Hammond v. State

120 S.E. 539, 156 Ga. 880, 1923 Ga. LEXIS 352
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 11, 1923
DocketNo. 3626
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 120 S.E. 539 (Hammond 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
Hammond v. State, 120 S.E. 539, 156 Ga. 880, 1923 Ga. LEXIS 352 (Ga. 1923).

Opinions

Beck, P. J.

The plaintiff in error was tried for the offense of murder, the indictment under which he was tried alleging that he did feloniously and with malice aforethought kill Winnie Hammond by shooting her with a pistol. The decedent was the wife of the accused. . The jury trying the case returned a verdict of guilty, with a recommendation; and the defendant thereupon made a motion for new trial, which was overruled; and to the judgment overruling the motion he excepted.

[881]*8811. There was evidence introduced by the State showing that shortly after the homicide the defendant’s little daughter, a child of tender years, addressing the defendant, said to him, “ Papa, why did you kill Mama? She was not sick; she ought not to die.” And in the course of his instructions to the jury the court charged: “Now, the State in this case contends that the defendant’s daughter said to him, e Papa, why did you kill Mama ? She was not sick; she ought not to die.’ The State invokes a charge on the following principle of law: Acquiescence or silence, when the circumstances require an answer or denial or other conduct, may amount to an admission. Now, the defendant denies that such a statement was made. The defendant denies that he heard such a statement. Now, if the defendant did not hear such a statement, if there was no such statement made, or if the defendant heard it and on account of trouble — on account of grief — failed to notice it, you would not be authorized to consider that as an admission. Now, if you should believe that the State has shown beyond a reasonable doubt that such a statement as that was made in the presence of the defendant, and you should further believe that the defendant heard the statement and that .he made'no denial of the charge, why, as I have stated to you, under the law you may consider that as an admission.” We are of the opinion that this charge was error. True, it states in substance the rule as to acquiescence or silence, as laid down in section 1029 of the Penal Code, which reads as - follows: “ Acquiescence, or silence, when the circumstances require an answer or denial or other conduct, may amount to an admission.” But -in the charge under consideration the court instructed the jury that if they believed from the evidence there had been shown beyond a reasonable doubt that the statement was made in the presence of the defendant, and that if they should further believe that the defendant heard it and made no denial of the charge, then, to use the court’s own language, “ under the law you may consider that as an admission.” This statement of the law by the judge should have been qualified by submitting to them the question as to whether the statement required an answer or denial; and then, instead of stating to the jury, “you may consider that as an admission,” he should have instructed them that they would be authorized to treat it as an admission if they found that under the circumstances the defendant was required to make an answer or denial.

[882]*8822. One theory of the homicide advanced by the defendant was that the decedent committed suicide. The evidence as to the homicide was entirely circumstantial. Among other circumstances proved was, that, shortly before the decedent was killed, oil had been applied to the pistol of the defendant with which the killing was done, and that there was a considerable quantity of the oil upon the pistol and was still upon the pistol at the time the shot was fired and for' sometime afterwards. When the witness I. C. Evans, a practicing physician, introduced by the State, was called to the stand, he was asked the question whether or not the decedent could have fired the shot that killed her. The wound was in the face, near the nose. In one part of his evidence Dr. Evans had testified that she could have fired it. He was interrogated further upon this point, and this question was propounded by counsel for the State. “ Mr. Arnold asked if it was possible for her to have fired the shot. I understand you said it was possible; but doctor, I will ask jfou this question: from having made an investigation, the condition of the body, the condition of the wound, the pistol, the size of the pistol, the grease on the pistol, and the hand over here and this hand here, in your opinion could she that night as you found her have fired that shot?” This was objected to by counsel for the defendant, on the ground that it called for an opinion by the witness and the determination by him of a question that was for solution by the jury; that the witness should state facts and not an opinion. The witness was a practicing physician, and in matters connected with his profession he was an expert witness. Of course, it is a well-known exception -to the general rule requiring witnesses to testify to facts and not their opinion, that, in matters involving questions of science, art, trade, or the like, persons of skill may speak not only to the facts, but give their opinions in evidence, and may express their opinions as to the application of these general facts to the special' circumstances of the matter under investigation, whether these circumstances have fallen under their own observation or have been given in evidence by others. And the witness in question, a practicing physician, could have testified whether, from the standpoint of an anatomist or a physiologist, it was possible that the dead woman could have fired the pistol; and he had answered that it might be possible. But he was interrogated further, and his attention was called to the [883]*883blood, and the lack of finger-marks, and the lack of odor or evidences of oil, and he answered, “Well, the blood and the lack of finger-marks, and the lack of odor or evidences of oil, I don’t believe she could have fired the pistol as it was fired.” We have considered here together the evidence objected to in three grounds, the 4th, 5th, and 6th grounds of the amended motion. It will be seen that the witness in question, the expert, was not only called upon -to give his answer to the question of the science in which he was an expert, but he was permitted to answer as to whether or not, considering the presence of blood, and the lack of fingermarks, and the lack of odor of oil about the person of the deceased, it was possible for her to have fired the shot. As to these questions of fact the jury and the jury alone were the judges. This examination as to the question of the possibility of the woman having fired the pistol that ended her life brought from the doctor, in substance, the expression of an opinion that, considering the facts that the pistol had kerosene oil upon it in such a quantity that the woman could not have handled it without getting some of it upon her hands or fingers, and that there was no odor of kerosene oil upon the hands or about the person, she could not have fired the shot. This was a question of vital importance in this case, and whether a woman could have handled a pistol covered with kerosene oil without getting enough of it on her hands to make them smell of the oil was not a question to be determined by an expert in the science of medicine or anatomy, but was a question to be solved by the jury; and it was hurtful error to admit the evidence objected to.

3, 4. The rulings made in headnotes 3 and 4 need no elaboration.

5.

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Bluebook (online)
120 S.E. 539, 156 Ga. 880, 1923 Ga. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammond-v-state-ga-1923.