killed it,” and added that it was Mr. Tim Paulk’s cow, and he (the defendant) knew it was Mr. Paulk’s cow when he killed it. W. A. Tucker, sheriff of Irwin county, testified that the defendant [224]*224had talked to him several times about the cow alleged to have been stolen; that soon after the defendant was shot, he and others went to0 see the defendant, but could get no information from him, but that later, after the hide was dug up' and the defendant was arrested and brought to jail, he said to the defendant, “Edmund, we have got you,” and the defendant replied, “Yes, you have got me,” and, in answer to questions, stated that the cow he had butchered was “Mr. Tim Paulk’s cow, a speckled heifer, about two and a half years old;” that he knew it was Mr. Paulk’s cow, and that several other persons he named were to meet him there that night and help skin the beef; “that he killed it about two hours by sun, and went back to Aaron’s and got the mule and buggy, and the other boys did not come; that he used a flash-light in butchering the beef; that somebody halted him that night and he shot them twice; that'Isaiah was justified in shooting him because he shot first.” The defendant in his statement admitted that he had confessed the stealing of the cow, to different persons including the solicitor (who did not testify), but claimed that the cow was not Paulk’s cow but was his, and said that he had several witnesses who could prove where he got the cow, two of whom were “down there at that time, and there aint nobody seen them since I got shot.” No witness was introduced in his behalf.

It appears from this testimony, which we have given almost in full, that there were ample circumstances from which the jury could infer the defendant’s guilt to the exclusion of reasonable doubt. Obviously the beef in his buggy when he was detected by Spicer was stolen beef. His conduct in firing his gun at Spicer because Spicer hailed him can not be explained on any other theory.

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Related

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304 Ga. 862 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2019)
Burkett v. State
212 S.E.2d 870 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1975)
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87 S.E.2d 443 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1955)
McCarthy v. State
89 S.E. 348 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1916)
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87 S.E. 703 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 S.E. 981, 16 Ga. App. 221, 1915 Ga. App. LEXIS 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-state-gactapp-1915.