Grimes v. State

54 S.E.2d 302, 79 Ga. App. 489, 1949 Ga. App. LEXIS 679
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 12, 1949
Docket32307, 32308, 32309.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 54 S.E.2d 302 (Grimes 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
Grimes v. State, 54 S.E.2d 302, 79 Ga. App. 489, 1949 Ga. App. LEXIS 679 (Ga. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinions

MacIntyre, P. J.

The defendant, Isaiah Grimes, was charged in three separate indictments with arson. With his consent all three cases were tried together. He was found guilty of each of the offenses charged. He made a motion for a new trial in each case which was overruled and he excepted. As numbered in this court, the cases are identified as No. 32307, for the alleged burning of the Mt. Zion Methodist Church on August 22, 1947; No. 32308, for the alleged burning of the Friendship Baptist Church on October 3, 1947; and, No. 32309, for the alleged burning of *490 the Loganville Colored School Building on November 21, 1947. The grounds of the motions for a new trial and the briefs of evidence are identical and the cases will be considered together by this court.

1. The verdicts of the jury were evidently based upon the confession made by the defendant and corroborated by other circumstances; “A confession alone, uncorroborated by any other evidence, shall not justify a conviction.” Code, § 38-420. However, “a conviction may be lawfully had upon a free and voluntary confession though the same be not otherwise corroborated than by proof of the corpus delicti.” Wimberly v. State, 105 Ga. 188 (1) (31 S. E. 162). In the instant case the defendant’s written confession was as follows: “I, Isaiah Grimes, in the presence of C. J. Sorrells, the Solicitor-General, Mr. D. M. Pollock and Mr. P. W. Martin, the court reporter,' make this statement. Fluke Catlin died and he had some insurance with two lodges, one was the Faith Hope & Charity and the other Joy & Benevolence, or Joy something, I don’t know what the rest of it is; he had $80 insurance in one and with the other one had had $100 willed to a little girl, Minnie Idonia, an adopted girl. Fluke died. When Fluke died they would not pay the insurance to Maggie because he had made the insurance to the little girl. She wanted the money because he left some debt and these parties were bearing down on her for the money and she didn’t have no way to get the money, and Maggie got mad about not letting her have the money and I didn’t feel like they were treating her right. As to what I decided to do about that, I was crazy and thought I would get even with them and I didn’t have any cause at all. They were meeting in Mount Zion Church, both of them, they had a church for each one. I could not tell you which one was meeting at Zion, one met in one place and one in the other. What I did then was I got crazy and thought I would get even with them and set it on fire. As to what I did that night, I had some old gas I had had a month in a tin can, it was an old five-gallon square can. As to whether I did anything to that, I got that tin can and cut the top out and made a slop bucket out of it and put a brace around the can, iron braces. That was after the second fire I did that. It was the same can. I found the can and took the can and had to get some gas. I got the gas from *491 W. I. Still who runs a filling station. I had gotten four or five gallons of gas and had about two gallons left. I got that gas the latter part of March and set it in the smoke house. The first fire was Friendship, I mean Mount Zion church. As to what time of night that was, I was on a fishing trip by myself and had been fishing and came back home. As to whether 1 had been drinking I might have had a little but not much. I got home that night about twelve or one o’clock and I went on in the house and then I got the can with the gasoline in it. 1 then went down to Zion. The way I went was through the back yard to a lady named Tuck’s house. I crossed the Conyers road about the Tuck house on a little road where you go out through a little path where the sawmills sets. When I got to the church I took the gasoline and dashed the gasoline up in the front and set a match to it. Then I left and went back home the same way I came. I took the can with me. I did not use all the gasoline; there was somewhere around three quarts or a half a gallon left. As to what I did when I got home, I set the can in a little old house at Fluke’s house. At Fluke’s house is where Maggie lived. That was on the 22nd of August. At the time the second fire happened and Friendship Church was burned, I was down at my uncle’s, Alfred Grimes’. We were playing Florida String down there. At the game was me, Isaiah Grimes, Pearly Grimes, Eliza May Baker, Annie Rice Martin, Frank Hill, William Hill, Joe Cox, Joe Wood and I think that is all. Maggie had left there before that time; Maggie Catlin had been there and left. As to how that fire happened, I had no cause. They were playing Florida String, “rise and fiy”. By rise and fiy when one of the crowd get beat they had to quit and when they get beat two others got up, the best two out of three. Me and Alfred Grimes played and he and I had to rise and fly. When I rose I went back and walked out this front door and got the gas and went to Friendship Church. In order to get to Friendship Church I had to pass Fluke Gatlin’s house where I had left the gas. I went to the back and got the can and there were three quarts in it, might have been more. I then went to Friendship Church and threw it on the front and struck a match to it and left. I then brought the can to the house and in a day or two took some hooks and cut the top out and had some steel hooks and put a *492 handle on it. That is the one you have in the office at Monroe, that is the one. Friendship Church is a short distance from where the game was; it ain’t nothing like a quarter of a mile, something like two hundred and fifty or three hundred yards. I then came back and went to playing and played two hands with William Hill and Joe Wood. Joe Wood is the one who discovered the fire. What he said was ‘something is burning up there.’ When I went out the front door nobody said anything about me going out. When I came back somebody asked me where I had been, some one in the crowd I don’t know which one. I had been gone then about twenty-five or thirty minutes. That was the second one. About burning the schoolhouse: I went and fed the hogs and came back by my mother’s. That was at Fluke’s house; I went in the house and walked off and said I was going off. I then went back and got a jug; it was-a gallon jug with two handles, one on each side. I then went by Uncle Alfred’s. I went in there and sat down a while. I left the jug out of doors when I went in there. From there I went to William Hill’s. When I got there it was time for the lodge to have done been started. I saw Earn Ragsdale down there; he was on the porch talking to a girl. I scared him and he jumped back. I then talked to them a minute. I then had set the jug side of the road before I went in there. I stayed there and talked to them a minute and came out and got my jug. I told them if anybody said had they seen me to say they hadn’t seen me. I was there talking to Earn and Earn Ragsdale heard me. I then went down to Toler’s filling station and got gas. I put one gallon of gasoline in the jug and paid twenty-six for it. I then went down the road below Tuck’s house and came out in the field to an old house. When I left Toler’s filling station I went down Rosebud road. I did not turn out the same road I turned out before, the one below Tuck’s house and then went by there to an old vacant house out in the field. I stayed there until the lodge broke up. The lodge was then going on while I was at this house and the lights were on there and I waited there until the lodge was out. After I saw the light go out I waited ten or fifteen minutes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 S.E.2d 302, 79 Ga. App. 489, 1949 Ga. App. LEXIS 679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grimes-v-state-gactapp-1949.